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U.K. makes real progress
Local growth and closer to Westminster
By Mike Feinstein
International Committee
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The U.K. Greens' best hope for
Westminster: Brighton City Councillor Keith Taylor.
Courtesy U.K. Greens |
While much of the nation revolted from an election that failed to excite
voters, for Greens in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, the United
Kingdom's May 5 General Election represented a big step forward.
Greens campaigned on a platform of "Real Progress" and met several
of their strategic goals, including gaining more seats on the local level, and
moving closer to their first-ever seat in the House of Commons.
Greening local government
On the local government level, Real Progress meant focusing upon land use
planning, public transit, "localization" (local production for local
needs so as to strengthen local economies and reduce food miles), education and
the need for ethical, environment-friendly investment of pension funds.
This Green message apparently resonated with voters, as an all-time high of
71 Greens now hold elected office in England and Wales, up from 62 before May 5.
This includes By-Election (special election) victories in Norfolk and Kirklees
in the days following May 5. Greens now sit upon 30 different Principal
Authority councils-including districts, English counties, metropolitan and
London boroughs.
Overall, Greens in England and Wales fielded 604 candidates out of 2,385
seats being contested, up 50 percent from 401 candidates in 2001. The strongest
results came in Oxford, Lancaster, Norwich and Watford, including four new
county council seats in Oxfordshire. The success in Oxfordshire makes five seats
there in total, compared to nine for Labour. In Oxford itself, Greens hold seven
seats on the 47-member city council there.
Greens also won their first-ever seats in Northern Ireland, operating under
the Single Transferable Vote system, with District Council victories by
incumbent Brian Wilson, North Down (Bangor West)-who switched to the Green Party
earlier this year-as well as Bill Corry, Down (Downpatrick) and Ciaran Mussen,
Newry & Mourne (Crotlieve).
Party co-leaders John Barry and Kelly Andrew also turned in strong
performances, but were squeezed out in final counts for North Down seats, Barry
being defeated by a well-orchestrated transfer campaign by Ulster Unionists.
Westminster bound?
According to Peter Cranie, party election co-coordinator, the Green goal for the
election for the House of Commons was "to secure an authentic Green voice
in the Commons at this General Election or at the very latest the one after, so
that the establishment parties can be held to account in the public spotlight
over climate change and other issues."
The party's best Westminster hope, Brighton Pavilion City Councilor Keith
Taylor, received 22 percent in a four-way race, only 1.9 percent behind the
Tories for second place. These results come in a district where Greens also
received 27 percent in the 2004 European Parliament elections, and have six
members on the 54-member Brighton & Hove City Council, where they also hold
the balance of power.
Taylor took this as affirmation about how voters see Greens in government:
"The message is clear; Greens are radical, electable and effective, and
where they are in office, people want more."
Running sitting Green councilors in each, the party doubled its vote in the
targeted constituencies of Brighton Pavilion, Norwich South and Lewisham
Deptford-making it a "four horse race" with the Conservatives, Liberal
Democrats and Labour in these constituencies for the first time-and in Brighton
Pavilion, actually finishing ahead of one of the other three for the first time
ever in a Westminster race.
In Scotland, Greens contested 19 Westminster seats, saw their average percentage
of the vote rise across all 19 after only contesting four in 2001, and saw party
membership grow by 10 percent. In Glasgow North, their 7.7 percent was the fifth
highest for Greens across the entire U.K., and they also experienced success in
parts of Edinburgh, the capital.
Scottish Greens argued to cancel the proposed M74 extension in the heart of
Glasgow and instead redirect funding to boost production of renewable energy.
They also sought to regulate supermarkets, as party co-convener and Member of
Scottish Parliament Shiona Baird explained, "to limit the damage being done
to community-based food production by their purchasing power."
Nationwide, U.K. Greens contested 202 Westminster constituencies out of 646
(31.3 percent), with England leading with 172/529, followed by Scotland 19/59,
Wales 11/40 and Northern Ireland 0/18. This represented a 40 percent rise from
145 constituencies in 2001 and a more than doubling of the 95 in 1997. Overall
Greens received 283,486 votes, up from 166,626 in 2001 and 64,021 in 1997.
