Express & Star

Paddy Ashdown’s plan to redesign Parliament

Lib Dem leader wanted a ‘hemispherical’ Commons chamber to symbolise pact with Tony Blair’s New Labour.

Published
Liberal Democrat leader Paddy Ashdown

Liberal Democrat leader Paddy Ashdown wanted to redesign the House of Commons as a symbol of his party’s joint reform agenda with New Labour, according to newly-released official papers.

Files released by the National Archives show Mr Ashdown was keen to expand co-operation between the two parties – dubbed “the project” – following Tony Blair’s landslide general victory in 1997.

In his excitement, he even proposed that the Commons chamber could be re-shaped as a “hemisphere” in recognition of the new culture of “consultation, pluralism, debate” which they hoped to inaugurate.

In a letter to Mr Blair dated July 6 1998, the Lib Dem leader suggested if they were to expand co-operation they needed to counter accusations that it was just a “grubby deal between parties, rather than something in the interests of the nation”.

“One of the most telling criticisms of the project will be that you are doing this to get even greater dominance and I am sacrificing my duty and role to oppose for ambition/greed etc and that this is yet another mechanism to diminish the role of Parliament and make it into even more of a cipher,” he wrote.

“One way of dealing with this is to openly recognise it and say that we are concerned about it too. That is why we intend to make it a specific aim of the project, to restore the importance of parliament and open a new culture of consultation, pluralism, debate and even disagreement.

“And as a symbol of this we might even say we shall alter the shape of Parliament itself, turning it into a hemisphere and setting up a design competition to do this before the Millennium.”

The proposal however met with little enthusiasm in No 10.

Tony Blair
Tony Blair was urged to extend co-operation with the Lib Dems (John Giles/PA)

In a memo to the prime minister, Jonathan Powell, Mr Blair’s chief of staff, wrote: “I can’t believe that he has proposed a hemispherical House of Commons. Are you sure you want to go ahead with this project?”

Deputy prime minister John Prescott was even more sceptical, complaining to one No 10 aide that Mr Blair wanted to “kiss the Lib Dems to death instead of kicking them to death”.

The files also show that Mr Ashdown discreetly sounded out Ken Clarke about defecting from the Tories amid unhappiness over the Eurosceptic direction the party was taking under new leader William Hague.

In a note to Mr Blair, he said that he had had lunch with the former chancellor who told him he had no intention of leaving the Tories “at least until I am clear they cannot be dragged back to sense”.

“I got the impression that he could, if things turned out really badly, set up a different party… but not join a different party,” he wrote.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.