The previous Archbishop of Canterbury, Baron Williams of Oystermouth, has challenged the Lib Dems' stance on non secular beliefs amid a lawsuit by a former parliamentary candidate who claims he was struck down due to his Christian religion.
David Campanale is taking authorized motion towards the get together for alleged breaches of the Equality Act 2010 after he was dropped as a candidate for Sutton and Cheam and changed by Luke Taylor.
In authorized paperwork submitted to the District Courtroom, the Lib Dems defended their actions, claiming that Campanale's “expressed non secular beliefs towards abortion, homosexual marriage and authorized gender reassignment are opposite to the core values set out” within the get together's constitutional paperwork.
Baron Williams requested whether or not a Christian or different non secular particular person might characterize the get together.
Within the feedback to The Telegraphhe stated the get together's place in its court docket filings indicated that “full compliance is required in non-public and in public.”
“The Liberal Democratic Get together's response to Campanale's authorized problem has been to say that reservations about – for instance – abortion or same-sex marriage are at odds with the 'core values' the get together espouses,” Williams instructed the paper.
“If it truly is unimaginable to carry completely different views, it ought to make it unimaginable for Orthodox Jews and most Muslims, in addition to Catholics and different Christians, to characterize the get together. Are the Liberal Democrats actually saying that?”
“You might or might not agree with David Campanale's private beliefs — some I share, however not at all all — however the precedent is troubling.
Lib Dem chief Sir Ed Davey has beforehand stated that some points comparable to abortion and euthanasia should stay “a matter of conscience” and that the appropriate of MPs to vote freely primarily based on non secular or moral considerations “have to be defended”.