Why we should take the Green Party seriously

Sean Thompson gives his view of what Left Unity’s position should be on the Greens

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.

There is no point in our trying to deny it: the Green Party is certainly now a party of the left and is even – somewhat fuzzily – anti-capitalist. Caroline Lucas has said on TV that she is proud of the party’s ‘socialist traditions’ and both she and the party’s current leader, Natalie Bennet, have publicly said that they are comfortable with being described as ‘watermelons’ (green on the outside but red on the inside; the epithet thrown at socialists in the party by right-wingers and the title of Green Left’s conference bulletin). There is little in its formal list of policies that any of us would take violent exception to; the party is opposed to Trident and NATO, and in favour of the renationalisation of the railways and public ownership of buses, water, gas and electricity. It is opposed to the privatisation of the NHS and its education policy is all but identical with the NUT’s. It is opposed to current anti-trade union laws and the proposed TTIP and supports the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign against Israel. Oh, and in addition to publicly supporting the People’s Assembly Against Austerity, the party supports CAMRA’s Beer Drinkers and Pub Goers Charter! In other words, most of the time we agree with each other on most things.

However, its politics are syncretic and impressionistic, having developed out of and still marked to some degree by, a narrow and moralistic environmentalism. The nearest thing it has to a clear statement of political position is its ‘Philosophical Basis’ document, 3,000 mind numbing words of well meaning flannel. As a result, the party’s politics are to a large degree built on sentiment rather than rigorous analysis. This is compounded by the fact the the party has a very weak tradition of organised internal debate (apart from its six monthly conferences) and no tradition at all of political education.

The political strategy of the Green Party is based on the unspoken assumption that politics is virtually entirely about fighting elections and political success is entirely about winning them. Thus the whole structure of the party, such as it is, is organised as a rough approximation of an election machine which apes the three major parties. In those areas where the party is organised enough, its activities are for the most part confined to fighting elections and in between, preparing for the next one by distributing newsletters/leaflets and canvassing. Its presence on demonstrations and in broad labour movement campaigns is usually limited to members of Green Left, the Green Party Trade Union Group (GPTU) and increasingly the Young Greens.

The GPEW is no longer just an environmental one trick pony – it is a left-social democratic party and implicitly (and to a modestly increasing degree, explicitly) anti-capitalist. The trouble is, it has no real analysis of capitalism, the state, or who, where or what are the agencies for change. As a result, it has no overall strategy for how to get from where we are to where we want to be beyond getting an ever increasing number of people to vote the goodies into office rather than the baddies. The problem with this sort of voluntaristic radicalism, based on a personal moral imperative and unreinforced by much in the way of analysis or understanding of class politics, is that when push comes to shove, no matter how principled and progressive you are personally, you do tend to get shoved – as they did (and continue to do) when they ‘took power’ as a minority administration in Brighton.

Nonetheless, the more or less conscious move to the left of much of the party’s membership over the past few years, away from the the narrow environmentalist niche politics that were, and to some degree still are, its comfort zone, in combination with the recruitment of large numbers a younger generation attracted by its increasing emphasis on egalitarianism and social justice, has been extremely positive. While it is is true that the average Left Unity member is to the left of the average Green Party member, the Greens are clearly significantly to the left of Labour. They are, whether they realise it or not (and many of them do, in a muddled sort of way) – or whether we like it or not – part of the broad and inchoate movement that has to be brought together to be the basis of a new mass party of the left that can earn the active support and involvement of millions of working people.

Clearly, the Greens are not that party – actually it has not even occurred to much of the older membership that that should even be an ambition. The party’s membership is overwhelmingly middle class (although I suspect not that much more so than ours). By and large, the areas in which it has done well – Brighton, Norwich, Bristol, Lancaster and pockets of some of the major cities – have a larger than average percentage of young, leftish, well educated middle class inhabitants (eighteen months ago, an internal survey found that 38% of the Green membership had a postgraduate degree). However, the Greens have started to pick up a modest increase in support in a few working class areas, particularly in the West Midlands.

The problem is that their niche market – the progressive middle class vote – is highly contested and unstable. At the last General Election a good slice of the Greens’ ‘natural’ supporters went to the Lib Dems. Since then, of course, the Lib Dem vote has collapsed and in the elections in May 2014, many of those who chose it in 2010 because of New Labour’s shameful record in government returned to Labour, which has exercised a hegemony over progressive middle class politics for the best part of a century. What will happen next May is anyone’s guess. At the moment the Green Party is neck and neck with the Lib Dems, with the latest Ashcroft poll showing them at 8% to the Lib Dems’ 7%. Caroline Lucas will, with any luck, retain her seat in Brighton (although the party will be hammered in the council election there) but its chances in its other target seats are rather slimmer than it claims. Their electoral support is very evenly spread so they are likely to pick up a very respectable number of votes which are unlikely to translate into many, if any, additional seats.

