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The Limehouse Declaration and the birth of the SDP

Monday 29 January 2001


On 25 January 1981, four former Labour cabinet ministers - Roy Jenkins, David Owen, William Rodgers and Shirley Williams - published the Limehouse Declaration, publicly signalling their intention to quit the leftward path that the Labour Party had taken. The Declaration advocated a classless society and called for the realignment of British politics. After an overwhelming public response, the SDP came into being two months later.

Twenty years on, the Liberal Democrat History Group looked at the origins and importance of the Limehouse Declaration. Did it signal the end of both Old Labour and Liberal Party irrelevance? Or did it back the progressive forces in British politics into a cul-de-sac?

Was the SDP a mistake? Or was the party essential for both the reform of Labour and a rebirth of Liberalism?



Linked people
Wrigglesworth, Ian (speaker)
Oakeshott, Matthew (speaker)


Linked areas

Party organisation
1976-1988

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