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Left turn could bear fruit for Greens' next leader
Left turn could bear fruit for Greens' next leader

Times

time14-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Times

Left turn could bear fruit for Greens' next leader

Sometimes in this gig a devotion to truth means you have to write something that makes you feel a bit dirty. Which is why, much as I may wish otherwise, I feel it is my solemn duty to start this column by pointing out that Zack Polanski, a likeable chap who wants to be the next leader of the Green Party, was formerly a Harley Street hypnotherapist who specialised in telling women they could increase the size of their breasts just by thinking about it. We don't really know how well this worked. The only case study I can find is when The Sun sent Kasie (32B) to have a go, apparently quite productively. 'Panic sets in,' she wrote, six days later. 'What if my

‘I thought politics was a dirty thing' – Zack Polanski on his ‘eco-populist' vision for the Green party
‘I thought politics was a dirty thing' – Zack Polanski on his ‘eco-populist' vision for the Green party

The Guardian

time13-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

‘I thought politics was a dirty thing' – Zack Polanski on his ‘eco-populist' vision for the Green party

By coincidence, I meet Zack Polanski, the 42-year-old deputy leader of the Green party, in a cafe on the same bridge – Waterloo – where he was first arrested for his part in an Extinction Rebellion protest. 'I was leading the charge on the very first day of the very first rally,' he begins. He has a dewy, wide-eyed look and quite a nerdy delivery, very enthusiastic, with no side to it. It takes a bit of getting used to, but once you have, you're all in. 'I did not intend to get arrested. XR ran training on what to do if you get arrested and the ramifications of it, and I didn't go to any of them, because I just wanted to be on the sidelines and chant. But partly from being an actor, I've got a really loud voice.' Someone asked him to lead the chant from the front, which he didn't want to do. 'I always think marginalised communities should be at the front, not me. And the only reason I say that is because there's a parallel with how I see exemplary leadership – it's not being out in the front, saying 'Come this way', it's being within and moving together.' Still, he ended up at the front, and saw between one and two hundred police officers. 'I remember one pointing at me, and I heard: 'Get him'.' Before he knew it, he was in handcuffs. Polanski, who is also chair of the London Assembly Environment Committee, is standing for leader of the Green party, promising a radical new 'eco-populism'. When he first announced his intention to stand, the move was portrayed in some quarters as a bid to oust Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsay, current co-leaders, which he rejects. The Greens elect new co-leaders every two years (Ramsay and Denyer had a three-year term because of the general election; both are now MPs. Denyer has already announced she won't stand, but Ramsay is running again, in a joint bid alongside fellow new MP Ellie Chowns). Polanski says it's a perfectly workable model to have a Green MP as a parliamentary party leader and a separate leader of the party at large. 'Someone who can lead the party for the country, and be accountable to the membership … I've reflected on this because the Green party has never had a solo male leader before, albeit a gay and Jewish one.' He's bashed these questions around in his head: the tensions between identity and class politics, which I guess could be distilled into 'could a man ever lead a radical progressive party?'; the idea of the strong leader (rather than co-leaders) and how much the media needs to see one – and whether it's against the Green DNA to have one. He's basically decided that, as valid as all the arguments and counter-arguments are, sod it, he's going for it. He emphasises how much he respects Denyer and Ramsay, who, in 2024's general election, got the best results the party has ever had, with almost two million votes. Nor is his leadership bid a criticism of the local election results, even though all the energy seems to be with Reform, and the Greens are inevitably casualties of that. 'It's mixed,' he says, 'it's a really solid set of results. We're the only party that has gained in the last eight sets of local elections. In each of those years, almost without failure, the Green vote has been described as a 'shock', but how many times are people going to be shocked? 'Reform did really well, you'd be a denier not to admit that, but the asymmetry in how their success has been reported, compared to ours, is really noticeable.' It's not that he thinks his party is languishing, in other words – just that he wants it to be bolder. By eco-populism, he means go after billionaires, go after water companies, go after corporations. He means retake patriotism. 'We should love our country. Loving your community is loving your country.' He means put the climate at the centre of everything – but never forget that these will seem like abstract conversations to people who can't put food on the table. He wants to lead a party that actively seeks 'to improve people's material conditions, right here and right now'. And the problem with these big, hopeful promises of justice and change, is that everyone, from Boris Johnson to Nigel Farage, from Keir Starmer to Ed Davey, makes them. This diet of disappointment has all the same word-ingredients. But the difference with the Greens, Polanski says, is that they mean it, and the answer is better storytelling. 'Far too often, the party leads from a policy and data space. Our MPs, who are excellent, are a scientist, an engineer, a renewables expert and a former MEP. We don't have storytellers. We have such a powerful story to tell.' Polanski's own story is that he was born in Salford, his parents divorced when he was quite young, his mum is an actor, his dad works in a DIY shop. 'I'm not the son of a tool maker, I'm the son of a tool seller,' he clarifies, very mildly mocking the political cliche of trying to parade working-class credentials. His wasn't a political family, and it's taken years to get here, where his parents both vote Green. Much more formative than party politics, in terms of how he handles difference and conflict, is that he 'grew up in a very Zionist household, raised to really believe that Israel was the centre of everything and must be defended at all costs. And that's very different to my politics now, so that's been a really hard journey, but I always caveat this with nothing is as traumatic as it is to live in Palestine. 