I always thought it was suicidal to go round saying “a period in opposition will do us good” before the election as some did, but I guess that is the situation we are now in thanks to the ConDem stitch up/ collation/ sell-out so we must use it to our advantage. As the saying goes “don’t get mad, organise”. We need a proper leadership election now, a contest, not a coronation. After days of seeing men in suits cook up deals on the television news I would hope at least one woman would stand and all wings of the party be represented.
Rupa Huq

The ConDem coalition proposal for five-year fixed term parliaments is a major power grab. Fixed term parliaments are a fine idea but only dying administrations hold on for the full five years. They should be done properly with a four year term. Anything more and you’re excluding the people from the democratic process. No one voted for a five-year fixed term parliament. No duration was specified by the Lib Dems, the Conservatives didn’t mention it at all in their manifesto. It increases power for politicians and excludes the people. Is it any surprise they introduced it the day after the election?
Will Parbury

Our most important challenge is to really understand why we lost people’s support. That will raise hard questions. We need to go to where the voters are, and that means changing ourselves in ways we don’t yet fully understand.

Each leadership candidate should then set out their vision for earning the support of a broader swathe of voters again. Delivering that will be the main task of the next five years.

Immediately, we need to pay attention to the value of sustained, local campaigning and ensure party organisation is built around recruiting and inspiring members to be active.

We have a great deal to learn from some of the best campaigns in this election about a community based style of politics, and the success of those campaigns needs to be applied to the seats we lost last week.
Hopi Sen

Step back, reflect and then regroup.

Listen to voters, rather than telling them what you think they are saying. They want fairness, and in some areas they aren’t getting it. For example… Face up to the problems of immigration, acknowledge that some tax credits have become a passport to too many benefits and are seen as unfair, and that taking more people out of paying any taxes at all by increasing thresholds is a good thing.

Don’t fight each other inside the party – acknowledge when the Tories and the Lib Dems are doing something good – and then regroup and defeat them at the next election.
Gisela Stuart MP

The alliance between Social Democrats and Liberals finally unwound last night with the formation of a coalition government where the Orange Book finally tied the knot with the Big Society. The next key event will be George Osborne’s first budget, where big cuts are promised. Labour’s first task will be to provide a coherent alternative to this budget, and this will be a big first step in defining our new agenda in the long run-in to the next general election. My expectation is that not only will our agenda change with the renewal that will culminate in the election of our new leader, but we will look to new ways to get this message out – in part a reaction to new media, in part a response to promised electoral changes.
Julian Ware-Lane

Photo: psd 2004