Yorkshire Post

We want to be Britain’s third political party, say new leaders of Greens

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THE NEW co-leaders of the Greens voiced their ambition to become Britain’s “third political party”, after their election by a landslide in a ballot of members.

The election of Jonathan Bartley and Sian Berry means the Greens in England and Wales will continue with a joint leadership, after Mr Bartley and the party’s only MP Caroline Lucas shared the helm for the past two years.

The pair easily saw off challenges from rivals, scooping 6,239 of the 8,379 votes cast, against 1,466 for Shahrar Ali and 495 for Leslie Rowe.

Amelia Womack was re-elected for a third term as deputy leader, taking 3,981 out of 7,369 votes.

The new co-leaders pledged to put the party on course to supplant the Liberal Democrats and Scottish National Party to be “the third political party in Britain”, and aim to get a Green into every council chamber.

Mr Bartley said: “We’re proud to lead a party with a track record on the right side of history and are ready to mobilise a fiercer Green resistance than ever before.

“When faced with the environmen­tal destructio­n of fracking or the spiralling costs of HS2, or the inhumanity of indefinite detention and forced removals of refugees and migrants, we are not afraid to join protesters putting their bodies on the line for what is right.”

Ms Berry said yesterday: “With Brexit on the horizon and our planet burning, the last thing people need is the stale centrism of the past, which brought us austerity and privatisat­ion and totally failed to tackle climate breakdown or give people real security and quality of life.

“The Green Party is the opposite of vapid, old school centrist politics.”

 ?? PICTURES: PA WIRE. ?? GREEN SHOOTS: Newly joint Green Party leaders, Sian Berry and Jonathan Bartley outside the party’s London HQ.
PICTURES: PA WIRE. GREEN SHOOTS: Newly joint Green Party leaders, Sian Berry and Jonathan Bartley outside the party’s London HQ.

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