Politics
The House | Caroline Lucas: The Greens Have Been “Really Burnt” By Progressive Alliances With Labour

Credit Emma Innocenti
9 min read
Former Green leader Caroline Lucas talks to Matilda Martin about her party’s new direction under Zack Polanski, how it needs to find better ways of handling its differences internally – and why she is wary of a progressive alliance
Caroline Lucas would “love” for Zack Polanski to spend more time talking about the environment. It is not, historically, a criticism that one would have expected to be levelled at a Green Party leader, but the Corbynite-populist turn taken by the newcomer has frustrated some veterans of the party – while also bringing electoral success.
As a former leader of the party herself, Lucas is complimentary of Polanski, saying she considers him a friend, albeit one she doesn’t speak to often, given his busy schedule. “He has taken the Green Party into a whole new space,” she says, noting the party’s ballooning membership and recent wins, most notably in Gorton and Denton.
“Journalists used to say to me very frequently: ‘You’re just a one-issue party,’” she recalls. “Now Zack has broadened the agenda, and the criticism that sometimes gets levelled at Zack is: ‘What’s happened to the environment?’”
Asked whether she disagrees with the criticism, however, she admits: “I would love him to talk about it a little bit more.” She goes on to add: “But I understand entirely why he’s taken the decisions that he has, and even in recent weeks he certainly, from my hearing, is talking about it more.”
While Lucas is careful in her answers to acknowledge that it is Polanski who now runs the show, she is not afraid to intervene when she feels it’s needed – for example, calling for immediate action by the party when several of its candidates in the May local elections faced antisemitism allegations. Lucas “definitely still sees a role for herself” in the Greens, as long-time friend and adviser Cath Miller tells The House. “It’s an intrinsic part of her.”
Asked whether the intervention over antisemitism was a difficult one to make, Lucas says: “I felt that it needed to be said, and that the vast majority of people both inside and outside the party would agree with it. It just felt that I hadn’t seen it being said in quite those terms.”
One of her frustrations as leader, she says, was not being able to get involved in disciplinary issues – though she understands the reasoning behind that set-up, considering it was political interference that contributed to the Equality and Human Rights Commission’s decision to call Labour institutionally antisemitic in 2020.
The Greens also attracted controversy earlier this year when the party looked set to debate a controversial motion titled “Zionism is racism” at its spring conference. While the motion did not end up being debated, it could return in the autumn. What does Lucas make of the row?
She pauses before answering. “I’m not sure it’s a very helpful debate, in the sense that the way in which that motion was worded caused a lot of concern among people across the party.”
There is a vast difference between criticising the Israeli government and using terms about which Jewish Greens and others have raised concerns, she stresses. “Zionism can be interpreted in so many different ways, and there was a concern that some people thought the motion was talking more about individual Jewish people rather than the Israeli government.”
It is up to the party to decide what to discuss, Lucas adds, but she hopes the debate is held in a less “toxic” way next time.
The party has also been criticised by some in recent years for its expulsion of ‘gender-critical’ members who oppose its policy on self-identification. Does Lucas think the zero-tolerance approach that has been taken is the right one?
“As far as I know, people haven’t been expelled simply for being gender-critical and, if they have, that should never happen,” she says. Suspension as a result of someone being accused of transphobic language or actions is one thing, Lucas says, whereas those who are gender-critical but “perfectly respectful – I don’t think we should be hounding those people out of the party”.
It seems inevitable that as the Greens grow, factional infighting will become more common. When asked what her advice would be, Lucas strikes a maternal tone: “There needs to be an awful lot more willingness to hear views that aren’t necessarily your own. We need to find ways of handling difference in our party, and all parties, in a better way.”
She continues: “If there’s transphobia or homophobia or any kind of race hate, that is completely unacceptable. But most of this stuff is much more about differences of views that we ought to be able to find ways to handle better.”
In 1986, when Caroline Lucas first joined the Green Party, “The height of our ambitions was to save our deposit or win a seat on a local council,” she recalls in her 2015 book, Honourable Friends? Parliament and the Fight for Change. Expectations within the party look very different today.
The Green Party had already been doing well in the polls, but the election of London Assembly member and former deputy leader Polanski as leader in September turbocharged its popularity. In the contest last year, Lucas threw her support behind the more environment-focused and traditional pair of co-leader candidates, MPs Ellie Chowns and Adrian Ramsay.
Now, she says her concerns about a Polanski leadership were misplaced: “I mistakenly thought it was going to be a problem, not having the leadership within the parliamentary party.” The reality, she believes, is it has been an advantage, allowing Polanski to be more active in terms of media appearances.
