Sunderland Echo

‘No coalition with the Tories’

- Kevin Clark kevin.clark@jpimedia.co.uk @kevinclark­jpi

Green councillor­s will not form a coalition with the Conservati­ves if Labour loses control of Sunderland City Council at this year’s local elections, the party’s coleader has said.

Carla Denyer was speaking as she visited Sunderland to meet with party activists and candidates on a whistlesto­p tour of the region ahead of May’s council elections.

She was commenting in the wake of comments from Sunderland Tory leader Cllr An tony Mullen earlier this month on the possibilit­y of the council slipping into No Overall Control after the elections in May.

Cllr Mullen told the Financial Times his party was working closely with the Liberal Democrats to oust sitting Labour members, and also referred to the Greens ‘helping strategica­lly target Labour seats’.

Ms Denyer confirmed that the party was feeling confident about May’s vote–but was adam ant that while its councillor­s would be willing to work with others on individual issues, they would not form a coalition with the Tories in the event of Labour losing its majority.

"We obviously are aiming to get Green candidates elected and it is true we are campaignin­g hard in some areas to do that but the Green sin Sunderland would not go into coalition with the Tories,” she said.

“We would work with other parties on specific issues. It is not about forming a coalition, it is about working together on particular votes where they agree, then opposing when they disagree.”

Asked why voters should back her party rather than their usual choice, she said: “Greens can offer a fresher and more independen­t perspectiv­e, I think.

"The council is so dominatedb­y Labour here that it can be a bit stuck in its ways and suggestion­s to do things differentl­y aren’t always received constructi­vely.

“One of the things that is different about the Greens is we don’t tell our councillor­s how to vote, which means they can represent residents’ concerns rather than just voting how the national party wants them to."

The party has already won one seat on Sunderland City Council. Dom Armstrong wa selected to the Washington South seat in 2019 but re signed last year after becoming ‘increasing­ly uneasy’ over the party’s stance on women’s rights.

Carla Denyer said his victory demonstrat­ed that the party could win on Wearside –‘ it shows that it is possible because it has already been done once,’ she said.

The party is putting candidates up in every ward across the city in May but is particular­ly pinning its hopes on Silksworth and candidate Chris Crozier: “I don’t want to be cocky, but I think we have got a really good chance here,” said Ms Denyer.

“The responses we are getting on the doorstep are that a lot of people are very openminded, they have already heard good things about Chris Crozier and the hard work he has done for the community and a lot of people are considerin­g voting Green for the first time.

“We have got a complete slate but Chris is the candidate we think is most likely to get in .”

 ?? ?? Green Party co-leader Carla Denyer with Silksworth candidate Chris Crozier.
Green Party co-leader Carla Denyer with Silksworth candidate Chris Crozier.

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