The Green Party is has called for a "Green New Deal" to tackle the duel challenge of climate change and the economic slump.
Speaking at the launch of their election manifesto, "Fair is worth fighting for", in Brighton this morning, party leader Caroline Lucas MEP said she believed her party was "on the edge of a breakthrough" into Westminster politics.
Lucas is the favourite to take the south coast seat of Brighton Pavilion from Labour, giving the party its first ever Westminster MP.
The Greens came a close third at the last election, securing 9,530 votes compared to the Tories who got 10,397.
Labour won the seat with 15,427, a majority of 5,030, but the current MP David Lepper is not contesting this election.
The party is also targeting Norwich South, with candidate Adrian Ramsay hoping to unseat former home secretary Charles Clarke who has a majority of 3,653.
And they are looking to snatch the London seat of Lewisham Deptford, currently held by energy minister Joan Ruddock.
If successful in gaining all or some of their target seats, the Greens said they would not vote to "prop up" a Conservative government in the event of a hung Parliament.
Lucas dismissed David Cameron's attempts to make his party more environmentally aware as a public relations stunt, and said they had simply "polished up" their green rhetoric for their manifesto.
The Tories were guiltily of "diminishing the ambition" of environmental policies in the European Parliament, she added.
Friday, 16 April 2010
Lucas calls for 'Green New Deal': ePolitix.com
via epolitix.com
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