Lucas, now 65, has a long history with the Green Party. After joining it back in 1986, she led the party for a decade in total between 2003 and 2018. She sat as a Green MP in Westminster for 14 years and served as an MEP for more than 10 years before that.
Since leaving the Commons in 2024, Lucas has more time on her hands. The House has travelled to meet her on the sunny campus of the University of Sussex where, in 2025, Lucas was appointed professor of practice in environmental sustainability.
“There was a concern that some people thought the motion was talking more about individual Jewish people rather than the Israeli government”
It is hours after the news has broken that Andy Burnham will return to Westminster. At one point she laughs about how they are talking of him as if he is already prime minister. “Let’s assume he will be pretty soon,” she says.
The possibility of the Greens partly forming the next government is an idea that has gained salience in recent months, particularly so in light of Burnham’s likely ascent to No 10.
Asked which role she would like to play in a hypothetical Labour-Green coalition, Lucas is keen to talk about the party rather than herself. She makes clear that she thinks the Greens should not resign themselves – in light of their recent success – to playing a minor role in such a government.
“We don’t even know which is going to be the most successful progressive party on the left at the next general election. So, let’s not assume that we’re the ones who are going to be the junior partners here. Let’s be ambitious.”
She also warns that history has shown the potential pitfalls awaiting those who enter coalitions. “What that would actually look like… is something that we’ve got to think incredibly carefully about,” she says, adding that the Liberal Democrats “gave an object lesson of how not to do coalition government, and we would certainly want to learn from that”.
Are there Green policies that could be watered down in preparation for a coalition, as reports suggest? “Those kinds of questions are so far ahead of where the debate is at right now, because it assumes the coalition government is the arrangement that most people would support,” she replies. “Let’s not get ahead of ourselves.”
Last month, reports emerged that a progressive alliance council was being formed by centre-left think tank Compass, of which Burnham ally Neal Lawson is director.
Lucas, who co-chairs the organisation, claims she knows little about it. “I imagine first and foremost, it’s about building trust and relationships now, well in advance of any election.”
Surprisingly, Lucas appears wary of going any further by embracing the progressive alliance movement too readily. “It’s true to say the Green Party’s fingers have been really burnt by it,” she says.
The idea has been “interpreted by Labour again and again as Greens being forced to stand down or being bullied into standing down”, Lucas argues. “There was no reciprocity to it at all, and that is not what a progressive alliance is. So, even that term now within the party is treated with understandable suspicion.”
But their recent wins mean the Greens now find themselves in a stronger position, Lucas says:
“There’s absolutely no way that the Greens are going to stand for being treated in that way.”
She insists that the foot is now “on the pedal” for the mayoral contest in Greater Manchester, triggered by Burnham’s new Westminster posting.
“The Greens definitely will be throwing everything at that, and I would absolutely support them in so doing, and will be up there to do what I can to help,” Lucas says.
She is, however, excited by Burnham’s support for electoral reform, saying the pressure is now on to make sure he delivers on that as soon as possible.
It is up to the progressive movement as a whole, Lucas declares, to ensure that Burnham does not campaign left but govern right: “It would be a rash person to sit here and say: ‘He won’t do that,’ given our experience of recent Labour leaders.”
While no longer an MP, Lucas’ dedication to the Greens has not wavered. She points to the new Green think tank Verdant, of which she sits on the board and through which she is keen to help shape policy, as well as her role as co-president of the European Movement, an advocacy group that promotes European integration, which she hopes will allow her “a little bit of influence over the party’s new direction”.
“There’s plenty going on,” she says. “I’m not done yet.”
Politics
The Surprising Way Upper Body Strength Can Predict Your Heart Attack Risk
Eating a balanced (largely Mediterranean) diet, steering clear of stress, and quitting smoking are just some of the ways to help reduce your heart attack risk.
Exercise also has a huge bearing. Studies have consistently found physical activity has a protective effect against heart disease, which can lead to heart attacks.
Adding to this body of evidence, researchers recently looked at the routine heart scans of 1,722 people, mostly in their fifties, who’d experienced chest pain.
Using artificial intelligence to analyse the scans, they found people with greater muscle density in their chest and back were less likely to have a heart attack or die in the decade after having the scan.
One of the study’s senior authors, Professor Michelle Williams, from the Centre for Cardiovascular Science at the University of Edinburgh, said the findings have inspired her to go to the gym twice a week (where possible) and walk for an hour a day.
