Greens Archive

2

BNP vs Greens in North West England

As a follow-up to yesterday’s profile of the UK race for the European Parliament, I thought I would feature this campaign website for the Green Party’s candidate for North-West England, Peter Cranie.

The Greens, in addition to their seats in London and South East England, are focusing on North-West where BNP leader Nick Griffin stands a real chance of winning a seat.

The Greens have managed to get left-wing party RESPECT to withdraw in North West to avoid splitting the vote, and to explain the voting system and why this means a vote for the Greens is the best method of defeating Nick Griffin, they have produced this YouTube video.

MEPs in Great Britain, and in many other EU countries, are elected using the D’Hondt method. As explained in the video, in each round the party with the most votes is elected, and every party’s votes are divided by the number of seats they have previously won, + 1. It is similar to the counting system used to fill seats in the New Zealand Parliament (although in that system votes are divided by twice the number of seats won, plus one, so the divisors are 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, etc, rather than 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 etc).

In 2004, the second Liberal Democrat was elected on a vote that was about 8%, while Griffin polled 6.4% and the Greens polled 5.6%. Considering recent polling following the expenses scandal, the scenario the Greens put in the video seems plausible.

Below the fold I’ve posted a request for donations I received, if anyone feels like giving money.

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32

Greens kick off Senate preselection

In the last few days, the Greens in Australia’s two largest states have closed nominations for their Senate preselections. In both NSW and Victoria, the process will be decided by a ballot of all members, although processes may vary in some ways. The Victorian Greens will have the process concluded by the end of May, while the Greens NSW will conclude the Senate ticket at the 11 July State Council meeting. I’m not going to get into commentary about candidates, but I will post the list of names with a brief description of who they are.

Update (again): So it turns out that nominations have not been officially announced in Victoria and there are more names to come. This should be resolved over the course of the next week.

In New South Wales

  • Ted Bassingthwaighte
  • Adam Butler – Inner West Greens
  • Cate Faehrmann – Director of the Nature Conservation Council of NSW since 2004, previously SA lead Senate candidate in 2001.
  • Keith McIlroy – Lane Cove councillor since 2008
  • Lee Rhiannon – Sitting Member of the Legislative Council since 1999.

In Victoria

  • Jennifer Alden – Lead candidate for Northern Victoria, 2006 state election
  • Peter Campbell – Candidate for Kooyong in 2001, 2004 and 2007, amongst other elections.
  • Richard di Natale – Lead Senate candidate in 2007, candidate for state seat of Melbourne 2002, 2006.
  • Jim Reiher – Lead candidate for South-Eastern Metropolitan, 2006 state election
  • Janet Rice – Former Mayor of Maribyrnong and Vice President of the Victorian Local Government Association.
  • David Risstrom – Former Melbourne City Councillor, lead Senate candidate in 2004.
  • Berhan Ahmed – 2009 Victorian of the Year

I have no information yet on when preselections will take place in Queensland, South Australia and the ACT (not WA and Tasmania, where I expect Senators Siewert and Milne to be returned easily).

Update: I have fixed a couple of links and ordered the candidates alphabetically to avoid bias. Apparently the list of Victorian candidates is not a complete list, so watch this space.

Update #2: Oz in comments reports back from a conversation with SA Greens MLC Mark Parnell. Apparently the SA Greens will choose their Legislative Council ticket from July-September and then choose their Senate ticket after that.

11

Some free advice for Greens candidates

Between March 2010 and March 2011 there will be a federal election and four state elections in Australia, and various Greens state parties are beginning to gear up to preselect candidates for the Senate, Legislative Councils and the occasional winnable lower house seat*.

Among these, five winnable Senate seats, an MLC spot in South Australia, a number of possible MLC spots in Victoria, most of the NSW Legislative Council contingent and a few key seats in inner Sydney and Melbourne will be open preselection contests, with no incumbent running.

Hopefully this will mean that, in 2009, there will be spirited contests that will set much of the Greens direction for the next few years. Most of these races will be conducted as direct ballots of all Greens members in the electorate, giving candidates a first chance to show their campaign skills and begin the general election campaign early.

