Speaking of Orange Book Cleggy, I think this is shaping up to be an election where a non- proportional voting system, and the 5 years of propping up Tory austerity is actually benefiting the Lib Dems.
They've reverted back to their old tactics of specifically targeting Tory seats. The Tories are down and out, and the coalition government pretty much represented an ideology that sleepy shire 'One Nation' Tories actually liked. Now that their home party has alienated and abandoned them in the name of sleaze, incompetence, and chasing Farage down a right wing rabbit hole that the Tories are too portly to fit in to, does that mean that some of those fearing Daily Mail headlines of a "one party socialist state" but can't bring themselves to support the old guard fall into the arms of Lib Dems?
On the left, they're talking about Social Care and the NHS more than Labour are, and planning on spending more money to boot. On Question Time last week, Starmer sweated under the pressure of being grilled about ideological U-turns and Corbyn, Swinney was struggling on SNP sleaze and his parties sexual arousal regarding Independence, and Sunak was being destroyed about.....well just about everything. Whereas Davey, as much as I don't like the guy, came across as sincere I thought, and dealt with Horizon and ConDem coalition pressures rather well. This could potentially be because their national polling isn't great, and they're not seen as a threat.
But, other than getting in to bed with the Tories, they have had a history of being quite electorally clever. Ashdown didn't have a great night in terms of national vote share in 97, but solidified their presence in parliament. By 2001, there was a plethora Lib Dem safe seats. Davey could return the most MP's to the commons for them in 100 years on a low vote share.
We could have a sleeper hit on our hands here, with one absurd MRP prediction putting them within reaching distance of becoming the official opposition.