“It is fascinating that people’s skeletal muscle could be linked to their risk of having a heart attack. The muscles which show up in the scans we used … are principally the back muscles, part of the pectoral muscles (or ‘pecs’) and the intercostal muscles between the ribs,” she said.
“So I am now personally interested in exercises like cycling, planks and pilates, which I enjoy and may have an effect on these muscles. However we need far more research to better understand how exercise may affect muscle density, and how this may relate to heart health.”
The reduction in heart attack risk was witnessed even after taking into account other factors which may increase a person’s risk of heart attack and death, such as age, sex and the amount of calcium build-up up in their arteries.
Researchers said it’s likely that people who exercise enough to have strong muscles in their upper body have a healthy lifestyle which protects their heart in other ways.
What type of exercise should I prioritise for heart health?
The researchers said all kinds of exercise, not just strength-training, can improve muscle density.
The size of people’s muscles was not linked to their risk of a heart attack or early death, which suggests it is the composition of the muscle which matters.
Cardiac rehab physiotherapist Helen Alexander previously told the British Heart Foundation (BHF) that three types of exercise can help strengthen heart health.
These are:
1. Aerobic exercise, such as brisk walking, cycling and swimming,
2. Resistance and strength training, such as lifting weights, using resistance bands, doing squats and press-ups,
3. Exercise that improves balance and flexibility, such as tai chi and yoga.
Professor Bryan Williams, chief scientific and medical officer at the BHF, which helped fund the study, said the findings provide “yet more evidence supporting the power of exercise”.
“Every time we move, we are making a positive difference to our muscles, our blood vessels and our overall health, and regular exercise can reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease by up to a third,” he said.
Politics
Ex-James Bond Casting Director Addresses Search For Next 007
A former casting director on the James Bond franchise has weighed in on the ongoing search for the next actor to lead the series.
However, for casting director Debbie McWilliams – who spent more than 40 years casting roles in James Bond films, including helping pick the most recent three actors to play 007 – there’s one “absolutely essential” quality that would make all three of them unsuitable for the role.
“I don’t want to see any of them as Bond because we now know so much about them,” she told The Independent, insisting that 007 should remain “a total enigma”.
“We want to know as little about them personally as possible, because that’s what spies are,” she continued. “We don’t need to know where he goes shopping or who his parents are, or where he lives. We never want to see him at home.
“And a vital element of the whole thing is his job description. He’s licensed to kill, and we have to believe that he can do that. If you don’t, then you’ve lost the audience.”
She added that the next James Bond should be “somebody who is completely out of the blue”, which she suggested was part of Daniel Craig’s appeal when he first picked up the mantle.
Deadline reported in May that the franchise’s new casting director Nina Gold was keeping an eye on the West End for new talent that might be suitable to play James Bond.
Politics
After Henry Nowak: taking on two-tier policing
The post After Henry Nowak: taking on two-tier policing appeared first on spiked.
Politics
Summer Clothes, Fans, And Raincoats A Shopping Writer Is Eyeing Up This Pay Day
We hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI — prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.
Every month, I look at hundreds, if not thousands of products as a shopping writer. And just like in my own time (I <3 shopping).
Thus there are plenty of things on my wishlist that simply don’t make it into my house because, well, I can’t afford them.
Come payday, though, I’m always looking for a little treat to buy myself, which is why this month I thought I’d share a list of my best fashion, homes, and tech finds – on the off chance you’re looking for something to spend your hard-earned money on, too.
Politics
I Tried The New M&S Sweet Dips, And My Life Will Never Be The Same Again
We hope you love the products we recommend! All of them were independently selected by our editors. Just so you know, HuffPost UK may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page if you decide to shop from them. Oh, and FYI — prices are accurate and items in stock as of time of publication.
Every now and again, I have to try things I don’t want to as a shopping writer. I might not want to, but I do it anyway in the name of good journalism; so you don’t have to.
This particular occasion wasn’t one of them. Without giving you TMI, there is a certain time of month where my craving for anything with even a sprinkling of sugar becomes almost unbearable.
Praise the lord, that coincided with M&S releasing its new sweet dips this month, and I made it my business to try them.

Honey Jane Wyatt/HuffPost
You’ll remember its viral strawberries and cream sando from last year; this year it’s made a comeback in the form of a pistachio, chocolate, and strawberries and cream sandwich.
Personally, that sounds like a bit much. But even better than that, I think, is the fact the brand has now released two new dips to make all your picky bits dreams come true.
And yep, they’re also as sweet and delicious as a girl could dream for.
One of said life-fulfilling moments is a strawberry and cream fruity dip, while the other is a velvety chocolate and pistachio number.
