I am no Green. I believe in coal and in nuclear power, employing trade union members while safeguarding the Union and its independence. One Nation, indeed. But this, by Tim Wigmore, is well worth reading:
As exotic locations go, a Coventry solicitors’
office does not rank very highly. Yet the motley group who met there 40 years
ago tomorrow live on. What these 43 people created in 1973 is now established
as the UK’s fourth biggest political party.
Affording such status to the Green Party may
ignore Ukip’s current surge. But Ukip would crave UK political representation
to match that of the Greens. The Green Party has 141 councillors, nearly four
times as many as Ukip’s 39. While former party leader Caroline Lucas won
Brighton Pavilion to become the first Green MP at the last general election,
Ukip leader Nigel Farage, running against only John Bercow of the main three
parties, was beaten by an independent candidate dressed as a dolphin.
So, after two name changes and much mockery, the
Greens have achieved something tangible. Where they have had success, it has
come from recognising that no election is too small; the party’s development in
Brighton serves as a model of local politics at its best. Years of campaigning
and gaining councillors – and then control of the council – culminated in
Lucas’s election in 2010. A similar strategy has led to electoral dividends in
Norwich, where the Greens have 15 councillors and could gain their second MP in
2015.
Despite these successes, the party should feel
frustration too. Progress since the general election could generously be
described as anaemic. The anti-establishment streak of Lib Dem voters
disillusioned with the coalition should be prime Green targets. But the Greens
aren’t even fielding a candidate in Eastleigh, saying they will concentrate on
the county council elections instead.
In great contrast to Ukip, they have barely
impacted upon the national debate. While the Greens might justifiably complain
that they have been featured less on programmes like Question
Time, Ukip have, through persistence and Farage’s zeal, used their
media showings to steer the public debate.
The Greens' failure has been in not creating a
clear, easily understandable link between their ideas and solutions to
Britain’s problems. People may not agree with Ukip’s solution of leaving the
EU; at least everyone understands it. Until it can resolve this problem, the
perception of the party as the preserve of the middle-class will remain.
Yet for all that the Greens must envy Ukip’s prominence
in political discourse, so Ukip long for representation to rival theirs - and
above all a Westminster presence. To Greens that – and the knowledge of how far
they have come from that Coventry meeting – must be worthy of a birthday toast.
No comments:
Post a Comment