Sdp-liberal Alliance

United Kingdom 1981 The SDP-Liberal Alliance was an electoral alliance of the Social Democratic Party and the Liberal Party in the UK that ran from 1981 to 1988, when the bulk of the two parties merged to form the Social and Liberal Democrats, later referred to as simply the Liberal Democrats. Following the breakaway of the Social Democratic Party (SDP) from the Labour Party in March 1981, the new party entered into an informal alliance with the existing centre party, the Liberals, led by David Steel. The SDP fought its first byelection, in Warrington, with future leader Roy Jenkins standing as "SDP with Liberal support". By the autumn of 1981 this was formalised into an alliance, with both parties agreeing to stand down in each other's favour. Between 1981 and 1983 the parties together won seats in byelections in Croydon North East (Bill Pitt, a Liberal), Liverpool Crosby (Shirley Williams of the SDP), Glasgow Hillhead (Roy Jenkins of the SDP), and Bermondsey (Simon Hughes of the Liberals, with the largest swing ever recorded in any British election). The Alliance did extremely well in the 1983 general election, running Labour very close, winning 25.4% of the national vote to Labour's 27.6%. However, the party only gained 23 MPs compared to Labour's 203; although the SDP came second in many seats, Britain's first past the post electoral system meant that this success did not translate into parliamentary seats. For many years after both the SDP and the Liberal party were committed to proportional representation, under which system they would have had a much larger presence in the House of Commons. However, the alliance failed to maintain momentum. In the 1987 general election, the share of the vote for each party fell slightly, and both parties lost seats. By 1987 relations had become fraught. As a result David Steel proposed a merger of the two parties in 1987, following that year's general election. The majority of both parties agreed and a merger was effected early in 1988. Small fractions of both parties established new parties under the names of the SDP and the Liberal Party - as both fractions were made up of those members who least trusted the other's party there was no chance of the two 'continuing' parties would co-operate. As a result the re-established SDP was soon wound up.

 

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