The Lib Dems have laughed off ideas that they have been wooing ‘Pimm’s drinkers’ and dominating the ‘Boden Belt’ after taking keep an eye on of councils in leafy, historically Tory spaces.
The birthday celebration celebrated wins throughout swathes of the Home Counties and southern England, and was the most important birthday celebration in Devon, Gloucestershire, Hertfordshire and Wiltshire.
Leader Sir Ed Davey had previous claimed the Lib Dems have been now ‘the party of Middle England’.
But on the day gone by’s Radio 4 Today programme, the birthday celebration’s schooling spokesman, Munira Wilson, was once requested about whether or not the Lib Dems had changed the Tories as ‘the party of the posh’.
This was once a connection with a up to date Spectator article which advised they constitute ‘constituencies where Britain’s bourgeoisie are maximum at ease’, including: ‘Everywhere Pimm’s is served, a Lib Dem is the native MP.
The Lib Dems have laughed off ideas that they have been wooing ‘Pimm’s drinkers’ and dominating the ‘Boden Belt’ after taking keep an eye on of councils in leafy, historically Tory spaces (Pictured: Ed Davey celebrating with a Pimm’s in Oxfordshire after his birthday celebration’s native election good fortune)

Leader Sir Ed Davey (proper) had previous claimed the Lib Dems have been now ‘the party of Middle England’

On the day gone by’s Radio 4 Today programme, the birthday celebration’s schooling spokesman Munira Wilson (above) was once requested about whether or not the Lib Dems had changed the Tories as ‘the party of the posh’
‘They dominate the Boden Belt. Even the Tories depression that the Lib Dems are the actual “party of the posh”.’
In reaction, Twickenham MP Ms Wilson mentioned: ‘We are the party that believes in integrity and respect, and the value of community. That’s what Middle England is.
‘You will find Liberal Democrats, yes, in the south of England; yes, in the West Country.
‘But we put up a very strong showing in the north of England . . . running Reform close in Hull and East Yorkshire.’