Sean Thompson is a former member of the Green Party and Green Left, who left the Green Party to join Left Unity. Ahead of LU's November Conference he has written an article about the organisation's relationship with the Green Party.
He has given me permission to publish this as a Guest Blog. I do this to encourage debate. I do not endorse everything he says but I do think he raises some important issues for both Left Unity and the Green Party.
Two resolutions to our national conference in November mention the Green Party; one calls for
‘structured collaboration… between serious forces on the left at the 2015 election, including the Green Party’, while the other states that
‘we will not call for a vote for… the middle class Greens’
Clearly, we need to get our act together and decide on the sort of
relationship we want to develop with the Green Party. In my view, it is
essential that we not only have a realistic understanding of the
party’s politics and its support base, but that we develop a positive
(but critical) working relationship with them wherever we can.
It’s only a bit more than eighteen months since our Ken, appearing on
BBC’s Question Time, said that what Britain needed was a ‘UKIP of the
Left’ and so kick-started the initiative that was to become Left Unity a
few months later. However, since May it has started to look more and
more as if it is the Green Party which is beginning to match that
description. Membership of the Green Party of England and Wales (GPEW)
is booming: it now stands at around 23,000 – a near 60% increase since
the beginning of this year. Membership of the Young Greens (party
members under 30 or full time students) has more than doubled over the
same period and now stands at over 8,000. In the week since the TV
companies announced that UKIP would be invited to take part in the
election debates between the party leaders next May but that the Greens
would not be, the party received an incredible 2,000 membership
applications and in five days an online petition demanding its inclusion
in the debates received over 185,000 signatures. Given our very modest
size and limited visibility and the utter irrelevance of all the old far
left sects and (except for a couple of areas) TUSC, the Green Party is
increasingly being seen as the only alternative to the left of Labour.