Politics

Powerful Mothin Ali speech highlights political neglect of North East England

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Mothin Ali stood in the Gurdwara Siri Guru Singh Sabha on Saturday 18 April and did what every political leader should do. Despite turning up pale-faced and poorly, the Green Party co-leader fought through it and delivered one hell of a speech. It was a stunning masterclass in the politics of hope that hit the right notes in the North East of England, an area struggling to survive.

But whilst Ali was pushing through illness to offer the North East a lifeline, the room he spoke to was only three-quarters full. This is the reality of the area in 2026. A region where politics is just another empty word.

The North East urgently needs a politics of hope, but the politics of hate is so much louder. Reform UK fills the void, and it fucking sucks.

The North East: UK’s industrial heartland is a political vacuum

The North East is a fucking sad place. Once upon a time it was the home of the Labour Party. It’s where the Durham Miners Association and the trade unions dominated. The skyline of steelworks and the mining communities forged the area into the impenetrable ‘Red Wall’.

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For a century, the people of the north-east built the world, forged the railways and we were the source of the UK’s economic growth. The heavy industries of the Tyne, Wear and Tees dominated the world. But today, that history is weaponised by Nigel Farage and Reform UK.

Whilst the Green’s were rallying in a room, Farage was filling the Sunderland Arena on Thursday 26 March. He filled that arena with his hate-filled politics of division that thrives when people feel abandoned.

Farage and Tice haven’t just turned up for a photo op. They have occupied the North East entirely. This year we have seen these arseholes touring Sunderland, Durham and Teesside and it’s working. Farage has even said he’ll try to bring Trump to Teesside. Their presence is slowly chipping away at the ‘Red Wall’, and they’re rapidly turning this part of the map a sickening shade of light blue.

The disgusting physical presence of Reform leadership is a stark contrast to the Green leadership. Polanski has spent most of this year in the south of England and London. Once again, the North is a footnote in politics. The politics of hope and change doesn’t seem to reach the area which really needs it the most.

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Reform is full of shit, but shit sticks

Reform UK is projected to pretty much clean house in the North East. Farage is promising a ‘breath of fresh air,’ yet it’s tainted with the smell of bullshit. But in truth, the snake-oil salesman would impoverish the North East even more.

Reform’s ‘Contract with the People’ contains nothing but hollow promises that would ruin the region’s future.

Farage wants to scrap all £10 billion of renewable energy subsidies. The North East could potentially gain £1.9 billion and create up to 27,000 new jobs by 2050. The area is earmarked to head the Green revolution in the UK, to regain its status as a powerhouse of industry. And yet Reform has got the sheep voting for the wolf it seems.

Reform’s new model for the NHS also spells a death sentence for these voters. Moving towards an ‘insurance-based’ system in a region with some of the highest health inequalities and chronic conditions will be a death sentence for so many. In a place where 21% of all the population lives in poverty, how the fuck are they meant to afford private healthcare? People are going to die if the Red Wall turns blue.

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And whilst Reform screams about cutting taxes, the councils they lead like Worcestershire, have seen tax hikes as high as nearly 9%. In a place like Middlesbrough that’s money which could go towards feeding a hungry child.

Being the voice of the voiceless

Despite the room not reaching capacity, Ali’s performance in Newcastle was stunning. He didn’t just stick to the same, tired old script that most leaders do. He spoke directly to the structural issues that fuel the fire of Farage.

Using the quickly-put together stage to target the ‘Red Tory’ policies of Labour and pushing the narrative that the North East is being forced to choose between two versions of the same old establishment neglect, Ali hammered that the Greens are the only viable alternative for voters who feel betrayed. That the battle is now Greens vs Reform — and the Greens need money to help make it happen.

His speech was grounded in the region’s reality. Ali claimed that the Green party is now a national force and not just London-centric. However, this is something that’s getting harder to believe when the region hasn’t seen Polanski at all in 2026.

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Ali is calling for a campaign built on grassroots door-knocking and canvassing to reach 28,000 voters across nine councils. It can be done; the passion was evident in those watching him. But how can the Green party call for this kind of commitment when the leadership seems to forget that the North East exists.

If they turn it around, if they gain footing in the region, it would be an incredible powerhouse for change. But just like every other political party, the area seems to be invisible, and therefore, its potential is lost.

The North East of England needs action, not words

The Greens hold the policies which can revive the North East. They’re calling for an annual £5 billion increase in local government funding and a £29 billion plan to insulate homes.  The old mill houses that dominate the North East really fucking need that.

But I have one thing to say to the Greens: The North East is sick of being talked at. Ali’s word were fucking wonderful but they remain empty. When the Greens are polling at 18% nationally, neglecting the one area that is ripe for a green industrial revolution seems like a massive oversight.

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The North East doesn’t need more photo ops. It needs a party of hope which will fill arenas and actually fight to turn the ‘Red Wall’ Green. If the Green Party doesn’t fill this political void, the hatred and bullshit of Reform will continue to win.

The upcoming May general election is a battle for the soul of the North. So, will the Green’s show up and save it or will the population vote to shoot themselves in the foot through pure, political neglect?

Featured image via the Canary

By Antifabot

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