7.15pm LeftWatch update: Lord Oakeshott says Tories must "swallow a slice" of humble pie on the mansion tax, and raises the prospect of Nick Clegg not being leader in 2015
6.15pm WATCH: Eric Pickles says he is "very proud to be a pleb" in difficult interview with Andrew Neil
4.30pm LeftWatch: Lib Dem conference update: further highlights of today's anti-Tory speeches
4pm LeftWatch: LIB DEM CONFERENCE ROLLING BLOG – highlights of the party's anti-Tory positioning
1pm: ToryDiary: Who are your conservative heroes?
12.30pm WATCH: Simon Hughes: "We don't think everybody at the top end of the tax system is paying what they ought to"
11.30am ToryDiary update: Andrew Percy MP suggested using the "huge potential" of the "massive international Commonwealth network" a year ago
Columnist Nadine Dorries MP: If we want to bring our members back to conference, we should allow them to air their views
Martin Parsons on Comment: The future of Afghanistan (part 2) – the west must be willing to invade again if necessary
Local Government: Councillor says Planning Department puts interests of architects ahead of residents
Major new drive to claw back 100 powers from the EU
"With a new deadline for a closer “federation of nation states” set for the middle of 2014, Government sources have confirmed that ministers will examine ways of clawing back sovereignty from the European Union in around 20 different areas. David Cameron is likely to point the way forward to further repatriation in his speech to the Conservative Party conference next month as he attempts to buy time amid calls from Tory Eurosceptics for a landmark referendum on Britain’s relationship with the EU." - Sunday Telegraph
Iain Martin: An EU referendum could be the crucial moment of David Cameron's career
"Mr Cameron and Mr Hague, wanting to wait and see what kind of federation the EU comes up with, hope to put off dealing with this until after the 2015 general election. But an interim promise of a referendum… may not satisfy Tory Eurosceptics, or the country. However, it is also an opportunity for Mr Cameron to define his leadership. Either renegotiating the UK’s relationship or taking the UK out, and sealing a friendly free-trade deal with the EU federation, would certainly mark him out as one of history’s consequential prime ministers." – Iain Martin for the Sunday Telegraph
> Yesterday on ToryDiary: The downside of a Con/UKIP pact is bigger than the upside – for the moment, anyway
Hague to launch worldwide network of Commonwealth embassies to tackle European diplomats
"William Hague will tomorrow launch a worldwide network of British Commonwealth embassies to rival the emergence of the EU as a foreign superpower. The Foreign Secretary is in Canada where he will sign an agreement to open joint UK-Canadian diplomatic missions abroad. He also hopes Australia and New Zealand will join the initiative whereby the four countries will pool their resources to extend their combined influence on world affairs." – Mail on Sunday
> Today on ToryDiary: William Hague announces new British Commonwealth embassies to head off expanding European diplomatic network
Taxman to target all £1m home owners in new anti-affluence crackdown as government widens net on tax dodgers - Mail on Sunday
Lib Dem conference bonanza: Negative polling for Clegg – good for Cable
> From yesterday:
Lib Dem conference 2: Clegg accuses Tory backbenchers of having a "turbo-charged" right wing agenda
"“My message to those Conservative backbench MPs who seem to think they have the right to force a turbo-charged right wing agenda on our country is this: You didn’t win the last election. “You do not have a majority. The British people have not given you the right to act like you do. We formed this Coalition in good faith and for the good of the country at a time of crisis. This required compromise on both sides. Liberal Democrats have kept our side of the bargain. You must too.”" – Sunday Telegraph
> From yesterday - WATCH: Nick Clegg: The Liberal Democrats "are going to hold our nerve and see this through"
Lib Dem conference 3: Tory "Tea Party tendency" putting green energy jobs at risk, warns Ed Davey
"In an interview with the Observer, Ed Davey describes a "Tea Party tendency" among Conservative MPs who question climate change and green investment as "perverse", and says it is creating deep uncertainty for an industry that could do much to help lift the country out of the economic doldrums." – Observer