I have a few pieces of advice to offer to all candidates that should hopefully strengthen all of our candidates and help develop links with the lefty online community, which will be helpful come election time. Scott Ludlam’s excellent work on the internet filter has helped pull much of the online progressive movement away from Kevin07 towards the Greens. By genuinely engaging with twitterers and bloggers, we can then call on them when it comes to the crunch.

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7

Another NSW Greens senate candidate

I’m avoiding making personal comment on the worth of particular candidates or using my internal knowledge within the NSW Greens to comment on the Senate preselection, so I’m just restricting myself to posting information easily available on the internet.

In addition to NSW Greens MLC Lee Rhiannon’s announcement that she would resign from the Legislative Council to run for the Senate, another prominent Greens member has announced she is running.

Cate Faehrmann, Executive Director of the Nature Conservation Council and former Greens staffer and candidate, has announced she will stand in the preselection. The announcement appears at the bottom of a page on her blog, where she outlines her history with the Greens for those who may only know her from her NCC role.

Nominations close in just over two weeks.

2

Global Greens fall out over Mexican Greens

It’s a slightly old story, but the European Green Party, the umbrella party for all Green parties across the continent, have condemned the Mexican Greens for their position on the death penalty, and opened the possibility of Mexico’s Green Party being expelled from the Global Greens.

In February, controversy broke out within the Global Greens when the Mexican Greens announced that they would support the introduction of the death penalty for kidnappers and rapists who kill their victims:

Violent murders linked to organized crime – in particular the drug trade – are soaring in Mexico with nearly 6,000 people killed last year, double the number for 2007. As a result, Mexico’s tiny Green Party has decided to campaign for the reintroduction of the death penalty.  The Green Party in Mexico is pressing for the death penalty for kidnappers who torture, mutilate or murder their victims. If this measure is adopted by the country’s legislators, it would reverse a 2005 decision to formally scrap capital punishment. It has been almost 50 years since anyone was executed in Mexico. More than 5,600 people were killed by drug traffickers in Mexico last year and analysts say Mexico is now the most dangerous country in the world for kidnapping.

The European Green Party, the most successful continental Greens federation and the only one formally constituted as a party, has condemned the Mexican Green Party (or PVEM) for this position, and have called on the Federation of Green Parties of the Americas to expel PVEM:

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0

Jeanette Fitzsimons stepping down

Via the NZ Greens’ Frogblog, the NZ Greens female co-leader, Jeanette Fitzsimons, has announced this week that she will be stepping down as co-leader at the June national conference. She reveals in her video that already two of her colleagues, Metiria Turei and Sue Bradford, will nominate. As I understand, there is a ballot of local branch delegates, after local branches discuss the candidates and give instructions to their delegates. I’m not sure of the more detailed mechanics, but it will be fascinating to watch this year.

And in what is an interesting line for Australian Greens members to consider, Fitzsimons says:

In other parties, they have a coup in caucus when somebody gets the numbers, and they walk out of caucus and say ‘we’ve got a new leader’, and the members of the party say ‘oh really?’ Well, we don’t do it like that.

Ahem.

2

Is this what you mean, Miranda?

From Crikey‘s First Dog on the Moon:

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10

Margins in strong Greens seats

There are a handful of seats in the House of Representatives where the Greens are within spitting distance of winning the seat. In nearly all of them, however, the true margin is hidden by the AEC’s methods of measuring marginality. Margins are calculated by referring to the two-candidate-preferred vote, but this doesn’t take into account the possibility that a candidate in third place may overtake the second-place candidate and be in a winnable position.

Greens marginal seats run into what psephologists call “non-monotonicity”, whereby one group’s preferences are not reciprocated. In monotonic system, a candidate cannot be harmed by receiving an extra vote. In recent federal elections, Liberal preferences in strong Greens seats have been directed to the Greens over Labor, putting the seat in a position where a Green in third place might win against Labor in a 2CP count, on Liberal preferences, but the preferences are not reciprocated, with Greens voters preferencing Labor over Liberal. Thus a seat may be registered as a 19.5% margin for Labor, as in the case of Sydney, even though the Labor vs Greens margin would be much smaller. Even if the result isn’t reversed by a change in the order of elmination, it’s possible that a seat can shift from “Very Safe” to “Marginal”.