Electoral reform
Despite U.K. Green success in 2005, the lack of proportional representation for
the House of Commons elections continued to frustrate the party by understating
their strength, particularly the anti-war vote, for which they were the
strongest critics of the Bush-Blair alliance around Iraq. As Cranie observed
after the election, "Britain will have no Green voice during its G8 nor E.U.
presidencies, nor politicians who-at this climactic crunch time-are committed to
combating global warming or will counteract U.S. military aggression."
U.K. Greens have called for a change in the electoral system before. But what
gives them hope this time is that their voice is being joined by millions of
other unrepresented voters. Support for reform ranges from the Liberal Democrats
(whose own electoral representation has also been historically understated) to
anti-war voters frustrated with the lesser-of-evil choice between Blair and the
Tories, to even the Tories themselves, who, after sustaining a "bloody
nose" because of the electoral system (209 seats with 33 percent of the
vote, compared to 356 seats for Labour with just 37 percent of the vote),
realize that that they must fight for proportional representation just to
survive.
Under the British system, parties have to pay a deposit of £500 ($925) per
candidate, which they only get back if they receive 5 percent or more of the
vote. In 2004, Greens saved 24 deposits in England and three in Scotland, after
saving only 10 between the two in 2001. But despite this relative
"success," they still lost 175 deposits and £87,500 ($161,875) just
to participate in elections.
The People's Party
Despite the shortcomings of Britain's electoral system, 2005 nevertheless
represented a significant step forward for U.K. Greens, and continues their
steady period of growth over recent years.
U.K. Greens first began organizing in 1973 as the People's Party, in response to
the publication of Teddy Goldsmith's Blueprint for Survival. In 1979 the
People's Party became the Ecology Party and in 1985 became the Green Party. In
1989, U.K. Greens received 14.9 percent for European Parliament, at that time
the highest percentage for any Green Party in the world. Today there are more
elected Greens in more influential positions across the U.K. than ever before.
Two Greens are members of the European Parliament (Caroline Lucas and Jean
Lambert) and seven sit in the Scottish Parliament (led by party co-convener
Robin Harper). Among the 71 Greens on Principal Authority councils, two are
members in the Greater London Assembly. U.K. Greens are also part of a ruling
coalition, or otherwise hold a "cabinet" position in Castle Morpeth,
Kirklees, Lancaster and Leeds, and they have the balance of power in Oxford.
Greens also sit on English parish and town and Welsh community councils. In
addition a Green Party peer sits in the House of Lords. And in July the
Association of U.K. Green Councillors will hold its Annual General Meeting and
further network these elected officials.
For more information about Greens in the United Kingdom, go to www.greenparty.org.uk.
"Real Progress": platform summary from the U.K. Greens' 2005 general
election campaign
Greening the Economy
Real Progress is investment in our communities, and economics as if people
mattered.
Sub-issues:
Budget
GATS
Globalization
Privatization & Public Services
WTO
The Euro
Technology
Learning for Life
Real Progress is education that allows us all to live our dreams,
publicly-funded for the public good.
Health and Wellbeing
Real Progress is health care free at the point of use, and policies that not
only heal, but cure the causes of sickness.
Sub-issues:
Fluoridation
GM/Genetics
Zero Waste and Incinerators
Phone Masts
Drugs
Reliable, Inclusive Transport
Real Progress is cheaper, easy-to-use public transport.
Sub-issues:
Aviation
Climate Change
Fuel Crisis
Peace, Justice and Security
Real Progress would be a safer Britain in an equitable, peaceful world.
Sub-issues:
Iraq
September 11th/War on Terror
Asylum
Nuclear
Human Rights
Bombing of Yugoslavia 1999
Defense
Development
Women
Home and Community
Real Progress is a safe, warm, affordable place to call home, in a community we
cherish.
Sub-issue:
Crime
Food We Can Trust
Real Progress is healthy local food, with more jobs, environmental excellence
and strong rural economies.
Sub-issues:
Fluoridation
Foot & Mouth
GM/Genetics
Clean Green Energy
Real Progress is safe energy, (em)-powering our lives, creating more jobs and
protecting us from climate change.
Sub-issues:
Aviation
Climate Change
Reliable, Inclusive Transport
Zero Waste and Incinerators
Nuclear
Animal Rights
Real Progress would be a society that cared about the treatment of animals.
Sub-issue:
Foot & Mouth
By the People, For the People
Real Progress would be government as the servant, not the master.
Sub-issues:
Asylum
Earth Summit 2002
Firefighters' Dispute 2002/3
Politics
Gibraltar
Back to Summer 2005
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