'Of all the criticism I've received in my career as a politician,' he continues, 'the most vicious has come from so-called mainstream Jewish communities. I very much identify as Jewish, I'm very proud to be Jewish, I'm very much involved in Jewish cultures, but I'm certainly not a Zionist, and that's seen as the ultimate betrayal.' He went to Stockport Grammar, a private school, on a scholarship. He hated it, got kicked out, and went to a sixth form college. 'I remember absolutely loving it and thriving, and suddenly going, 'Oh, this is what diversity feels like. This is what it feels like when everyone's not homogeneous.'' Then he went to drama school in Atlanta, Georgia, a pretty random place to go to do a Shakespeare course, which he has no answer to, except that it sounded fun. At this stage, he still felt that 'politics was a dirty thing that didn't really change anything. It wasn't until I went to America, and saw the inequality, the racism, the homophobia, that I started to wake up.' Initially, that took a pretty anarchic form. He worked for community projects with homeless people and migrants, 'helping people to tell their stories, but also encouraging them to articulate and empower themselves. I did that for years, and I don't regret the work. But I also kept feeling this deep frustration. You can role-play that someone is overcoming their oppressor, but actually, if the systemic barriers are still there, you're just setting someone up for failure. People would leave a project feeling so pumped up and ready to go, and they'd see them a year or two later and the problem would still be there.' He moved back from the US to London in the mid-00s and remembers walking to work because he didn't have the bus fare, planning his day around when he could get some free lentils from the Hare Krishnas near Russell Square (he's vegan, by the way – but very insistent that you don't have to be a vegan to vote Green). 'That's how I was going to make the rent work.' Still, he is very clear that 'if the shit hit the fan, I would still have had the bank of mum and dad' and that there is a difference between the temporarily skint and the grindingly poor. 'But I'm more interested in the much bigger gap which I see between the super wealthy and the rest. We create divisions between the working class and the middle class, when the real problem is people earning more money in their sleep than you could earn in your life. The real problem is the oligarchy.' He describes some of the theatre he was making at this time, with the company that later became Punchdrunk – wild, participatory productions in which the audience is invited to alter the course of events. In one performance, an audience member rugby-tackled one of the actors to prevent a murder. In another, Polanski played a leader stewarding the audience into an environmental crisis, and they had to overthrow him. So yes, they were political, because life is, but he was ready for a more formal intervention. He started by joining the Lib Dems, and standing as a councillor in north London in 2016. 'That was for one very clear reason,' he says. 'Proportional representation – it's always been really important to me.' He joined the Greens the following year, was elected a member of the London Assembly in 2021, and deputy leader of the Greens in 2022. He's always been an incredibly good communicator, and was a regular on shows like Cross Questions on LBC as soon as he had a presence in his party. His experience as an actor has left Polanski with a genuinely unusual style of political communication – he doesn't equivocate, his manner is quite urgent and arresting, he never drones, but nor is he embarrassed to say something very simple, even if it sounds schlocky, or boastful. He tells me that the video he launched announcing his leadership bid has been seen 1.4m times. 'It's had hundreds, maybe even thousands of people responding, and I would say 99% of those things are, 'Is this what hope feels like?'' Also, distinctively, there are rules he won't play by. There are all kinds of unspoken norms in current affairs chat. It's not considered classy to point out that representatives from a rightwing thinktank are most likely speaking for the interests of capital, rather than 'ordinary people', because that would be playing the man not the ball. A Tory might say 'multiculturalism has failed', and they mean 'I prefer monoculturalism', but you're not allowed to call them racist, because that's ad hominem, even though, come on, what else are you going to call someone who prefers society to all come from one culture? I remember being struck last year, when three people were shouting at Polanski because he'd used the 'r' word. He's a storyteller, but he's not a children's entertainer – sometimes the story is going to be quite challenging. When he launched his leadership bid, and only the terminally online would know this, a spontaneous community on X sprang into action, saying: 'Isn't he that boob hypnotist?' The community itself included an odd coalition of pro-Russian, anti-trans and pro-Zionist accounts, but the story has a grain of truth. In 2013, Polanski had a hypnotherapy practice, and a Sun journalist went as a client, asked him if he could make her think herself some bigger boobs, and the rest – well, you can read for yourself. To be honest, even if he'd actually set himself up as a breast-enlarger, I'd still have given it a pass – he didn't know he'd want a career in politics, he was only just 30. If you'll live on free food in order to make immersive theatre, there are probably other things you'd consider. I only mention all this because there are people who will make it their business that this story dogs Polanski for ever; that's the world we're in now. Ordinary people are allowed into democratic politics, until they are difficult or popular – or, heaven forbid, both – and then ways will be found to discredit them; it's actually a pretty good sign for his campaign that it's begun. I've heard rumours of imminent Labour defections to the Greens, MPs disaffected by Starmer on Gaza or cosying up to Trump, or cuts to disability allowances, or really, take your pick, finding their way back to the left. Polanski is confident of one but won't say who. That leap from red to green is a surprising wrench even if you're a member, or just a voter. 'I think it's the most obvious thing in the world,' Polanski says, 'if you align with our values, join us. I want to say to the millions of people who have supported Labour, you're not leaving the Labour party. The Labour party has left you.'

