News
Greens Will Target 3 Seats in Assembly Elections
Northern Ireland Greens helped by deeper links with Irish, Scottish, English and Welsh Green parties
The Green Party today announced new party structures that will develop the Greens in Northern Ireland and enhance their chances of winning three seats at Assembly elections in March. Green Party Leader Trevor Sargent TD joined the regional co-leader of the Northern Ireland Greens John Barry and colleagues from the English Green Party in Belfast today to announce his support for the Northern Ireland Greens and sign a memorandum of understanding establishing enhanced North-South and East-West links. Romayne Phoenix, Green Party Councillor for the London borough of Lewisham, Peter Cranie, for the Greens in Wales and Scotland, and Mark Dearey, Green Party Town Councillor from Dundalk, also signed the memorandum.
The Northern Ireland Greens are now a regional council of the Irish Green Party with the benefit of additional organisational and logistical resources. Reflecting the structure and reality of political decision-making in Northern Ireland following the Good Friday Agreement, the Northern Greens will also benefit from closer links with other Green parties in the UK, with whom they will work to promote Green policies in relevant UK and European legislation. A number of senior European Green politicians also sent messages of support.
Green Party leader Trevor Sargent TD speaking in the W5 centre in Belfast, said: "Today's development means that people throughout the island of Ireland will now have the opportunity to vote for an inclusive and progressive political party with a great record of representation and achievement in local and town councils across the UK and Ireland, in the Scottish Assembly, in the Irish Parliament and in the European Parliament. Issues such as climate change, an independent EPA, planning control, energy, organic farming and the dangers of nuclear power are of vital importance here in Northern Ireland and the people from all communities and all walks of life would be well served by a strong Green presence in the Assembly."
The co-leader of the Northern Ireland Greens John Barry added: "The Green Party is building for the future and now set to target three seats in the forthcoming Assembly elections."
Cllr. Mark Dearey adds, "I wholeheartedly welcome today's development and applaud the Green Party in Northern Ireland in its decision to become a regional council in a single all island party. Energy and environmental problems need to be tackled on a cross border basis and as a single all Island party with a real commitment to environment and sustainable economic development we are uniquely positioned to deliver."