You might be wondering what on earth you’re supposed to dip into them. Well, worry not, dear friend, because M&S has that covered on the literal packaging, too: shortbread, or strawberries.
And dear lord, are both of them delicious. Overall, the strawberry dip is more likely to be a crowd pleaser, because it tastes exactly like light and zingy strawberry jam loaded on top of a cream scone. Mmmmm.
It was also equally as good with the shortbread as it was the strawberries, which was surprising considering that’s basically strawberry squared.
Meanwhile, the texture of the chocolate dip was wholly delightful, however it didn’t taste much of pistachio.
I’m not complaining (because what’s not to love about pure chocolate?!) and it wouldn’t put me off trying it again, but I imagine people who are expecting a full on Dubai chocolate experience might be a tad disappointed.
All in all, though, I’d rate the strawberry one a solid 4.5/5, and the chocolate one a 4/5, and I know I’ll be picking these up on the way to picnics all summer long.
Politics
Migration, borders and belonging – spiked
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Politics
Trump’s Birthright Plans Busted!
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Politics
The House | Greens To Target “Unease About Gentrification” Under Burnham In Manchester Mayoral Race

Councillor Geraldine Coggins, the Green Party’s candidate for the Greater Manchester mayoral race, with recently elected Green MP Hannah Spencer (Alamy)
3 min read
Exclusive: The Green Party remains confident it can move ahead of Labour in the Greater Manchester mayoral race and plans to target local unease about gentrification under Andy Burnham, according to senior insiders.
The election of Burnham as Labour MP for Makerfield in June triggered a by-election in the Greater Manchester Combined Authority, with polling day set for 30 July.
Labour has sought to portray the election next month as a two-horse race between itself, with candidate Bev Craig, the Manchester city council leader, and Reform UK’s Sian Astley, a newly elected local councillor. The Greens are running Geraldine Coggins, a councillor in Altrincham.
The government put into effect a change of electoral system from first-past-the-post to the supplementary vote, a preferential system under which voters will cast a first and second choice. Labour sources believe this will boost their chances of holding onto the mayoralty.
While optimism around the by-election has grown within Labour since Burnham’s upcoming coronation as leader and prime minister became clear, the Greens are still hopeful that the “Burnham bounce” is surmountable.
Senior Green insiders say the first week of the campaign has been overshadowed by the noise around Burnham’s ascent to Downing Street, but insist their party’s ground campaign is strong and support for Labour is “soft”.
The party led by Zack Polanski, who originally hails from Salford, believe there is “a lot of unease” among voters about the policies Labour has enacted in Greater Manchester, including “gentrification” and “the role of developers in pricing people out of the areas they want to be in”.
The Greens will emphasise their offers locally on affordable housing, rent controls and a policy of no more money to developers without guarantees of affordable housing targets.
Green figures also suspect that while Burnham is a better communicator than Keir Starmer, the former mayor may not be as radical in government as some on the left hoped. The party will be highlighting demands such as dropping the fiscal rules, public ownership rather than increased control and a concrete commitment to electoral reform nationally.
The Greens will be aiming for first-preference voters primarily, and senior insiders point out that YouGov polling from February showed Labour voters being more willing to tactically vote Green than the other way around.
Earleir this month, the Greens’ former leader, Caroline Lucas, told The House mag that her party would “throw everything” at the Manchester mayoral election after deciding not to run a full-throttle campaign in Makerfield.
She compared the election next month to the by-election in Gorton and Denton in February, where Green candidate Hannah Spencer won 40 per cent of the vote to unseat Labour.
However, Labour sources counter that Burnham has changed the national picture since then and that the likelihood of the Greens repeating their success in Gorton and Denton is low, given they will not be able to target a particular demographic among voters across the combined authority in the way they did so effectively to secure Spencer’s win.
They also point out that Spencer finished fifth in the mayoral contest two years ago, and add that the Green vote share in the wards making up the whole combined authority in the recent local elections showed them placing significantly behind Labour and Reform, as it was concentrated in select areas.
“They’re trying to talk themselves into the race, but there’s no evidence for it,” a Labour source told PoliticsHome.
The Greater Manchester Combined Authority covers 27 parliamentary seats, making the scale of the by-election unprecedented in British politics.
The Conservative candidate is Trafford councillor Phil Eckersley, the Liberal Democrats are running Manchester councillor Richard Kilpatrick, and Restore Britain has grooming gangs campaigner Marlon West as its candidate.
Politics
Free speech, identity and cancellation
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Islam, the left and the West
The post Islam, the left and the West appeared first on spiked.
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