Green Party leadership contest: Adrian Ramsay and Ellie Chowns bid
Green Party leadership contest: Adrian Ramsay and Ellie Chowns bid

BBC News

time12-05-2025

  • Politics
  • BBC News

Green Party leadership contest: Adrian Ramsay and Ellie Chowns bid

Co-leader of the Green Party of England and Wales Adrian Ramsay has launched a fresh party leadership bid with fellow Green MP Ellie are hoping to be elected together as co-leaders and join the contest alongside the party's deputy leader, Zack Polanski, after he launched his campaign on 5 was elected as co-leader with Carla Denyer in 2021, but Denyer announced on Thursday that she would not be standing when the posts are re-elected later this for the leadership open on 2 June, with party members voting throughout August before the results are announced on 2 September. The Greens normally elect co-leaders every two years but Ramsay and Denyer were initially elected for a three-year voted not to choose new leaders in 2024 because of the general party rules, there can be one leader but if two co-leaders are elected, they must be of different genders. Chowns, the MP for North Herefordshire, said she and Ramsay were "ready to lead our party into its most ambitious chapter yet"."We need leaders who are at the heart of national politics in Westminster," she said, adding that the pair was "confident that we can win power right across the country and use it to reshape the political landscape".Ramsay said it was "time to build on our proven and bold Green leadership", adding that his party "must be ready to lead - not just to speak up, but to act - and potentially to hold the balance of power"."We've shown we can win seats seen as unwinnable - and now we need to turn those victories into real power," the MP for Waveney Valley said. "That means electing many more MPs, speaking to and for millions, and putting Green ideas at the heart of the next government."Launching his leadership campaign, Polanski said the party needed to build a "mass movement" to counter and provide a "real alternative" to Nigel Farage's Reform UK party. The Greens won seats in four constituencies in the 2024 general election - the party's best ever result - and it increased its number of councillors for the eighth year in a row in the local elections in parts of England. Sign up for our Politics Essential newsletter to keep up with the inner workings of Westminster and beyond.

Adrian Ramsay to stand for re-election as Greens co-leader with Ellie Chowns
Adrian Ramsay to stand for re-election as Greens co-leader with Ellie Chowns

The Guardian

time12-05-2025

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

Adrian Ramsay to stand for re-election as Greens co-leader with Ellie Chowns

Adrian Ramsay is to stand as Greens co-leader with another of the party's MPs, Ellie Chowns, amid what the duo describe as an unprecedented fracturing of political allegiances that meant it was vital to have leaders in Westminster with a proven record of winning. Ramsay has already been co-leader for four years, alongside Carla Denyer, who with Ramsay, Chowns and Siân Berry were elected to parliament last year in the party's greatest electoral triumph. Last week, Denyer revealed to the Guardian that she would not re-contest the leadership, instead focusing on her Bristol Central constituency and campaigns such as net zero and affordable housing. While nominations for the leadership do not formally open until next month, the contest is likely to be between Ramsay and Chowns, and Zack Polanski, the current deputy leader, who has already announced a bid to take the party towards what he called a Reform-emulating 'eco-populism'. While praising the outgoing duo's achievements, Polanski said he believed the Greens should be less cautious, and try to emulate Reform in becoming an insurgent, mass-membership political force. Unveiling their joint bid to the Guardian, Ramsay and Chowns dismissed this implicit criticism, saying that their record in winning rural, Conservative-dominated seats in July showed they could win over new supporters. 'We've both won seats that were previously considered unwinnable,' said Chowns, who overturned a near-25,000 Tory majority to win her North Herefordshire seat. Ramsay's Waveney Valley constituency, on the Norfolk-Suffolk border, was made up from parts of previously Conservative seats. 'We know what it means to win against the odds. We know what it means to build the biggest possible, most inclusive possible campaign teams, to inspire people to take action that results in previously unthinkable political change,' she added. Asked about Polanski's criticisms, Ramsay said such results showed they could take the Greens' message 'to people who don't normally vote for you', and that it would be hard for a non-MP to lead the party. He said: 'The reality is the MPs are setting the tone of what the Green party is saying on the issues of the day, because they're being debated in parliament. There's a reason why parties have their leaders as MPs.' The need to focus on electoral growth was all the more vital, he said, with the current 'crossroads in British politics', with polls showing Westminster voting intentions are now closely matched between five parties. In what could be seen as a coded swipe at Polanski, Ramsay warned against the Greens seeking to 'appeal to your existing supporters or to a particular base', adding: 'We're seeing with Kemi Badenoch and the Conservatives what can happen if a party elects a leader just based on appealing to a particular base of support.' As a new MP – and the only one of the four Greens in parliament to never lead the party – Chowns is less well-known but also very experienced, having been a councillor and, briefly, an MEP with a background in international development. She said her and Ramsay would be 'a really well-matched pair' as leaders. With the previous team, Denyer was more likely than the slightly quieter Ramsay to be sent into mass-party TV debates, a role Chowns seems set to follow. 'Both of us have got a huge history in the Green party,' she said. 'We are MPs, so we have that credibility of already being there at the heart of UK politics. And I think it's really important for the party that our leaders are MPs, there every day, speaking out on that key political platform.'

