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 leader
Jo Grimond (who was president of the Radical Reform Group in the late 1950s) was to call for. ==Rejoining the Liberal Party==