Home

Greens vote on leader

Caroline Lucas and Ashley GunstockCaroline Lucas and Ashley Gunstock

Friday, 05, Sep 2008 02:16

The Green party are voting to elect their first ever leader tonight at the start of the party conference.

The first contender is Caroline Lucas, the party's female principal speaker and Green MEP for south-east England. You can read politics.co.uk's interview with Green leadership candidate Caroline Lucas here.

The second is Ashley Gunstock, former star of The Bill and Green candidate for Leyton and Wanstead. You can read politics.co.uk's interview with Green leadership candidate Ashley Gunstock here.

"The election of a leadership team offers us new and exciting opportunities to take the radical message of Green politics into the mainstream – where it belongs," Ms Lucas said.

"The need for Green political influence has never been so urgent, and never has there been so much at stake. I would regard it as a major part of my role to communicate that even more effectively."

Up to now the party has had two principle speakers – one male, one female – but party members voted to change the system by 73 per cent in a referendum last November.

The gender balance aspect of the leadership has been retained however. The leadership election vote is counted first and if a woman is selected, for instance, only male candidates will be counted in the election for deputy leader which follows.

This could prove a problem if Ashley Gunstock wins the leadership, because the only candidate for deputy leader is male councillor Adrian Ramsay.

Caroline Lucas is the clear favourite to win the leadership, however.

The new leader is expected to make a speech to the party tomorrow afternoon.

The Green party are pushing to secure their first member of parliament, for Brighton Pavilion, in the coming general election.


What do you think ?

Name 

Town/Country 

Your email 

Your comment 

Enter the text shown to the right

New jobs channel

The new look politics.co.uk now includes a jobs channel, where you can search for jobs and sign up for our jobs bulletin.

Newsletter

Sign up to politics.co.uk’s daily newsletter and you’ll never miss a key political story again

Opinion Formers

Electoral Reform Society

The Electoral Reform Society is a voluntary organisation that campaigns for a better democracy, particularly through changes to our electoral system.

Public Affairs Jobs

Check out politics.co.uk's new jobs section, for government, public sector and public affairs roles

Current Vacancies:

Related News

Lib Dems eye £20bn in efficiency savings

The Liberal Democrats hope to identify £20 billion of tax savings from current public spending, campaigns chair Ed Davey says.

Ed Davey made the comments in a pre-conference briefing

Related Analysis

Analysis: Glenrothes result

Labour are resurgent. The SNP train has hit a brick wall. But what does Glenrothes mean for UK politics?

Analysis: Glenrothes result

Latest Headlines

No warrant issued for Green search

Commons speaker Michael Martin has sparked outrage from MPs after admitting he was not told police planned to search shadow immigration minister Damian Green's parliamentary office.

Speaker Michael Martin said he was only officially told of Damian Green's arrest yesterday

Issue briefs

Labour Leadership

What is the Labour leadership? The Labour party leader heads the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP) and is appointed as prime minister when the party holds a majority in the House of Commons.

Speakers Corner