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Scottish Greens reveal Glasgow list rankings for Holyrood

Scottish Greens reveal Glasgow list rankings for Holyrood

Glasgow Times21-07-2025
The long-serving MSP and co-leader who is stepping down from that role will go into the Scottish Parliament election next year as number one on the party list.
It means if the Greens secure enough support for one MSP once again, he will be re-elected for the sixth time in a row.
READ NEXT: All the latest changes to Glasgow city centre streets explained
Harvie leads the list in the city with activists Ellie Gommersall second and councillor Holly Bruce in third spot.
(Image: Newsquest)
The Greens have narrowly missed out on electing two MSPs in Glasgow on a number of occasions and are hopeful next year will be the year the manage to succeed.
The [[Scottish Greens]] have announced their slate of candidates for regional lists ahead of next year's Holyrood election. The party hopes to return a record number of MSPs at the ballot box next May.
Lorna Slater, Co-Leaders is top of the Edinburgh and Lothians East list and Gillian Mackay who steered the abortion protest buffer zones law though parliament top for Central Scotland and Lothians West.
Ross Greer who has spearheaded the campaign against a developer which owns Flamingo Land resorts building a park on the banks of Loch Lomond is top in West of Scotland with Cara McKee second.
While in the Highlands and Islands MSP Ariane Burgess is top with councillor Chris Leask second.
The tops spots are completed by Mark Ruskell, MSP in Mid Scotland and Fife with Mags Hall second.
Guy Ingerson is the list nominee for North East Scotland and Laura Moodie for South Scotland.
READ NEXT:Man 'banned' from Glasgow city centre after Palestine protest
The SNP secured eight MSPs in 2021, its highest since devolution.
A recent poll indicated that the party could secure 15 MSPs, giving the Scottish Greens a stronger voice in Parliament to push for bold, fair and progressive policies that champion people and planet above corporate greed.
Lorna Slater, Scottish Greens Co-Leader, said: 'Next year's election is pivotal for the future of Scotland and our planet, that's why I am delighted that Scottish Green members have selected such a strong group of lead candidates who will deliver real change in Holyrood.
'Greens have been the only influential left-wing force in the Scottish Parliament for decades, delivering free bus travel for young people, scrapping peak rail fares, and securing tax reforms to ensure the richest in society pay their fair share to support the services we all rely on, like our NHS.
'With more Green MSPs, we can continue to push for the climate emergency to be taken seriously by other parties who want to protect corporate profits rather than our planet, and to fight back against the toxic climate change denialism from the far-right. Scottish Greens won't give up on our planet's future.
'Electing a record number of [[Scottish Greens]] is the only way to secure the pro-independence majority in [[Holyrood]], and to continue advancing the case to rejoin the European Union. It is a cause that Scottish Green MSPs will continue to make on the doorsteps across the country and in the chamber at [[Holyrood]].'
The full Glasgow list is:
Patrick Harvie MSP
Ellie Gommersall
Cllr Holly Bruce
Iris Duane
Cllr Seonad Hoy
Malena Roche
Rana Noor Mohamed
Isabel Ruffell
Kit Renard
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Only 1.5% of Gaza cropland left for starving Palestinians due to Israel's war, UN says
Only 1.5% of Gaza cropland left for starving Palestinians due to Israel's war, UN says

The Guardian

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  • The Guardian

Only 1.5% of Gaza cropland left for starving Palestinians due to Israel's war, UN says

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‘I must document everything': the film about the Palestinian photographer killed by missiles in Gaza
‘I must document everything': the film about the Palestinian photographer killed by missiles in Gaza

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

‘I must document everything': the film about the Palestinian photographer killed by missiles in Gaza

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'We had different points of views: the American, the European, the Egyptian, the Israeli, but never the Palestinian. It started really bothering me, and at some point I couldn't live with it any more.' In spring last year she flew to Cairo with the idea that she could somehow find a way across the Gaza border to film the war firsthand. That quickly proved a naive and futile mission, so she began filming Gazan refugees in Egypt. One of them suggested to Farsi that if she wanted to talk to someone inside, he could put her in touch with his friend Fatma in the al-Tuffah neighbourhood of Gaza City. We first see Hassouna the way Farsi meets her, on her little phone screen, materialising with green hijab, big glasses and her broad white strip of a smile. They clearly delight in each other's presence from the outset. 'From the first call, I felt that she was someone very special, and that something clicked between the two of us immediately,' Farsi says. 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She talks about her family and introduces her shy brothers to Farsi. She has already made herself a photographer and poet by the time they meet, and Farsi coaches her into being a film-maker and to send out video of the ruination around her. Hassouna is supremely, naturally talented. Her pictures capture the everyday effort of her neighbours trying to survive in the rubble, while her use of language – in her poems and in conversation – is every bit as evocative. The film's title is taken from her passing description of what it is like to venture outside: 'Every second you go out in the street, you put your soul on your hands and walk.' In another conversation, struggling to make sense of what is happening, Hassouna asks: 'We live a very simple life, and they want to take this simple life from us. Why? I'm 24 and I don't have any of the things that I want. Because every time you reach what you want, there's a wall. They put up a wall.' The film should not work. It is determinedly rudimentary, filmed largely on one phone pointed at another. The image of Hassouna sometimes freezes and buffers as the internet connection ebbs and flows. But these glitches draw us in and make us experience the precariousness of their connection. 'That's why I decided to keep this low resolution and not to use a regular camera,' Farsi explains. 'I wanted it to be very low-key technically, to match the connection problems with her, to match the disparity of life here and there.' She had originally attempted a cleanly edited version with all the disconnections cut out. 'It was lacking soul. It didn't breathe. So we put it back in – this brokenness of image and sound.' The sweetness of the relationship at the core of the film is made bittersweet by the constant threat of death around Hassouna. Every so often she reports the death of relatives, or neighbours whose eviscerated homes she points to out of her window. It feels like the encircling darkness is in a direct struggle with Hassouna's smile and her instinctive optimism. Anyone who does not want to know which triumphs in the end should stop reading here. Towards the end of the film, Farsi calls Hassouna to give her the happy news that the film has been selected to be screened at Cannes. They excitedly talk about Farsi obtaining a French visa that might allow Hassouna to get out of Gaza temporarily to attend the festival. While they are talking, the young Palestinian sends the film-maker a photo of her passport. That was 14 April this year. The next day, a Tuesday, Farsi could not get through to Gaza to give Hassouna an update on preparations. 'So I said, 'OK, we'll do it on Wednesday,' the director recalls. 'On Wednesday, I was working on the film on my computer with my phone beside me, and all of a sudden I saw a photo pop up. I opened the notification and saw her photo with a caption saying she had been killed. I didn't believe it. 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Tickets at

Kate Forbes quitting means Stephen Flynn leading SNP ‘more likely'
Kate Forbes quitting means Stephen Flynn leading SNP ‘more likely'

Scottish Sun

time2 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Kate Forbes quitting means Stephen Flynn leading SNP ‘more likely'

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