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General Election Special: The Green Party
Go Green. The future
is bright – Bright Green
By Peter Tatchell, human rights spokesperson for the Green Party of England and Wales
London - 30 March 2010
http://mymarilyn.blogspot.com/2010/03/2010-election-special-green-party.html
Labour has lost its heart and soul. It has become the party of war,
privatisation and the erosion of hard-won civil liberties. The Lib Dems
support free market capitalism, use dirty tricks during election
campaigns, and when they get into office they always drift to the
right. The Conservatives are split between modernisers and the
reactionary old guard. Their green-friendly image is contradicted by
their anti-green policies of supporting new motorways, aviation
expansion and more nuclear power stations – just like Labour.
As I see it, the Green Party is the most progressive force in British
politics, with a visionary agenda for democratic reform, social
justice, human rights, global equity, environmental protection, peace
and internationalism.
With an empowering new political and economic paradigm, the Greens
offer the best hope for radical reform, as set out in our
Policies for a Sustainable Society: http://policy.greenparty.org.uk/mfss/
Unlike the far left, the Greens often win. We’ve got elected
representatives in local councils all over Britain, and in the London
Assembly and the Scottish and European Parliaments. Opinion polls
suggest that the Greens are poised to win their first MPs. Caroline
Lucas is leading in Brighton Pavilion and the Greens are also polling
well in Norwich South and Lewisham Deptford.
The Greens are not just an environmental party. We are also a social
justice party, with commitments to industrial democracy, workers
cooperatives and trade union rights. Our aim is a democratic economy,
which gives all employees a real say in how their institution is run
and which utilises their accumulated skill and experience to improve
private enterprises and public services. We want to make society fairer
and more equal, and to redistribute wealth and power. This
democratisation and socialisation of the economy is necessary, we
argue, to improve productivity, prevent a repeat of the reckless
decisions that led to the economic meltdown and to reorient production
to meet people’s needs. This includes switching from weapons production
to the manufacture of renewable energy and advanced medical
technologies, which are socially useful and have huge export
potential.
The Greens are not retreads of the old Left. Traditional socialism is
flawed. It is based on a left-wing version of big business
growth-driven economics, with the goal of producing more and consuming
more. This uncritical drive to maximise economic expansion is
destroying our planet, causing life-threatening pollution, climate
chaos and species extinction. It is also dramatically depleting
reserves of natural resources, such as oil, that are vital to the
global economy and to the long-term maintenance of a decent standard of
living. This old-style growth-fixated economics, which is shared by
both the left and the right, is outdated and reactionary. It is time
for fresh thinking.
The Greens argue that quality of life and fair shares for all are more
important than the left’s simplistic agenda of spending more on public
services. Greens would, of course, invest more in health and education.
But we also believe that government needs to radically rethink basic
premises, like shifting the focus in the NHS from curative to
preventative medicine. Our aim is to ensure that many fewer people get
sick in the first place, rather than merely throwing more money into
treating people once they become ill.
The Greens realise that the whole economic system has to change, in
order to meet people’s needs and to ensure the survival of life on this
planet. We propose a synthesis of the best bits of red and green,
combining social justice with sustainable economics.
A good example of how we would do this is our proposed Roosevelt-style
Green New Deal. It would stimulate the economy through large-scale
government investment in socially and environmentally valuable energy
conservation, renewable energy and cheap, hi-tech public transport.
This would slash carbon emissions and tackle climate change, as well as
creating hundreds of thousands of green jobs.
We’d fund the Green New Deal by axing Labour and Tory plans to waste
£160 billion on Trident nuclear missiles (£76bn), super aircraft
carriers (£4bn), Eurofighter aircraft (£20bn), A400 air transporter
(£3bn), national identity register (£10bn), the Afghan war (£5bn),
motorway building and widening (£30bn) and NHS computerisation (£20bn).
The Green Party rejects the failed neo-liberal economic policies that
are backed by the three main parties - policies that recently pushed
the world to the brink of a second great depression and which leave
billions of people malnourished, illiterate, homeless, diseased and
impoverished. But amid the gloom, we say: A different world is
possible.
The future is bright – bright Green.
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