Green Leader Visits Merseyside
Peter Cranie | 06.02.2004 23:10 | Anti-racism | Globalisation | Social Struggles | Liverpool
John Whitelegg, leader of the North West Green Party will be speaking at two meetings in Liverpool on Monday 9th February.
Following the Green Party’s most successful ever local election results in 2003, John Whitelegg, leader of the NW Green Party will be speaking to local people and students in two Liverpool locations on Monday evening.
John Whitelegg is Professor of Sustainable Transport at Liverpool John Moores University and Professor of Sustainable Development at the University of York. He is widely tipped to become the first Green MEP in the North West region.
The original meeting at the Liverpool Guild of Students has already generated so much interest that a second meeting has now been organised earlier on to take place in the south of the city. The first meeting will now take place on Monday at 6pm at Liverpool Hope Student Union (the Boardroom), off Woolton Road. The later meeting will take place in the library room of the Liverpool Guild, off Mount Pleasant in the city centre at 7.30pm.
Professor Whitelegg will be speaking about anti-racist campaigning, improving Britain's transport system and his plans to improve the NW region if elected as an MEP this June.
Currently, Professor Whitelegg is one of eight Green councillors in Lancaster, and Chair of the Planning Committee on Lancaster City Council. He was elected in the Green Party's most successful ever local elections in 2003, with a Green councillor elected in Manchester and a 15% share of the vote in the Abercromby ward in Liverpool.
For more information, please ring Liverpool Green Party on 0151 709 0986
John Whitelegg is Professor of Sustainable Transport at Liverpool John Moores University and Professor of Sustainable Development at the University of York. He is widely tipped to become the first Green MEP in the North West region.
The original meeting at the Liverpool Guild of Students has already generated so much interest that a second meeting has now been organised earlier on to take place in the south of the city. The first meeting will now take place on Monday at 6pm at Liverpool Hope Student Union (the Boardroom), off Woolton Road. The later meeting will take place in the library room of the Liverpool Guild, off Mount Pleasant in the city centre at 7.30pm.
Professor Whitelegg will be speaking about anti-racist campaigning, improving Britain's transport system and his plans to improve the NW region if elected as an MEP this June.
Currently, Professor Whitelegg is one of eight Green councillors in Lancaster, and Chair of the Planning Committee on Lancaster City Council. He was elected in the Green Party's most successful ever local elections in 2003, with a Green councillor elected in Manchester and a 15% share of the vote in the Abercromby ward in Liverpool.
For more information, please ring Liverpool Green Party on 0151 709 0986
Peter Cranie
e-mail:
greenliverpool@hotmail.com
Homepage:
http://www.liverpoolgreenparty.org.uk
Comments
Hide the following 16 comments
whoopee!
07.02.2004 15:33
Save the Wheels!
save the wales
Green Party
07.02.2004 17:46
Personally, I don't really like their "middle class with a conscience" politics or their lack of any real connection or interest in the working class.
The Incredible Hulk
Ummm...
07.02.2004 18:33
right? i.e. 'middle class conscience politics' with no connection to the working class!
Greenie
Green worms in the rotting mass that is politix
07.02.2004 19:16
left right left right LEFT !
Green has become just another shade of politix
07.02.2004 19:23
Left Ear (longtime ago)
Italian greens are just as bad if not worse
07.02.2004 19:40
verde
class issues
08.02.2004 11:46
For the record. I grew up in a small Scottish town with 40% unemployment. Son of a merchant navy man, grandson of a coal miner, great-grandson of a blacklisted leader from the 1926 General Strike. However, I've got a university degree (the first in my family) so that makes me "middle-class" now. John Whitelegg is from similar "working class" origins, but of course is a Professor, so he is also "middle class" now.
There are policies of our you will agree with, and policies you will disagree with. You may wish to express these disagreements without descending to the journalistic style of "The Sun".
peter
e-mail: greenliverpool@hotmail.com
well said peter
08.02.2004 16:17
If we were doing things right on Merseyside we could tell these 'middle class' 'busy bodies' to do one but we're not. Things like pollution n toxic food affect us all and probably the 'working classes' more than the rest. the Greens should be supported even if you think it isn't an important enough issue to vote on.
read chomsky
Green Party
08.02.2004 20:49
They are essentially left-liberals. When they have got on council seats they often collaborate with the lib. denms. In their policies they show no real organic connection with working people. They have no links with the Labour movement and don't really except for broad social democratic plattitudes have any empathy for the most poor and marginalised in society.
