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UK Green Party Hopes to Get Second Seat in Parliament at General Election

© AFP 2023 / Justin TALLISThe Palace of Westminster, comprising the House of Commons and the House of Lords, wchich together make up the Houses of Parliament, are pictured on the banks of the River Thames alongside Westminster Bridge in central London on March 29, 2017
The Palace of Westminster, comprising the House of Commons and the House of Lords, wchich together make up the Houses of Parliament, are pictured on the banks of the River Thames alongside Westminster Bridge in central London on March 29, 2017 - Sputnik International
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The Green Party of England and Wales (GPEW) hopes to get the second seat in the parliament at the upcoming June 8 general election in Britain.

LONDON (Sputnik) — The Green Party of England and Wales (GPEW) believes it has a real chance to get one more parliamentarian elected at the general election on June 8, in Bristol West constituency, bringing the total number to two, Shahrar Ali, the party's spokesman for home affairs and former deputy leader, told Sputnik on Monday.

Until now, the party has had only one representative at Westminster, Caroline Lucas, for Brighton Pavilion.

"We want to reelect currently sole MP [Member of Parliament]. But we also have a number of target seats — Bristol West constituency, Molly Scott Cato. There is a fantastic opportunity there for us, where we came second last time with a massive swing in our favor. So there is a real chance of getting a second MP," Ali said.

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May makes a speech at the Royal United Services Institute for Defence and Security Studies in central London while on the General Election campaign trail. Monday June 5, 2017. - Sputnik International
UK General Election 2017: Politicians, Policies, Polls
He noted that the Green Party "can get parliamentarians even with this first-past-the-post system," which places small parties at a disadvantage.

The support for the Greens in the upcoming election may stem from the anxiety of people over the problem of climate change, especially after US President Donald Trump announced the withdrawal from Paris Agreement.

"It's really dispiriting when a leader of the so-called free world is adopting such a position," Ali noted.

Last Thursday, Trump announced his decision to pull out of the Paris accord, although the president expressed readiness to renegotiate the deal under terms that would be more fair to the United States,

The latest ICM poll, published on Monday, suggests that the Greens may hope for 3 percent. A ComRes poll, published on Saturday, has them at 1 percent of the potential votes.

 

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