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The word ‘liberal’ means different things to different people in different places.  In the USA it means ‘left-wing’ and is synonymous with the country’s coasts.  In Britain and most of Western Europe it has come to mean somebody who is ‘nice’ or ‘tolerant’.  But the problems of defining liberalism are not created by the Atlantic.  They exist within the heart of liberalism, and lie right beneath its origins as a political philosophy.
As many historians of ideas have shown, including in recent decades Isaiah Berlin and John Gray, liberalism has long existed in at least two major versions.  These not only divide liberals but rumble around beneath them, vying for pre-eminence at all times.
The first form of liberalism views liberalism as a mode of living together – a way of convening the many different political attitudes and movements which exist in any society and finding a way to get along harmoniously.  In that form of liberalism almost all of us who believe in the franchise and accept that our preferred political outcomes will sometimes be achieved and often be rejected are some type of basic political liberals.  But a second form of liberalism exists as well – and that is a form of liberalism which believes that liberalism is not a state of being but a political project in and of itself.  European liberals largely find themselves in the former camp.  American liberals more clearly in the second.
There is a long argument to be had within this – one going back to Hobbes. But the fissure between these two interpretations of liberalism does not only divide the US and Western Europe.  It now exists beneath many Western political parties.  Occasionally the fissure opens up and someone falls down through it.
Tim Farron is such a person. Before going any further I should say that I have never had any particular occasion to admire Mr Farron. I thought him unusually honest when he was once asked by an interviewer how he would like to be remembered and replied by saying that he would not be remembered. Perhaps I should also add that as somebody who argued the case for equal marriage before it became fashionable to do so, some people might expect me to be critical of Mr Farron for the content and cause of his political descent. But I can neither rejoice in it nor castigate him for it.  Indeed I thought his treatment by his fellow liberals earlier this year to be not only deeply illiberal but deeply wrong.  Furthermore, I think his speech to the Theos think-tank earlier this week to be a rather important moment of political clarity from a direction in which I would not previously have expected to look for it.

First it is worth remembering what Farron fell for.  When repeatedly questioned in great and gruesome detail about his personal moral attitude towards homosexual sex he stumbled over the question of whether he saw it as innately ‘sinful’ or not.  On a subsequent occasion – and after considerable barracking – he said that he did not think that it was.  Too late. The scene had been set.  Tim Farron was anti-gay.  Elements of his party blamed this distraction for Liberal Democrats not making a greater break-through in June’s General Election and he subsequently stepped down from leading that badly monikered party, citing the interrogation of his religious beliefs as part of the explanation.  Now that he is unburdened of office he is able to unburden himself of his true opinions.  It is a shame he could not have remained in position and still done so.
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