The article below was jointly written by Caroline Lucas MP, Cllr Phelim MacCafferty (convenor of the Brighton Green Groupof councillors) and Tom Druit (Chair of Brighton and Hove Green Party) on the eve of the Labour Party Conference. Their focus is ways in which Greens and Labour could work together on a local basis in terms of common commitments.
The article was first published in the Brighton and Hove Independent LINK
The article was first published in the Brighton and Hove Independent LINK
Jeremy
Corbyn’s election as the leader of the Labour Party is good news for
progressive politics. For the first time in living memory, the Labour
Party is led by someone willing to challenge the political and economic
consensus. It’s particularly encouraging to see a Labour leader in place
who rejects the so-called “logic” that says everything around us should
be bought and sold on the free market.
For
us, as local representatives, Corbyn’s election presents us with a
possibility to work across party lines for the very best for people in
Brighton and Hove. In parliament, there is the chance for Labour MPs to
be part of a serious opposition to the government’s pernicious attacks
on the welfare state, their short-sighted slashing of renewable energy
subsidies, and their economically-illiterate austerity programme.
Locally,
there is an opportunity for Labour and the Greens to work together. The
flourishing of the People’s Republic of Brighton and Hove shows that
the majority of people in this city reject the Tories and yearn for a
new start where all progressives work together. By doing so, we can
reject austerity, rising inequality, and the relentless attack on the
poor – and we can work together towards a fairer, more sustainable
society.
As
Greens, we won’t hesitate to express our support for Corbyn’s policies
when we agree with them. In the face of attack from the mainstream media
– and with few friends in the political establishment – he will need
all the support he can get when articulating the bold policies upon
which we agree.
Our
challenge to Labour in Brighton and Hove is to dare to live up to what
Corbyn’s win means. When Labour are bold and when they stand up for the
voiceless, we will support them. We could start by standing together to
safeguard council tax relief for the poorest.
We
will stand side by side with Labour in voting to rid our country of
nuclear weapons, calling for a fair deal for public-sector workers, and
trying to protect people from the spiralling cost of rent. In Brighton,
politicians from across the political spectrum should support
long-suffering train passengers by calling for the railways to be
brought back into public hands.
Politics
is starting to change from the ground up. To ensure that change is
meaningful and long-lasting, we need to transform radically our
democratic structures – redistributing wealth must go hand in hand with
redistributing power. In the Green Party, we are committed to leadership
as the honest sharing of power, to organising locally, and to working
co-operatively. To this end, it is encouraging to see that Corbyn has
appointed Jon Trickett to lead for Labour on constitutional reform – and
that the trade unions voted last week to support the growing campaign
for reform of our anti-democratic electoral system.
Greens
won’t always agree with Corbyn’s Labour – and when we don’t we will say
so. More important, however, is our role in moving beyond Labour’s
policies and calling for the radical overhaul of the political and
economic system that lies at the heart of the social and environmental
injustices we face. That means working with local communities that are
already demonstrating it’s possible and positive to do things very
differently, from neighbourhood planning and housing cooperatives to
community-owned renewable energy and social enterprises. It means
reaffirming our vision of an economy that provides enough for everyone –
but doesn’t require people to work all of the hours of the day to stand
even a chance of feeding their families.
Greens
will continue to act on the belief at the heart of our politics: it’s
only by tackling climate change and environmental degradation that we
will secure our future prosperity, and security for our children and
grandchildren. Recent events, of increasingly-extreme weather events
across the globe, flooding in the UK – and the global refugee crisis –
show the urgent need for Green policies.
The
tide of progressive politics and ideas is surging, and it’s refreshing
to see policies that many of the ideas Greens have promoted for decades
now being articulated by a leader of the Labour Party. The Green Party
will continue to show people that we offer a radical alternative to
business-as-usual – but that we’re open to working with others to
further our shared goals, and we believe politics is better when we do.
This
could be the beginning of the end of partisan politics and the
flourishing of a people’s movement that goes beyond political parties.
We must not let this opportunity pass us by.