At the 2007 election, only one Greens candidate managed to come second after preferences, in the seat of Melbourne, where the Greens overtook the Liberals on preferences from minor candidates and registered over 45% of the two-party-preferred vote, making the seat marginal. But there are a number of seats that fit the criteria of Greens marginals but don’t appear as such on the pendulum. These criteria are:

  • A reasonably high Greens vote (above 15%).
  • A large gap between the two major parties, with the weaker of the two (usually the Liberal) very low (usually below 30%).

The Greens managed to attract 82.5% of Liberal preferences in Melbourne at the 2007 election. In order to determine the next five most marginal Greens seats, I translated this proportion of Liberal votes to the Greens, to determine a two-party-preferred vote between Labor and Greens. I excluded all seats where the margin between Liberal and Greens is greater than the Labor-Greens margin. For example, in the case of Grayndler, I calculated a 60-40 margin, and the Liberals beat the Greens by 2%. I assume that if the Greens were to gain 10% of the 2PP vote they would manage to overtake the Liberals.

Anyway, here is my calculations.

  1. Melbourne – 54.7-45.3
  2. Sydney – 55-45
  3. Grayndler – 60-40
  4. Cunningham – 61-39
  5. Denison – 61-39
  6. Batman – 62-38

Comments, anyone?

8

Lee Rhiannon to contest Senate

Being a Greens member, I’m gonna refrain from commenting on this story, so I’ll just quote from this AAP story:

Greens MP Lee Rhiannon has told her party she will stand down from the NSW upper house ahead of the next federal election in a bid for a Senate spot.

Ms Rhiannon won her seat in the legislative council at the 1999 state election and has led a number of campaigns, most recently calling for political donation reform.

Her current term in the NSW upper house doesn’t expire until 2015.

“When our party opens up preselection (for the Senate) I will put forward my name, but that hasn’t been finalised,” Ms Rhiannon told AAP on Thursday.

“Irrespective of that, so that the party has certainty, I’ve said that I will resign when a federal election will be called.

The Greens will be choosing their 2010 Senate team in the first half of 2009. Clearly it will be interesting to see a new Greens MLC elected to fill the remainder of Lee’s term when she steps down at the time of the next federal election.

Update: the Sydney Morning Herald has injected the story with some baseless speculation about Lee replacing Bob Brown as the Greens leader, clearly written by someone who doesn’t know much about the internal dynamics of the Australian Greens, although a potential Senator Rhiannon would immediately overtake Senators Siewert, Ludlam and Hanson-Young in terms of parliamentary experience.

5

The Green tide?

Support for the Greens has increased markedly since the beginning of 2008. Newspoll has shown an increase in the party vote over the 10% barrier for the first time, recently reaching 13%. State Newspolls have the party polling over 10% in all mainland states, with the Tasmanian Greens over 20%. Recent elections in the Northern Territory, Western Australia and the ACT have all seen marked increases in votes for the Greens, and the Greens came close to winning the federal by-election in Mayo.

At this time last year, nineteen Greens sat in Parliaments across Australia. This has now risen to 25, with the election of two extra MLCs in Western Australia, two extra MLAs in the ACT and one extra Senator, and the defection of Queensland Labor MP Ronan Lee. This is well in excess of the numbers elected by the Democrats or the Democratic Labor Party. This compares to 8 MPs belonging to conservative minor parties such as the DLP, CDP, Shooters’ Party and Family First.

Following the Greens winning three seats and the balance of power at last Saturday’s ACT election, Poll Bludger and Larvatus Prodeo have begun debates about the future of the Greens. The question stands: are the Greens on a path to become Australia’s third force in the long-term, or is the high vote simply an expression of a protest vote against the major parties?

The biggest change to take place before the swing to the Greens went into overdrive in January 2008 was the election of the Rudd government in November 2007. The Greens have suffered from progressive voters who sympathise with Greens policies voting Labor in order to defeat Liberal governments. Most voters do not fully understand the preference system, and this misunderstanding is encouraged by ALP politicians who tell voters that a vote for anyone other than the ALP risks a Liberal government. Labor governments tend to be markedly more conservative than Labor oppositions. This may also contribute to the Greens’ overall stronger performance in state elections, where they have been opposed to Labor governments.

