Didn't you vote against the Sexual Orientation Regulations?
I don't think I did. I think in 2007 or 08...
On the 2007 law, you did. It's where that protection comes from. You cited your ‘extreme liberal point of view' at the time.
Well, I've changed my position since then.
My take on stuff like the cake issue, which was not live at that point, and the B&B issue, which had become live – it is un-Christian to turn people away from your establishment. You should not, if you offer services, be in the situation where you are discriminating.
The issue about the Equality Act stuff – it's about who has got the right to silence certain people... Tolerance is not about putting up with people you agree with. You don't tolerate those people – it's about co-existing with people you really don't agree with.
We had an amendment that I think was defeated, which tried to deal with some of the issues about protections. My recollection is that amendment was not accepted – I could not therefore support the [Sexual Orientation] regulations.
The bottom line is in a free society we need to protect individuals' right to say what they wish, so long as it doesn't anybody's freedom.
There was a lot in it. The issue more generally is that we'd made some clarifications about conscience, which was not about preaching hatred but respecting individual doctrines.
Do you regret the way you voted?
I joined the Liberals in 1986, Section 28 was introduced in 1987. It was a major driver for me, I went on the demos against that. You look at the issues of the past 25 years – civil partnership, age of consent – I've actively campaigned on the right side on all those things.
I regret anything that gives people the wrong impression.
What I believe as a Liberal... Charlie Hebdo is a powerful reminder. You've got to remember this is a newspaper that had a picture of a leading French politician who is a black woman depicted as a monkey on the front page. My French is not good, but Je Suis Ne Pas Charlie.
However, I stand with them for their right to be offensive, to take satire to its absolute limits. Freedom and tolerance is not about us all agreeing with each other – it's about bloody-mindedly defending one another's rights to be different.
I would very strongly refute that I voted in a way which is anti-gay. If you're in opposition, you're there to test. The LD record is to be a constructive opposition – you put down amendments, you probe, otherwise you get crap legislation. It's right to do that.