Advanced | Help | Encyclopedia
Directory


Green Party of England and Wales

Green Party
Leader None. Caroline Lucas MEP and Cllr Keith Taylor are Principal Speakers
Founded 1993
Headquarters 1a Waterlow Road
London N19 5NJ
Political Ideology Green
International Affiliation Global Greens
European Affiliation European Greens
European Parliament Group Greens-EFA
Colours Green
Website http://www.greenparty.org.uk
See also Politics of the U.K.

Political parties
Elections

The Green Party of England and Wales emerged as a distinct party in the 1990s.

The Green Party had been formed in 1973 as PEOPLE/the Ecology Party, with the first edition of the Manifesto for a Sustainable Society as its statement of philosophy and policies. The party became formally the Green Party in the 1980s. In the 1990s, the Scottish and Northern Ireland wings of the Green Party in the United Kingdom decided to separate amicably from the party in England and Wales, to form the Scottish Green Party and the Green Party in Northern Ireland. The Wales Green Party became an autonomous regional party, and remained within the Green Party of England and Wales.

The all-UK party enjoyed a brief spell of success in the late 1980s. At the 1989 European Elections the Green Party won 2 million votes, and received 15% of the overall vote. European elections in the UK were then run on a first past the post basis and therefore the party failed to gain any seats. Mainstream political parties were alarmed however by the Green Party's election performance and adopted some "Green policies" in an attempt to counter the threat.

However due to internal divisions over the direction of the party in the early 1990s, the Green Party fell out of the limelight and failed to maintain its electoral momentum. Due to this the party has not been able to repeat the successes it achieved in the 1980s, nor has it been able to match the success of Green parties in some other parts of Western Europe. Britain's first-past-the-post electoral system has often been blamed for this.

The Green Party has not succeeded, as of 2004, in returning Members of Parliament – which must win under first-past-the-post – but it has 63 local councillors elected – gaining 10 during the 2004 local elections. The recent introduction of proportional representation for European elections means that it has two elected Members of the European Parliament (MEPs), Dr. Caroline Lucas (South East England; [1]) and Jean Lambert (London; [2]). They retained their seats in the 2004 European elections, despite a reduction in number of seats available.

Part of the green politics series

Green issues


Worldwide green parties: Global Greens · European Greens · Asia-Pacific Green Network


Global Greens Charter: ecological wisdom · social justice · participatory democracy · nonviolence · sustainability · respect diversity

edit this box
Green Party conference, 2004

Also elected by proportional representation is the London Assembly; it has two Green Party members, out of 25. These are Darren Johnson and Jenny Jones. The Green Party of England and Wales has one member of the (unelected) House of Lords, the Upper Chamber of Parliament, Lord Beaumont of Whitley.

The Green Party has been careful not to have a "leader"; its organization provides for two Principal Speakers, a man and a woman. The current Principal Speakers are Caroline Lucas and Keith Taylor. Taylor, a councillor in Brighton and Hove, was elected in 2004 after the death of Mike Woodin.

See also

External links

Political Parties of the United Kingdom

Labour

Conservative

Liberal Democrats

Green and
Scottish Green

Ulster Unionist

Democratic Unionist

Sinn Féin

Social Democratic
& Labour

Scottish National

UK Independence

Plaid Cymru
The Party of Wales

Scottish Socialist







Links: Addme | Keyword Research | Paid Inclusion | Femail | Software | Completive Intelligence

Add URL | About Slider | FREE Slider Toolbar - Simply Amazing
Copyright © 2000-2008 Slider.com. All rights reserved.
Content is distributed under the GNU Free Documentation License.