So what sets apart the Greens from other minor parties in recent history, such as the Democrats and One Nation? The main difference lies in the development of the Greens. While the Democrats and One Nation rose to their peaks quickly (although the Democrats stayed at their relative peak for a long time), the Greens have slowly risen, gaining small swings at each election and gradually electing more members of Parliament. This has been accompanied by a reliance on a large grassroots membership, as well as much stronger presences on local councils and in state and territory parliaments. In contrast, the Democrats always had a relatively small membership base, with the party centralised on the Senate party room, with little in the way of local and state branch structures.

The Greens do not rely much on the Senate party room or its Senators. With over 10,000 members, an extensive network of local groups, local councillors and MPs in every parliament except the Northern Territory, the party is much less reliant on the performance of its federal representatives.

In particular, the New South Wales party relies much more strongly on the perfomance of its local councillors (now increased to 75 seats across the state) than on Greens Senators. The next generation of potential Greens MPs in NSW is largely composed of sitting or former councillors. This is particularly true of the seats of Balmain and Marrickville, where the Greens have tended to stand local councillors in an attempt to win the seats. The Greens also are growing on councils in Victoria and Tasmania. Two of Victoria’s three Greens MLCs are former councillors, with Greg Barber previously serving as Mayor of Yarra. With Victoria’s local councils slowly shifting towards a more favourable electoral system, the Greens should pick up more council seats in the November 28 election. In addition to giving Greens an opportunity to train up future MPs, councils give the Greens an opportunity to demonstrate competence in governing and to debunk

The Greens have also taken time to carve out a niche on the political spectrum to the left of the ALP, unlike the Democrats who struggled to attract progressive voters while maintaining a position at the centre of the spectrum and work constructively with all governments of whatever ideology.

While the Greens vote has increased, and current polls would give the Greens a strong chance of electing extra Senators in 2010, the Greens are looking towards winning lower house single-member electorates as the opportunity to cement their position as a third force. The Greens have had a number of close calls, polling strongly in the state seats of Marrickville (NSW), Balmain (NSW), Melbourne (Vic) and Fremantle (WA), with a number of other state seats also registering strong results for the Greens. The Greens came second in the federal seat of Melbourne in 2007 for the first time in a federal general election, although it is likely that a breakthrough will take place first in state politics. You would have to think that the Greens stand a very good chance of winning Balmain and/or Marrickville at the 2011 NSW election, and may finally get over the line in Melbourne in the 2010 Victorian election. If the Greens manage to win those seats they will have truly surpassed the performance of Australia’s historical minor parties.

So is the increase in the vote for the Greens a blip, or a long-term trend? It is true that the Greens have benefited from the poor performance of the major parties, but the major parties have been equally damaged by the rise of a credible party for people to cast a protest vote, even if the Greens are not yet seen as a credible alternative for government. There is no sign that those voters will turn back any time soon. Protest votes seem to be cast not so much against individual policy items or figures in the major parties but a culture of top-down control, arrogance and thuggery, something which is not likely to change anytime soon. Furthermore, once someone casts a vote for the Greens once, there is much less of a burden for them to vote for the Greens a second time.

The Greens’ performance in positions of balance of power, despite a media narrative which ignores history, has been relatively strong. While the Greens failed to hold onto long-term coalitions when they held the balance of power in Tasmania, the party managed to achieve parts of its agenda, and has survived the short-term decline that all minor parties suffer following a period supporting a government. Likewise, the Greens have generally acted responsibly in their time in the upper house balance of power in NSW, Victoria and Western Australia. Sure, they don’t just do what the major parties want, but that is exactly why their voters elected them. The first experience of Greens in the Senate balance of power suggests that the Australian Greens are performing well in their role of handling the power responsibly while mapping out their own policy agenda.

While there is no long-term future guaranteed for any minor party in Australia, the Greens appear to be on track for further gains and a significant role in Australian politics for many years to come. The Greens are no flash-in-the-pan.