Whenever they do get into power (as in Germany) they move rapidly to the right, which is symptomatic of these kind of politics.
The Incredible Hulk
On Chomsky
08.02.2004 20:53
I rate his book on Israel: "The Fateful Trigangle" and the one on the Media "Manufacturing Consent" as classics.
However, I think even Chomsky cops out. He never advocates any practical politics or tells us how to build a movement or actually agitate for change in our community.
I think it is this lack of practical politics that makes him popular amongst left-liberals.
Chomsky is brilliant at interpreting the world, but the point is not only to interpret the world - but to CHANGE it!
The Incredible Hulk
on chomsky
08.02.2004 23:18
read chomsky
Better just kill myself then
09.02.2004 13:49
GROW UP!
sqoo
man goes to Derby
09.02.2004 21:53
translator
I posted a main story and they didn't print mine either........
10.02.2004 11:46
A lot of lefties are monied and middle class, it is as simple as that. AND, and I think this can be a problem, what middle class British people and working class British people might believe are relevant issues can often be two different things. Fighting for justice in South Africa, Latin America, Indonesia, SE Asia, Eastern Europe and many other places ARE noble causes, but if you are IGNORING, and perhaps wilfully so, the problems in YOUR town, YOUR street, the place you live, work, eat and chill out, you are acting in your own way like the same despots and dictators in other harsher places. We remember the slave trade so such things don't happen in Europe again. We remember the Holocaust so this doesn't happen again. We remember the 1st World War so this doesn't happen again. But, it is like tackling problems in other parts of the world; those things are past, they are gone. We should be concerned about injustice everywhere, but especially in the country and place we live in, and we should be thinking about injustice HERE and NOW, the injustices that allow wealthy people ALL OVER THE WORLD to pay less tax, to pay low wages, to waive workers rights, NOT JUST in 'trendy' countries around the world, BUT RIGHT HERE in Britain!!!!!!! When any of those lefty groups, of whatever class group they are, march for a genuine minimum wage, a fairer tax system that hits the well-off and the rich more than the poor, and when monied lefties march for proper workers rights, and wave placards and banner about that, I'll think about joining one!!! But until there is a genuine and considered effort to tackle the, sometimes, savage economic injustice in Britain, and look at why the 4th wealthiest country in the world has poverty-stricken communities the length and breadth of these Isles, all this lefty posturing will remain just that, and all those groups for the most part will remain obscure, powerless, disunited and achieving very little if anything!!!
Until those who want genuine change get together with a majority of working class radicals who would directly benefit from fairer tax laws, fairer pensions, a fairer minimum wage, nothing is going to change. Where are all the radicals and the angry who are shocked at the mess the former mining communities? Where are they now? Yes, probably planning ANOTHER diversion, something about South America, or anti-racism, or something else to keep us away from the main issue; the issue of immoral and unjust economics, which allows wealthy countries like Britain to keep a majority of it's citizens in poverty, relative poverty and absolute poverty. When the monied lefties understand that their turning a blind eye in Britain to injustice, is EXACTLY the same as the oppressors in other countries turning exactly the same blind eye, we will all get to the truth of a matter. I won't hold my breath......
Timbo O'the 'Pool
Hiding vs. censorship
10.02.2004 13:54
Well yes we did, but we might have moved it from off the front page to the unmoderated "view all posts" page, as described here:
http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/static/editorial.html
I agree that this article is basically an advert for a political party, so I'll moderate this one too. Thanks for flagging it up: we don't always catch them all straight away.
Cheers,
An IMC guy
Labour right?
12.05.2004 14:32
OK some of Blair's policies contain shades of Thatcherism and that makes my blood boil sometimes but taking the party as a whole it is obvious where it sits - slap bang on the left.
Or would you rather keep reading the press opinion and not have any of your own?
Jay