“A vision of what’s possible”
Patrick Harvie MSP will tell his party’s autumn conference today that Greens are ‘leading the change’ in Scotland, with other parties playing ‘catch up’ in proposing policies for a fairer and greener country.
Speaking at Edinburgh Napier University, Harvie will cite the progress made by Greens in opposition at Holyrood, including John Finnie’s proposed equal protection bill, Mark Ruskell’s proposed 20mph bill and the reversal of £160m in cuts to local councils successfully negotiated at last year’s Scottish Budget.
The Glasgow MSP will then tell members that the party is ready to rise to new and emerging challenges such as Brexit and the forthcoming Scottish Budget. He’ll highlight how Greens are also leading the change across Europe by welcoming Swedish deputy minister for finance Per Bolund MP, and Green MLA Clare Bailey who has been leading the campaign to change Northern Ireland’s restrictive abortion laws.
With these examples, Harvie will say that Greens can be proud in giving people in Scotland “a vision of what’s possible”.
Scottish Green Party co-convener Patrick Harvie MSP will say: “The list of Green achievements at Holyrood is long and getting longer. We’re leading the change on issues from air pollution to rent control, and from the fracking ban to the announcement of a publicly owned energy company and it’s clear that the positive Green agenda we’ve been pushing for years is making real progress.
“With support growing for Green campaigns like our bills to protect children from violence and to make 20mph speed limits the norm, and for core Green ideas like universal basic income and Land Value Tax, it’s clear that we have much more progress ahead.
“But leading the change is what Greens have always done. From our earliest days, long before devolution and fairer voting systems, we have pushed at the edges of what’s politically possible and forced others to respond. We were the first to call for meaningful action on issues like climate change, radical land reform and equal marriage, and these are now mainstream – though it often takes the rest of the political landscape a decade to catch up.
“Now, with critical challenges ahead like the chronic inequality in our society, the continuing environmental crisis and the recklessly destructive Brexit power-grab, we must respond with practical ideas, but also inspire people with a vision of what’s possible.
“We must never stop pushing at the boundaries; we must never become the kind of party that tries to win by offering a safe, unchallenging middle-ground agenda. We’ll keep leading the change in Scottish politics, advocating investment in the post-oil economy that lies ahead, finding new ways of sharing our wealth more fairly and living within environmental limits. Other parties will no doubt still take their time to catch up, but the radical Green agenda will keep moving the political agenda in the right direction.”