Could This Be the Green Party’s Second MP?
The new co-leader wants to be ready for when
‘something snaps’.
25 January 2022
While rarely mentioned in the national media – understandably given the wider circumstances – these are exciting times for the Green party of England and Wales. Since 2018 the party has tripled its number of councillors, while Greens triumphed in more council by-elections last year than any of the big three.
Polls regularly show the Greens above 5% for Westminster elections (the party’s best performance was 3.8% in 2015) and even occasionally ahead of the Liberal Democrats. The party’s membership – which is at an all-time high of 53,000 – can also draw inspiration from events north of the border: last May the Scottish Greens entered a power-sharing agreement with the SNP, marking the first time that Greens are in government anywhere in the UK.
Yet despite
all of this – and the prospect of more gains in forthcoming local elections –
the party’s main challenge is whether it can add to its solitary Westminster
seat of Brighton Pavilion. Without that the Greens will remain a minnow on the
national stage.
If Brighton MP Caroline Lucas is to be joined in parliament after the next time of asking it will almost certainly be by Carla Denyer, recently elected as the party’s co-leader and one of twenty-four greens on Bristol city council. After coming second in 2019, Denyer hopes to overturn Labour in Bristol West, where Thangam Debonnaire presently enjoys a majority of 28,000.
Before entering politics Denyer was an engineer in the renewables industry. While she found her job rewarding, it became increasingly clear that change of sufficient scale would have to come from elsewhere. “In the renewables industry I was doing good work”, Denyer tells me outside Bambalan, a cafe near the city’s College Green, “but [that was] only one wind turbine at a time. Politics was the barrier.”
While Labour
recruits from lawyers, lobbyists and even the occasional trade unionist,
leading Greens are more likely to herald from the sciences. Sian Berry, a
London Assembly member, studied metallurgy; Amelia Womack, the party’s deputy
leader, has a degree in environmental science. Natalie Bennett, now in the Lords, studied agricultural science before entering
journalism; and Caroline Russell, another London Assembly member, trained as an
engineer. The cliche of greens as idealists and hippies, particularly when it comes to the party’s leading figures, couldn’t be
more wrong. Their politics result from their commitment
to empiricism or, in the parlance of the Covid-19 zeitgeist, “following the
science”.
Does this also mean
that Denyer’s approach to running the party, and winning that vaunted second
seat, resembles an engineer quantifying variables and outcomes? Denyer laughs
before conceding the point, although she is keen to highlight the role of her
co-leader, Adrian Ramsay, in making the party more effective. Ramsay was deputy leader when
Caroline Lucas won in Brighton Pavilion 12 years ago, and Denyer claims the
massive increase in Green councillors – the party now has more than 460 – is
the result of a campaigning strategy he “largely developed”.
The Corbynite
canard, that the Greens might operate as a ‘Ukip of the left’, pushing Labour in
a more radical direction, is viewed as secondary by Denyer, who points to the
climate emergency motion Bristol Council passed in 2018 – one of the first in
the world. “Labour helped pass it but are making decisions now that means we
won’t meet the target,” she tells me. Exemplifying that is a ‘zero carbon airport’ touted
by Labour mayor Marvin Rees: suffice to say the planes will still burn fossil
fuels. Denyer thinks some Labour politicians “get” the climate crisis but the
majority, presumably including Rees, do
not. For Keir Starmer’s party the issue is something to manage, an appendage
to real politics, for Greens, it’s their driving mission.
Denyer seemingly embodies her own politics, arriving to meet me by bus wearing
a Patagonia raincoat – a brand much loved by eco-friendly millennial hipsters.
She is also vegan.
When I ask
if that means the party can win five Westminster seats by 2030, as touted by Caroline Lucas, Denyer responds in the
affirmative. By virtue of their analysis of the climate crisis, which will only
get worse, Greens don’t expect predictability – something which could mean
productive relationships with movements such as the youth climate strike.
