With my party hat on, and some party poppers too, I’ve been publicising the first group of Green Holyrood candidates. Here they are, and I’m afraid I will enthuse about them all. I do mean it, though:
Lothians. Robin’s replacement at the top of the Lothians list is a big deal for Greens. It’s the first Parliamentary seat any Green ever won in the UK, and Councillor Alison Johnstone will take on the scarf of responsibility. I’ve known Alison since she first started working for Robin right back at the beginning of devolution, and she’s smart, determined, kind and, above all, normal (unusual across politics, that last one).
We’ve won two here before, so I should also mention her Councillor colleague Steve Burgess second on the list. He’s your classic Green candidate. Scientific background, plays the fiddle, served on Rainbow Warrior II.
Mid Scotland and Fife. Mark Ruskell will be top here again, having served as the region’s Green MSP from 2003-2007. Another comrade from the epic 1999 Green campaign, he proved a natural Parliamentarian from the off, with an eye both for the detail and the big picture. Trivia fact: he was the year below me at school, although we didn’t properly meet until that first Holyrood campaign.
Highlands and Islands. Eleanor Scott has also been reselected top, another of our Magnificent Seven MSPs from last session. Eleanor made the health brief her own in the last session, having specialised in paediatrics, and I’ve never met anyone who didn’t warm to her immediately. She is also the party’s national co-convenor alongside Patrick, ruling the party with an iron rod. It feels wrong being in Parliament without her.
North-east. Councillor Martin Ford is a new entrant at number one here, and deserves a little more introduction. Martin made his name internationally as the man who stood up to Donald Trump over Menie. Mr Trump’s alleged billions met Martin’s definite principles and lost before skullduggery and machinations by his former Lib Dem colleagues came into play. I’ve worked with Martin since he joined the Greens last year, and he will be an excellent candidate and an excellent MSP too. Made out of pure integrity, he also knows how the media works, and is one of the shrewdest political campaigners I’ve ever met.
Central. Kirsten Robb is top for us here again, which wasn’t a massive surprise given her hard work and strong media presence. She’s another proper community activist, a fairtrade campaigner, and also has great media sense. Her local, the EK News, had a page lead of her with her new baby not that long ago. Not bad before she’d even been reselected. Determined, passionate on the issues, and would be a real asset to Holyrood.
Glasgow. A young man you may have heard of got himself reselected: Patrick Harvie. Please bear in mind he pays me to represent him, but if I could afford it, I’d do it for nothing. There can’t be many people who encourage the boss to kip on their sofa when he’s through, but I do like those nights set the world to rights.
Over the eight years he’s been at Holyrood Patrick’s become widely accepted as one of the Chamber’s true stars, as well as a natural in the Newsnight hotseat. We normally agree, and when we don’t it’s normally because he’s right. If it wasn’t against party policy, I’d clone him a couple of times. All three would have pretty busy diaries.
We’re still selecting, by the way, and West and South will follow.
#1 by Jeff on September 9, 2010 - 9:56 am
A strong line up James, thanks very much for posting on here. I’d be delighted to see them all in Holyrood from May ’11 but particularly Martin Ford as a just reward for the poor way he has been treated.
Incidentally, when you say – “can’t be many people who encourage the boss to kip on their sofa when he’s through”. I trust this isn’t some sort of expenses con…? I’m sure Paul Hutcheon is already on it.
#2 by James on September 9, 2010 - 10:00 am
Patrick’s really not the sort of chap to claim on expenses when he’s been on the sofabed. The correct way to look at this is it saves the taxpayers a hotel bill each time.
#3 by Malc on September 9, 2010 - 10:09 am
I hope the sofa-bed is in a different room and you haven’t just got both of you into a William Hague-type situation…
#4 by James on September 9, 2010 - 10:18 am
This is exactly the kind of highbrow discussion I’d hoped for on this site. Thanks team.
#5 by Jeff on September 9, 2010 - 10:40 am
True enough.
Back on topic. I believe the Greens winning an extra seat in every region would reduce the SNP’s tally by two or three, potentially an FM-making amount. I wonder how much that will be a factor in some voters’ mind? Do the Greens do better when there will be a clear winner and the second vote is more of a ‘luxury’?
I’m not sure what the best way to combat that would be, apart from bringing in STV of course.
#6 by Malc on September 9, 2010 - 10:51 am
Jeff makes a good point. Although, presumably for eco-Green voters, the choice of FM between Salmond and Gray is a choice between dying by shooting or hanging – neither exactly exhibits a proper green streak, though Salmond’s “wind” plans probably lead them more towards him over Gray. I’m not presuming to speak for Green voters here James, so correct me if I’m wrong.
Is this a concern – and is it something you think about? I mean, do more Green MSPs = more influence, or is the party more influential at the moment with 2 MSPs and an effective ‘balance of power’ role in Holyrood.
Here’s your high-brow discussion…
#7 by Paul on September 9, 2010 - 1:30 pm
Why can’t I “like” comments on this site? It is facebook, isn’t it?
#8 by James on September 9, 2010 - 2:02 pm
I like that.
#9 by Indy on September 9, 2010 - 12:34 pm
I expect the Greens in the central belt to pick up a lot of ex Lib Dem voters which should pay off on the list.
#10 by anon on September 9, 2010 - 2:54 pm
I see you didn’t re-select Shiona Baird. Is that cause she was crap?
#11 by Jeff on September 9, 2010 - 3:01 pm
James? Think this one’s yours mate.
#12 by James on September 9, 2010 - 3:12 pm
I’m going to be polite even though you’ve not been and you’re also anonymous.
Shiona didn’t stand this time, which is a shame. During FMQs in the last session she was widely seen as the best in the chamber at holding McConnell to account. She was calm, determined and principled, and I would love to have seen her back at Holyrood next year.
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#13 by anon on September 10, 2010 - 2:12 pm
During FMQs in the last session she was widely seen as the best in the chamber at holding McConnell to account.
No she wasn’t. She could barely speak properly let alone hold someone to account.