Green party must choose again between election-focused or activist leaders
Green party must choose again between election-focused or activist leaders

The Guardian

time12-05-2025

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

Green party must choose again between election-focused or activist leaders

So here we are again. Much as was the case in 2021, the last time the Greens picked their leaders, members have a choice that could be broadly presented as the more sober, election-focused professionals versus insurgent activists. On one side of the equation are Adrian Ramsay and Ellie Chowns, both MPs, and in the case of Ramsay, already a co-leader. Four years ago, he and Carla Denyer saw off Amelia Womack and Tamsin Omond with a self-stated mission to change the party and win elections. While Womack was hardly an outsider – by then she had been deputy leader for seven years – she was running with Omond, a climate activist who co-founded Extinction Rebellion, and their candidacy was seen as more aimed at younger Greens, and those with an interest in direct activism. In this summer's leadership election, for which party members in England and Wales will vote during August, Ramsay and Chowns are up against Zack Polanski, who took over from Womack as deputy leader in 2022 and wants to turn the Greens into what he called an 'eco-populism' mass movement. As a London assembly member who hopes to also become an MP, Polanski is not averse to the electoral route. But his view is that the Greens could and should do more to match the appeal of Reform UK, which is polling at about three times the level of the Greens and has a membership about four times the size. Ramsay and Chowns are expected to be the favourites and have one particularly strong card to play: they can point to the approach already taken by the outgoing leadership team, and argue that it worked. When they took over from Siân Berry and Jonathan Bartley, Ramsay and Denyer promised to build up the Greens' councillor base with a view to expanding the party's single parliamentary seat. In 2023 came a more specific promise, to win in four specific Westminster constituencies, a target many observers – and some Greens – viewed at the time as hugely ambitious. But nine months later, at the general election, it happened. Two of the wins were in Green-friendly, Labour-facing seats – Berry successfully took over Brighton Pavilion from the departing Caroline Lucas, while Denyer, a Bristol councillor since 2015, removed the Labour frontbencher Thangam Debbonaire from Bristol Central. More notable still were the victories for Ramsay and Chowns, in rural and fundamentally Conservative areas. Ramsay won the newly created constituency of Waveney Valley on the Norfolk-Suffolk border and Chowns overturned a near-25,000 majority in the previously Tory constituency of North Herefordshire. The pair can thus present themselves to Green voters as exemplars of the party's long-term mission of building up a Westminster presence via local government, with both serving as councillors in the areas they eventually won. This approach is being spread more widely, with the Greens holding more than 850 councillors on 180-plus local authorities, and finishing second last year in 40 parliamentary seats. Polanski's counterargument is not that this approach is wrong, simply that it should be allied with a less cautious approach to policy and presentation, one that would transmit Green messages to potentially supportive voters with more urgency. Polanski, who trained as an actor and is happy to take on even hostile broadcast hosts, is arguably a more natural media performer than Ramsay or Chowns. On the debit side for some members will be a policy approach that can raise eyebrows, such as last week's suggestion that the UK should quit an 'out-of-date' Nato. Which version will win out? In some ways it is hard to predict, not least because this is the first leadership election for four years in a party that normally holds them every two. Ramsay and Denyer were initially given a three-year period as Berry and Bartley broke their tenure midway, with the general election then delaying it again. And then there is the size of the party – yes, smaller than Reform but now above 60,000. In 2021, Ramsay and Denyer won easily with just 5,000 first-round votes, on a turnout of about 20%. If one side or another can motivate the members, anything could happen.

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