When I was in the Green Party I repeatedly pointed out to my comrades in Green Left that the party, while being many times larger than all the far left sects put together, was just as much a sect as any of them. The Green Party may be an unusual sect, in that it is left reformist and fairly democratic and tolerant, but it is a sect nonetheless. Like other sects it is obsessed with the Full and Correct Programme (in this case its Policies for a Sustainable Society rather than the Transitional Programme of 1938 or the British Road to Socialism) which, if presented to the unenlightened masses for long enough, will lead them to recognise their previous shortsightedness. Like other sects it tends to view actual concrete struggles through the distorting prism of its own programmatic priorities – including many programmatic points which are good in themselves of course.

To its credit, it doesn’t share with most far left sects an obsession with the Leninist conception of the party (although, arguably, neither did Lenin) but on the other hand it doesn’t have a class analysis (or much of any kind of analysis) of society and the state. And it doesn’t have any of the other various laughable programmatic tics and obsessions of the ‘old left’ grouplets – but then it doesn’t need them as it has plenty of its own.

While it is therefore unlikely that the Green Party, left to its own devices, will break out of its political niche, it has demonstrated that it has considerable potential to grow within it. It is at least three times as large as all the groups on the radical left (including Left Unity) put together, if not larger. Its youth wing (which will be discussing a proposal to formally declare itself socialist at its next conference) is growing at a rate of knots and is the biggest political grouping on an increasing number of campuses. And thanks to the efforts of Green Left (which now has four members on the party’s national executive, including Trade Union Liaison Officer) and GPTU, it is beginning to have some very modest influence in a number of unions at national level.

It would be a grave mistake to just write off the Greens as ‘middle class’ or, regardless of their policies and their involvement in progressive campaigns, tacit supporters of the status quo. Many people, particularly younger people, are increasingly seeing them as the only viable organisation to the left of Labour – and in many parts of the country they are. In Australia, the Green Party has effectively filled the space to the left of the right wing Labor Party by default, due to the irrelevance (and tiny size) of all the orthodox groupings of the radical left. That was the situation, too, in Germany for many years – and even now Die Grünen, compromised and discredited though it is, still constitutes a major block to the development of our sister party Die Linke. Given that we are less than a tenth of the Greens’ size it would be ludicrous for us to dismiss them as irrelevant.

The vast majority of Greens see themselves as left wing and a large proportion are happy to describe themselves as anti-capitalist, including Caroline Lucas and Natalie Bennett. Many consider themselves socialists, and the fact that many more don’t really know whether they are or not is as much a condemnation of the sectarianism of the far left groups as it is of the poverty of political theory in the Green Party.

I believe that building a mass party to the left of Labour has to involve the Green Party, or at least a large part of its membership, in some way. Rather than reject or ignore them I think that we should attempt to engage with them in practical ways and develop a relationship as critical friends. In May, the Green Party will be standing in at least 300 seats and in the majority of them are likely to be fielding the only left of Labour candidates. No doubt some comrades might be able to construct some sort of argument for not supporting them in those contests, but it would be an example of the sort of bone headed sectarianism that has been so typical of the British Left over the past few decades and which has been in large measure responsible for us being so discredited and marginalised now.

If, in the future, we want them not to put up candidates against us in some areas, or wish to persuade them not to stand against the handful of decent Labour MPs (or Plaid in Wales) – or not to stand in the two or three places where TUSC has a chance of a more than derisory vote – then we need to take the initiative in backing them as we did in the North West in the Euro elections, at least in constituencies where there is no other left candidate. There is no chance of us negotiating a national agreement with the Greens in time for the May elections, but there is time for us to start to talk to them at local level and begin to discuss how best to co-operate in practical ways.


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19 comments

19 responses to “Why we should take the Green Party seriously”

  1. Simon Hales says:

    Good article by Sean here. I believe this sort of piece can spark genuine comradely debate between members of Left Unity and the Green Party and is much more helpful than the rather sectarian attack on the Greens that was published on this site a while ago.

  2. John Penney says:

    An incisive analysis of the Green Party, both in terms of explaining its plusses and minuses as a potential ally in the fight against the Austerity Offensive, and its conclusions.

    As the article says a number of times, the Green’s overall rambling “jumble-sale”, “philosophy” is incoherent at best , and has no rigorously critical analysis of capitalism. so the current ” quasi socialist” leaning of the Greens is very patchy and tends to collapse when tested – as per Brighton Council.

