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  • From the BBC's summary of their 2017 manifesto, these are shown as the key policies:

    Second EU referendum on Brexit deal
    1p in the pound on income tax to raise £6bn for NHS and social care services
    End the 1% public sector pay cap
    Invest nearly £7bn extra in education
    Ban the sale of diesel cars and small vans in the UK by 2025
    Scrap the planned expansion of grammar schools
    End imprisonment for possession of illegal drugs for personal use
    Reinstate university maintenance grants for the poorest students
    Job-sharing arrangements for MPs
    Increase maximum sentence for animal cruelty from six months to five years, and a ban on caged hens
    Extend free childcare to all two-year-olds and introduce an additional month's paid paternity leave for dads
    Reverse cuts to work allowances in universal credit and housing benefit for 18-21 year olds
    Levy up to 200% council tax on second homes
    Take over the running of Southern Rail and Govia Thameslink
    £300m for community policing in England and Wales

    Other than legalising drugs which shows libertarian principles (although depends how you do it, legalise and regulate is hardly classic libertarianism) lots of these seem to me to be expansive state policies, because they either increase spending or taxation or reinstate/increase a govt role.

  • Other than legalising drugs which shows libertarian principles (although depends how you do it, legalise and regulate is hardly classic libertarianism) lots of these seem to me to be expansive state policies, because they either increase spending or taxation or reinstate/increase a govt role.

    Remember that the Lib Dems aren't a purely libertarian party but the result of the merger between the SDP and the Liberals.

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