Jeremy Corbyn has just announced he is launching a brand new left-wing party – but it already sounds very similar to the Green Party’s proposals.

Together with fellow former Labour MP Zarah Sultana, the ex-Labour leader promised a “new kind of political party” which “belongs to you”.

They said they would call for a wealth tax, champion an NHS which is free from privatisation, stand up for Palestine and challenge the fossil fuel giants “putting their profits before our planet”.

These policies are not dissimilar to those backed by the Green Party, which many former Labour supporters, now disillusioned, have flocked to over the last year.

That could therefore put the two parties at odds with one another.

Zack Polanski, the frontrunner in the ongoing Greens’ leadership race and the party’s current deputy, told HuffPost UK shortly after Corbyn’s announcement it is clear the parties have plenty in common.

He noted: “I’ve read the statement and I can’t see a single thing in there that’s not Green Party policy or doesn’t align already with the Green Party.”

He said: “I really like Jeremy and Zarah both as people and also as politicians. I’m supportive of anything they’re setting up.”

But the London Assembly member also made it clear they would be “welcome” in the Greens, which he called a “movement for change”.

He said: “I think it’s a positive thing that they’ve recognised that the Labour Party as a vehicle of progressive change that utterly collapsed, and it’s time to abandon it. They’ve not left the Labour Party, but Labour Party has left them.”

However, he noted that – unlike Corbyn’s new group – the Greens do not need to have a conference in the autumn to decide their name.

“Maybe that conference should decide actually, the Green party exists and is doing really well,” Polanski said, pointing to the nearly two million votes they secured in the general election. “It kind of makes sense to join the Green Party.”

  • jabjoe@feddit.uk
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    6 days ago

    The problem is the new party that could realistically get into government right now is Reform.

    The best I can hope for is Corbyn’s peals left leaning voters back from Reform. Realistically it’s not going to win power, so if they split left even more, we are in trouble. Hopefully, this is also true of Reform by the time of an election, but right now, it’s worrying.

    Reform will be a disastrous government making even the Tories look professorial and caring.

    If you right leaning, you basically vote Tory or Reform. If you left leaning you have more choices, some of which depend where you are. The left can’t all agree on a party. The closest to that is Labour. Our voting system just isn’t setup for this. It’s unrepresentative at the best of times.