    I don’t think the Greens are actually a “social democratic Party” at all – but an unstable “Left populist” one. This is a “Left” populism which can, and has, reverse rapidly into strike-breaking, conservative populism, when the pressures of holding “power” in a local council reveal the fundamental capitalist status quo acceptance built into the very political DNA of middle class Green politics. The Greens are unlikely to ever “do a Clay Cross or Liverpool Council” in standing up to the Austerity Offensive if this means them losing office.

    And of course , a point not even touched on by the article, the Greens, like much of the radical Left in Scotland (and the UK) , has been completely seduced by the opportunist class collaborationist appeal of Scottish Left nationalism. But then, given the collapse of the Scottish Left (and much of the UK Left) into Scottish Left Nationalism this is hardly a particular example of just the Green’s underlying incoherent politics.

    Having said that, I agree with this intelligent article that there are deals to be done with the Greens, as long as the interests of the working class is always the guiding principle governing alliances and electoral non aggression pacts and other mutually beneficial deals done.

  3. Ray G says:

    Great article Sean – a bit of sense and balance in this debate at last. A new left party in this country (or the bits of it)cannot grow without attracting, or/and merging with sections of the Green Party.

    I am in a quandry as my Labour MP, John Cryer, is not that bad really (these things are all relative) but the Greens are much, much closer to what I stand for than Labour is. TUSC is all too often, I am afraid, a poisonous, dismissive, sectarian force, particularly in Waltham Forest where they have their national headquarters.

    One new factor is UKIP. If i thought that i could let UKIP win a seat by not voting Labour, that would make me think twice.

  4. Andrew says:

    Very balanced article, Sean. On the Scottish left, see this:

    http://bellacaledonia.org.uk/2014/10/18/scottish-left-project-the-people-demand/

    If the Scottish Left Project gets off the ground, it could be the matural partner for Left Unity north of the border. The main reference point seems to be 1945, not 1745, but if there was anything on climate and environmental issues I missed it..

  5. David Melvin says:

    A balanced view Sean – the Greens and Left Unity can work together. You just have to the the Progress anti-Green rantings on Labour List to see the Greens must be doing something right!

  6. John Tummon says:

    Nice one, Sean – I hope my amendment will pass at conference so that we can work with both the Greens and TUSC in using the General Election campaign to get our collective teeth into what I think is capitalism’s weakest link – the decline in western democracy to the point where the public as a whole regard the main parties and Parliament as the establishment. We could also get our teeth into the right wing notion that the EU is the main obstacle to democratic accountability, when it is actually Westminster itself. That + focusing our arguments just on austerity and the need to re-nationalise the railways and build council housing again is the kind of joint programme I want to see. It is the only way to get a UKIP of the Left some significant public resonance and without that we cannot move forward on anything else.

  7. Micky D says:

    Since the Greens at their heart are actually anti consumption / production ..anyone mind telling me how they are in any way socialist ? They also cling to a lot of anti scientific woo …anti nuclear power , anti stem cell research , anti gm crops … In truth they are the UKIP of the left in so much as they are backward neanderthal , anti progress and anti human …they see humanity as a plague on the planet . They also want to tax beer heavily , enough reason to denounce em imo

    • Ray G says:

      Micky! – Welcome back

      It’s always good for a laugh to read your fevered anti-green rantings. I hope you have a ticket to the spaceship the ruling class will need to get to the next planet once they have comprehensively destroyed this one. You deserve a ticket for all the frantic blogging you do on their behalf.

      Environmental destruction is an enemy of working people the world over, particularly the poorest. The reality of capitalism is that it considers human being expendable, and is quite prepared to see millions of them die or live in illness and squalor caused by pollution and environmental degradation. Talk to the representatives of the poor in any of the poorest countries.

      So who really sees humans as a plague??

      • Micky D says:

        Lol no actual arguments then …just insults …and the weird idea that planet earth is dying …What the poor need is infrastructure and the creation of wealth …last time i looked that means using fossil fuels just like we did …Roll on the day when people presently starving to death are wandering around shopping malls texting each other on their smartphones about where to go for lattes

  8. Dave K says:

    Very pertinent analysis Sean, a correct non-sectarian but honest reading of where they are and where we are. Their growth is tied in with decline in Liberals and the continued hollowing out of Labour.

