The two main protagonists in the birth of the Radical Reform Group were Desmond Banks and Peter Grafton who was Liberal candidate for Bromley in 1950 general election. Banks also gave as a justification for the Radical Reform Group the need to popularise and strengthen the Liberal Party as a political alternative for electors disillusioned with the main parties so as to avoid the growth of extremist groups. 'If there were no Liberal Party' he declared in a speech at Ruan Minor in Cornwall in March 1956, 'we might well be witnessing today the growth of some dangerous movement akin to that of M.Poujade in France.
Leaving the Liberal Party
In 1954, the Group decided to disaffiliate from the Liberal Party to try to attract members from the social democratic wing of the Labour Party and from moderate Conservatives under the slogan 'social reform without socialism'. While most individual members remained card-carrying Liberals however, one former chairman of the Group, Eric Farquhar Allison decided to join the Labour Party and one of its vice-presidents, the former MP for Dundee, Dingle Foot, openly supported Labour candidates in seats not contested by Liberals at the 1955 general election. This was an early attempt to provide a radical, progressive, non-socialist, cross-party force in British politics similar to the re-alignment of the left that Liberal leaderJo Grimond was to call for.
Rejoining the Liberal Party
This strategy was not successful however and the Group voted narrowly to move back into the Liberal Party in 1955. The move was welcomed by the Liberal leaning newspaper the News Chronicle in a leader entitled Left or Limbo.
Influence
The Group was at the peak of its influence in the mid-1950s. The Economist reported on 1 May 1954 that the Radical Reform Group had gathered strength from the Liberal revival in the universities. In addition to Jo Grimond, the Radical Reform Group was endorsed by many top people in the party amongst them Frank Owen the former MP for Hereford who contested a by-election there in February 1956, pushing Labour into third place and Jeremy Thorpe who went on to succeed Grimond as party leader. In 1955, The Western Morning News reported that Thorpe was proclaiming the gospel of his Radical Reform Group with the energetic support of university students from Exeter and Bristol. The Group continued into the 1960s and although it was never formally wound up it became increasingly a debating society as the mainstream of the party endorsed Grimond's political strategy and the economic liberals gradually lost influence or left the party.
Works by the Radical Reform Group
Radical Approach: A Statement of Aims by the Radical Reform Group