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Green Party of England and Wales

The Green Party of England and Wales (GPEW; Welsh: Plaid Werdd Cymru a Lloegr; Cornish: Parti Gwer Pow Sows ha Kembra; often known simply as the Green Party or the Greens) is a green, left-wing political party in England and Wales. Since October 2021, Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsay have served as the party's co-leaders. The party currently has one representative in the House of Commons and two in the House of Lords, in addition to over 700 councillors at the local government level and three members of the London Assembly.

Green Party of England and Wales

GPEW

Jon Nott

July 1990 (1990-07)

PO Box 78066, London. SE16 9GQ

Decrease 53,126[1]

  •   Green
0 / 60
744 / 17,546

The party's ideology combines environmentalism with left-wing economic policies, including well-funded and locally controlled public services. It advocates a steady-state economy with the regulation of capitalism, and supports proportional representation. It takes a progressive approach to social policies such as civil liberties, animal rights, LGBT rights, and drug policy reform. The party also believes strongly in non-violence, universal basic income, a living wage, and democratic participation. It is split into various regional divisions, including the semi-autonomous Wales Green Party, and is internationally affiliated with the Global Greens and the European Green Party.


Alongside the Scottish Greens and the Green Party Northern Ireland, the party was established in 1990 through the division of the pre-existing Green Party, which had initially been established as the PEOPLE Party in 1973. The party went through centralising reforms spearheaded by the Green 2000 group in early 1990, and also sought to emphasise growth in local governance, doing so throughout 1990. In 2010, the party gained its first member of Parliament in its then-leader Caroline Lucas. As the party's support is spread out across the UK, and is rarely found in electorally significant clusters, the party holds only one seat in the House of Commons. The Green Party supports an abolition of the UK's first-past-the-post voting system, and instead supports proportional representation, which would grant the party a share of seats in Parliament based on its national vote share.

Organisation[edit]

Member groups[edit]

There are a number of member groups affiliated to the Green Party.


The youth wing of the Green Party, the Young Greens of England and Wales, has developed independently from around 2002 and is for all Green Party members aged up to 30 years old or in full or part-time education. There is no lower age limit. The Young Greens have their own constitution, national committee, campaigns and meetings, and have become an active presence at Green Party Conferences and election campaigns. There are now many Young Greens groups on UK university, college and higher-education institution campuses. Many Green Party councillors are Young Greens, as are some members of GPEx and other internal party organs.[178]


Other groups:

Anti-nuclear movement in the United Kingdom

Bright Green

Green Left (England and Wales)

List of advocates of republicanism in the United Kingdom

List of green parties

Politics of the United Kingdom

Carter, Neil (2015). "The Greens in the UK general election of 7 May 2015". Environmental Politics. 24 (6): 1055–1060. :2015EnvPo..24.1055C. doi:10.1080/09644016.2015.1063750. S2CID 154669515.

Bibcode

Dennison, James (2016). The Greens in British Politics: Protest, Anti-Austerity and the Divided Left. Palgrave.

James Dennison. 2020. "" Parliamentary Affairs, Volume 73, Pages 125–141

How Niche Parties React to Losing Their Niche: The Cases of the Brexit Party, the Green Party and Change UK.

Maciejowska, Judy (2017). "For the Common Good: The Green Party's 2015 General Election Campaign". In Dominic Wring; Roger Mortimore; Simon Atkinson (eds.). Political Communication in Britain: Polling, Campaigning and Media in the 2015 General Election. Springer. pp. 169–179.  978-3-319-40933-7.

ISBN

Hughes, Ceri (2016). "It's not easy (not) being green: Agenda dissonance of Green Party press relations and newspaper coverage". European Journal of Communication. 31 (6): 625–641. :10.1177/0267323116669454. S2CID 151322360.

doi

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Official website

LGBTIQA+ Greens

Green Party Trade Union Group

Young Greens