Lib Dem conference 4: Coalition cuts have been too deep, says key Clegg aide
"[Clegg's] recently departed director of strategy, Richard Reeves, believes the coalition has squeezed spending too tightly and been blind to the benefits of investing in the economy. According to a pamphlet written by Reeves, the policy may have choked Britain's economic growth and pushed the country into the double dip… Reeves's admissions are particularly incendiary because he only left his position at the heart of government weeks ago and was known to have Clegg's ear." - Observer
Roundup of other Lib Dem conference stories
Lib Dem conference comment
Home Secretary claims death penalty would not have prevented officer deaths
"Theresa May moved yesterday to damp down calls for a return of the death penalty after the murder of Manchester policewomen Nicola Hughes and Fiona Bone. … The calls were supported last week by Paul Beshenivsky, widowed husband of PC Sharon Beshenivsky, who was shot dead in Bradford in 2005. … ‘The murder of Nicola Hughes and Fiona Bone was a callous and cowardly act,’ she said. ‘But I do not believe in the death penalty, and I do not believe that the death penalty would have acted as a deterrent in this case.’" - Mail on Sunday
Andrew Mitchell disputes reported version of encounter with police officer – denies using "pleb", but admits to swearing
"The Sunday Telegraph understands that the Chief Whip’s version of events is that after asking officers to open the main gates to Downing Street for his bicycle, and being refused, he said: “You guys are supposed to f***ing help us.” A friend of Mr Mitchell said he was “100 per cent adamant” he had not used the word “plebs” or “morons”, despite contradictory reports, although he was not calling anybody a liar. “He lost it a bit,” the friend said." - Sunday Telegraph
> Coverage from yesterday:
Matthew d'Ancona: I don’t believe that Andrew Mitchell let loose the explosive P-word
"This is the kernel of the case, the flinty, irreducible core. Swearing, silly moments of grandeur, frayed tempers: all that can and should be dealt with by censure, apology and a well-deserved day in the stocks. But the “p” word – well, that takes us into an entirely different realm. … Decent people say disgustingly snobbish things, it is true, but I do not believe that this is one such case." – Matthew d'Ancona for the Sunday Telegraph
Grant Shapps has said he was born in both London and Hertfordshire
"New Conservative Party chairman Grant Shapps was under fresh pressure last night over his alleged ‘double life’ after it was disclosed that he gave voters contradictory details about where he was born. When Mr Shapps was standing for a parliamentary seat in the capital, he wrote in his campaign literature that he was ‘a Londoner by birth’. But since his successful 2005 campaign to win Welwyn Hatfield, his leaflets have proudly declared that he was ‘born in Hertfordshire’." - Mail on Sunday
Jeremy Hunt in new "row" over bid to hire adviser from private health sector - Observer
Douglas Carswell MP: The West’s political and social model is in crisis
"The digital revolution will reinvigorate the West, lifting us out of our big-government-induced stupor. The West arose because Europe, unlike the empires of the Ming, the Mughals or the Ottomans, was never politically centralised. Europe progressed because no oligarchy could ever impose its idea of what progress should look like. Since the Treaty of Rome, Europe has stagnated because a centralised elite is trying to run a whole continent on the basis of blueprints. Maths and technology are about to do to the grand planners in the West what the collapse of Communism did to the socialist planners in the old Soviet bloc. We are about to be set free not only from the grand plans, but from the conceit of the grand planners." – Douglas Carswell MP for the Sunday Telegraph
Legal tourists are making a mockery of our legal system – Nick Cohen for the Observer
More than 20 MPs are risking hefty fines by illegally handling constituents’ personal data – The Sun on Sunday
Mitt Romney’s message is good – it just needs restating – Janet Daley for the Sunday Telegraph
British still giving hundreds of millions of pounds in aid to wealthy countries – Sunday Telegraph
Scottish teenagers say 'NO' to independence in blow for Salmond - Mail on Sunday
Living standards report shows bleak future of a divided Britain – Observer