  9. Roland Scales says:

    Great article Sean. Well-balanced. I’m neither a tree-hugger nor a Leninist but I consider that at its best the Green Party has much to commend it, and it seems to be getting a grip at last (could that be after the somewhat acid email I sent the policy department after the Euro-elections? They didn’t seem to be very amused.)
    I take issue with Micky on environmental questions though. These are important. It’s just a question of finding the right emphasis, and you don’t force the preservation of cuddly seal pups up the agenda at election time, particularly when there are social and economic injustices and corrupt power structures to be tackled.

  10. Marcos Margarido says:

    In my view the Green party is neither left nor anti-capitalist. Instead of “watermelon” it should be called the opposite: red outside and green inside because its programme (the outside) is only a “show to the gallery” while its deeds (the inside) are completely capitalist-driven. In Liverpool they defended that all the support services of the libraries should be privatised to “save money” to keep them open (there is a strong campaign against the closure of 11 libraries by the Labour mayor). They said also they would run one of the libraries as volunteers (a kind of privatisation), a policy which is rejected by all the groups in the campaign.
    I think that, instead of being aside the greens, they should be exposed by their capitalist policy, showing the deeds not the words.

  11. kevin McGrath says:

    Some form of alliance has to be the way forward. There is a space opening up on the left, which the Greens are well positioned to occupy. After the next election and the future constitutional battles that will follow, a period of real turbulence can be predicted. Who can say with any certainty what will happen, what the future of Labour might be? Is it possible that the Green Party might be able to emulate UKIP and make a great leap forward. With issues like fracking likely to propel it more and more into the minds of the Great British Public, its a reasonable assumption to make that a party, not seen as complicit in the great Westminster stitch, can make the case for fairness and social justice in a way which will gain them a hearing.

  12. Tony Free says:

    I joined Left Unity excited to be part of a new party of the Left. Labour let the working classes down a long time ago. But I did not want to join a party that has any affiliation with the Green Party. Just because the Green party have a few obvious left wing policies does not mean that they have the similar objectives to Left Unity. There is a place in politics for the Greens but it is a small minority niche. Left Unity should be set to become a mainstream party not one that is so desperate that it will ally with any party left of centre.

  13. dan says:

    saving trees instead of building houses is a massive policy failure of the Greens. Plants first, people second. That said they do offer some real left-wing policies which Left Unity should support, in the spirit of ‘Left Unity’.

    • Tony Free says:

      I agree we have empathy with the Greens but we are separate parties with some policies in common. The policies we support should all be in Left Unities manifesto.

    • Owen Norton says:

      Plants first, people second, is the correct way round, without the first you can’t have the second.

  14. Merry Cross says:

    I agree that this is a useful and thought provoking article. But I also think we really have to get our house in order. We are too engaged in in-fighting, so that we are barely ‘out there’ showing what we are about by what we do.
    We need to face up to the fact that we are largely, still, a white, middle class talking shop and work out what to do about that! How much soul-searching do we do about whether we number amongst our friends people from BME communities, or disabled people, or immigrants etc? We can’t change the world unless we change ourselves too. We have to be tackling what is frankly a social crisis both at the level of individual and social change. Am I being/feeling impatient? Yes. Is this a helpful comment? Possibly not, but I am acutely aware of the accuracy of Sean’s comment that we, like the Greens, are far too narrow a section of society.

  15. Owen Norton says:

    As an independent in this debate (I am a member of neither the green party nor LU though have interest in both), I’d like to comment on a few points.

    Firstly having read all the comments and the article no one seems to have actually mentioned enviroment issues other than as “niche” and “narrow” as if they are solely political issues.

    “The Left”‘s usual problem is that it fails to look at the bigger picture and decides itself correct and extrapolates thusly, this is a prime example, rather than considering that the green issues are just as important if not more so to individuals within society as their working conditions or pay it instead looks as to how the green party isn’t “left” enough.

    If the left is meant to be socialist from what I’ve read so far here at LU there seems to be a lot more leftists than socialists

    All a party needs to do well and eventually “win” control is the support of the “thinkers” or what the PR machine would call “early-adopters” plus time, the masses will follow.

    Most of the young generation of these thinkers can see through the hollow pre-scripted words of politicians and switched off long ago, a leftist message will not reach them, “anti-austerity” is not a rallying call of a un-interested generation.

    “The Left” forgot it was meant to be about fairness for all, not just being for the people treated unfairly, Left Unity will just become another unknown fringe group imo unless it realises very few are interested in “left” or “right” issues they are looking for a new alternative that isn’t concerned with policy instead with ideas. The Greens even if you do not agree with their “niche” climate policies stand for an easily understandable idea the same with UKIP both have very clear ideas and values.

    LU will gain a lot more support through focusing more on unity and less on the left.


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