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Lib Dem peer would take Brown job | Lib Dem peer would take Brown job |
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Liberal Democrat peer Shirley Williams has said she is willing to be Gordon Brown's nuclear proliferation adviser "subject to conditions". | Liberal Democrat peer Shirley Williams has said she is willing to be Gordon Brown's nuclear proliferation adviser "subject to conditions". |
She told the BBC she would accept the prime minister's offer, as long as she is allowed to retain her independence. | She told the BBC she would accept the prime minister's offer, as long as she is allowed to retain her independence. |
She also said she wanted the "right to criticise government policy". | She also said she wanted the "right to criticise government policy". |
Mr Brown has pledged to "reach out beyond narrow party interest" but was rejected when he offered former Lib Dem leader Lord Ashdown a Cabinet post. | Mr Brown has pledged to "reach out beyond narrow party interest" but was rejected when he offered former Lib Dem leader Lord Ashdown a Cabinet post. |
Baroness Williams, who left Labour in the early 1980s as one of the founders of the Social Democratic Party, has said at no stage was she offered a ministerial post. | |
Talking on BBC News 24's "Straight Talk With Andrew Neil", Lady Williams said she backed calls for the eventual abolition of nuclear weapons. | Talking on BBC News 24's "Straight Talk With Andrew Neil", Lady Williams said she backed calls for the eventual abolition of nuclear weapons. |
And she said there needed to be "a clear commitment by the nuclear powers that they'll move towards a substantial reduction". | And she said there needed to be "a clear commitment by the nuclear powers that they'll move towards a substantial reduction". |
Britain's Trident missile system and the Vanguard submarines which carry them need replacing by 2024. | |
Mr Brown angered some Labour MPs last year by signalling he wanted to replace Britain's "independent nuclear deterrent". | |
In March the government won MPs support to renew Trident, despite a large Labour rebellion. Tony Blair argued that it was "essential for our security in an uncertain world". |