Everyone has been guessing at what Nick Clegg and the Liberal Democrats would do if the voters return a hung parliament after the next election. The Lib Dem leader has sent all kinds of mixed signals. But if there is one person worth listening on the party’s intentions it is Julian Astle, the head of CentreForum, Britain’s leading Liberal think-tank, and a former political advisor to Paddy Ashdown. Astle has, in recent years, acted as one of the Lib Dem’s unofficial consiglieri – but one that has never shied away from challenging party orthodoxy. He has, for example, argued against the Liberal Democrat pledge to abolish tuition fees – showing it would involve a significant redistribution of resources from poor to rich.
Now he has published a report about the chances of a Lib-Con pact. Astle argues that policy divisions would prevent Nick Clegg entering into a formal coalition and sitting in Cabinet, but there would be enormous pressure on him to “act responsibly” in a hung parliament and “sustain the Tories in power” if they won more seats.”Necessity
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