As a reaction to Thursday's events (Charles and Camilla caught up in violence after 10 December tuition fees, voices), are predictable in the flag of democracy Coalition politicians serving. You have no right to do so.
The last election won the Tories in an absolute majority of the most favourable conditions possible. Are erected by a Liberal Party, the seats in the election - come despite all the propaganda about your time - lost his desertion of the principle haemorrhaged support because of the. The Lib Dems are already practically a spent force in politics, your sole residual role is to facilitate legislation by malicious Tory by it a little slowdown. Therefore, claims the Government, "listen".
On the basis of this Stitch-Up con Dems access the welfare State, effective privatisation of higher education and the NHS and to destroy what is left, the life we have in common. This is the declining society and the neo-liberal ambition of the project is breathtaking.
Raymond Williams struck once "if not official democracy may have people, you should be unofficially". Thursday provided ample proof of this.
Dr. David Alderson
University of Manchester
• Their editorial (10 December) concludes: "Mr Clegg must discover his distinctive voice if it to repeat the tragedies of the past of Republican." After the events of this week question I me, like many of my colleagues radical Liberals in the Liberal Democrats to the reluctant conclusion have come, that Mr Clegg may have little interest in the revival of a distinctive liberal voice and even less to avoid repeating the tragedies of the past our party?
After three quarter a century the opposition Liberals are party friends in the coalition Government that appear most of us creation to criticize, of which would have supported understandably reluctant. Our position to rethink, if the economic liberals intent on the receiving airline us over a longer period of oblivion displayed.
Phil Rimmer
London
• Their editorial demonstrates the farce chaos where the Lib Dems have fallen in the last few weeks. As an active member of the party, I am appalled by the results of the Commons vote on tuition fees. The party has lost all moral authority and no specious call Nick Clegg for "party unity" can hide the scale of the disaster. We can not just put the matter behind us and hope, the voters by 2015 all over it forgot is.
This vote next to the "broken promises" choice is set broadcast put out by the Lib Dems choose continue to haunt us. The party outside Westminster must reaffirm abolish commitment fees and participate in the ongoing student campaign.
Simon Hebditch
London
• The "toughest day in modern history [the Lib Dems']" comment (10 December)? On this day, the party won a Fareham of Council Byelection 49.8% of the vote. This was no freak score based on apathy: voter turnout was 35%. The vote lib was 331 in May 2008 to 933 - after weeks of denigration of the leader of the party. Sure many people told us at the front door that unhappy you were with the rise in tuition fees - how many of us were knocked on doors and leaflets delivered.
But real voters in real elections recognise that a party in the Government has to take tough decisions. The Lib Dems strength remains our willingness to meet, engage and listen to our local voters and try to address your concerns. The crisis predicted by commentators who listen only to another a satisfactory habit in the absence of come the.
Jim Forrest
Deputy Chairman, Fareham Council Liberal Democrat Group
• Well done to the coalition. In six months or so you have managed a largely apathetic generation of young people in a band of potential anarchists ready to turn the monarchy brick. The reason is simple enough-you have a thoroughly questionable mandate for your policy. Part of me would like to see go now, but on the other hand, I'm curious, what Cockup see they will serve as next.
Nick Pearson
York

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