Zack Polanski has declared Britain’s two-party politics “dead and buried” as his Green party won its first ever mayoral election.
The Greens unseated Labour from mayoral power in the east London borough of Hackney after 24 years. The new mayor, Zoë Garbett, told reporters she was “elated” and promised it was just the beginning, after the party won with 35,720 votes to Labour’s 26,865.
“Across London and the country, people have made it clear that they are desperate for an alternative to this failing Labour government,” she said. “It’s not old politics … versus new parties. This is about a system of fear versus a movement of hope.”
“All the work I’ve ever done has been to change the system and services that let people down, harm people and widen inequality. Our borough has over a quarter of a million people,” added Garbett, who succeeds the Labour mayor Caroline Woodley.
UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Was listening to the BBC brief this morning and they mentioned Conservatives, Labour, and Reform. Absolutely nothing about the Green Party at all.
Love my British political news coverage.
tenebrisnox@feddit.uk 3 days ago
Ferrari on LBC talked about every other party, too. I’m sure the anodyne interview with Caroline Lucas at about 7am will be LBC’s justification of balanced coverage.
ohulancutash@feddit.uk 3 days ago
Because the greens are marginal. c.1300 seats now, against LAB c.4400, CON c.3700, LIB c.3300 and REF c.2400.
They had a modest +400 increase this time, but Reform are the big winners with +1400.
So the two parties of government are still the two parties of local government, Reform are the upstarts, and Greens remain in the mid-tier.
jimmy90@lemmy.world 3 days ago
because the greens didn’t do that well
reform did astonishingly well
auraithx@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 day ago
Greens performed exactly in-line with projections. Average of the projections from Reform put them at 1625 seats, so they missed it by ~200.