Denyer recently told the New Statesman that the party must take advantage
of “future Green waves to come” and she frequently reminds me that the Greens
are a “young party”. One can’t avoid the sense she views her leadership as a
staging post for an organisation thinking in decades rather than months. “I’m
just grateful to stand on the shoulders of so many greens in the past”, she
tells me, adding how her relative success would be impossible without her party
forebears. The ecological perspective is inherently long-term, something Denyer
brings to her politics. As we enter the city’s conference hall, whose walls are
etched with the name of every Bristolian mayor since the 13th century, she
eagerly points to the name Cleo Lake, the former green councillor who became
Lord Mayor in 2017. Rather than a mediatised flash in the pan Denyer, like her
party, wants to imbricate green values within the very fabric of the city. And
one day the country too.
By comparison,
Denyer is notably upbeat on Labour’s shift to the right under Starmer. “As far
as I’m concerned they [Labour] joined us on [issues like] anti-austerity,
public services and being pro-immigration for a few years and then went back to
where they were”. Many, who like Denyer were politicised by the Iraq War and
disagreed with both major parties on austerity, joined Labour under Corbyn. For the Green leader that was
always destined to be a temporary
blip. If she is right, and her own party continues to grow, it poses questions
for socialists and social democrats in places like Bristol where the Greens can
win. Importantly for Denyer, voting Green in Bristol West is a ‘risk-free
choice’: the Tories finished a distant third in 2019.
But given the size
of Debonnaire’s majority is winning the constituency remotely plausible? More
than one might initially think. After all, Labour has only held the seat since
2015 and that same year the Greens finished just 5,000 votes behind it (a majority
which increased to 37,000 in 2017). Yet Denyer thinks she can go one step
further than the Greens of seven years ago, stressing that she had only been a
candidate for three months in 2019. Today, by contrast, the Greens have built a
ground campaign over several years, and the local political context is
strikingly different. This is more than just speculation: last year the Greens
went from 11 seats on the City council to 24. Labour, meanwhile, lost 13
councillors – meaning the parties are now tied and the council is in no overall control. But critically for Denyer, the Greens
amassed twice as many votes in the wards which comprise the Bristol West
constituency. When she talks about “an appetite for green policies” in the
seat, the evidence is incontrovertible: last year 16 of the 19 councillors
elected in Bristol West were from the Green party. Only three were from Labour.
While it is often
difficult to discern what politicians want to do with power (other than keep
it) Denyer proffers an immediate response when I ask what her priority is. A green new deal is
“urgent” she tells me, with tackling climate change “in a socially just way,
creating lots of sustainable, well-paid, unionised jobs” the only way to
address the challenge with adequate public buy-in. “Labour’s version is very
much a green new deal light. It is an industrial strategy rather than looking
at the whole of society,” she says. Indeed, green infrastructure remains
arguably the only radical policy Starmer has maintained since becoming leader –
if he shifts away from that, as he has with public ownership and party
democracy, it will provide a further boon to the Greens.
Alongside a
meaningful green new deal, Denyer adds electoral reform, insinuating that if
the Greens were ever needed in some kind of confidence and supply arrangement –
unlikely until at least those five seats materialise – then adoption of
proportional representation would be a precondition. She is sufficiently
informed about Labour politics to note Unite the union have changed their view
on the issue, supporting PR since October. With Labour’s
membership increasingly focused on the matter, but the leadership not
listening, pushing PR could offer the Green’s another advantage at the next
general election.
In spite of first past the post, the Greens face a host of opportunities in Britain’s volatile political landscape. Their expectation is some Labour voters will back them as a party of anti-austerity and public services, while disenchanted shire Tories, particularly as the Johnson administration enters a tailspin, are attracted by a message of conservation and community action. Over the rest of this decade we can likely expect many more Green councillors to be elected, with 2021 possibly viewed as something of a rubicon. But for the party to become a genuine national force, it needs that second seat. It’s a tall order but Bristol West, despite an enormous Labour majority, is no mission impossible. After all, this is the city where Colston was toppled and unicorns stand aloft above city hall.
Aaron Bastani is a
Novara Media contributing editor and co-founder.
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