Former Greens leaders urge party to stand up to Labor ‘arrogance’ as jockeying begins to replace Bandt | Australian Greens

The former Green leaders urged the party to stand in a state against the workers’ arrogance “in the new parliament, especially in climatic and environmental issues, as the internal tremors begin to find a new leader yet An unexpected defeat for Adam Pandt.
Bob Brown urged the party to “not” “not” work on the liberals and instead runs an open ticket, as he and his former teammate Christine Milne said that the vegetables should retreat strongly against “lies” around the party. Richard de NatalieThe leader claimed before Bandt, that the vegetables were “bad luck” in Saturday’s elections.
“Most of what happened was out of our control,” he told Guardian Australia. “We had a perfect storm.”
None of the former leaders will be drawn on who should be the next leader. Brown, the founding leader of Greens, said that the party should focus on its roots in “being the main party in environmental protection and climate change, but also social justice.”
Panda on Thursday He admitted a defeat in his seat in MelbourneWith acknowledgment that the Labor Party has regained voters that it won five times in a row from 2010. While the Greens lost three of their four seats in the House of Representatives, which led to the transformation of the results of the Senate. It is possible that they will give them the only power balance In the Senate – one of the two positions said earlier that it would provide the most progressive parliament in the history of Australia.
Sarah Hanson Young, a party spokeswoman and communications, and Mehreen Faruqi, Vice leader Greens, is among the main candidates who take the leadership from Bandt, with David Shoebridge mentioned as a possibility for the deputy. There is a feeling among some in the vegetables that the next leader must be a woman to reflect the basic rule of the party.
Panda did not provide any comment on the party’s future leadership, unlike saying that the party’s whip, Nick McCim, will act in the role of the acting Acting Acting until a new leader was elected.
Al -Khader will meet next Thursday to report a new leader. It is understood that McCim, a Senate member of Tasmania, is not looking for leadership.
Greens sources remained tight about the party’s leadership throughout the week, including Thursday after the Pandt concession, saying it was too early to discuss the case in the wake of his defeat.
“We must be ready to take it.”
Brown, an environmental hero in Tasmania, said that the vegetables will be in a “very strong situation in the Senate” and that the work will need to accept that “the arrogance of power must be mitigated.”
He was asked if his party should have done anything differently in this campaign, Brown said: “No.”
He said: “But the next time, we need to be ready for these bad distortion of the vegetables, which are funded by millions of dollars from the end of the large city.” “There is no easy answer to that, but, however, we must be ready to transfer them.”
Brown accused Anthony Albaniz Being “uncomfortable” towards vegetables and independents, and ignored that the Labor Party has received 34 % of the first preferences. He said that the Labor Party was “issued” on the seats controlled by the vegetables late.
MilN, the leader of Greens, said between 2012 and 2015, that the small party should use its Senate’s authority to secure “the important climate policy and the environment”, indicating that the vegetables focus on cutting trees, land clearing, new fossil fuel projects and the failure of work in legislation of the strongest environmental laws in its first term.
While the discussion focused on Albaniz’s promise to establish a federal environment protection agency – after interfering to stop a deal between the Minister of Environment, Tania Bliberk, and Al -Khidr in the last parliament – Melmen said that the Environmental Protection Agency alone “does not cut it.”
Brown replied on the accusation of Albanez of “exceptional arrogance” and said that the vegetables should back away from criticism, including supporting the truth in the laws of advertising.
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She said: “The pale, funded, must be treated with lies around the vegetables and independent billionaires for liberal and fossil fuel,” she said.
Panda leadership praised – but who will be followed?
On ABC Melbourne Radio, Bandt said that all members of the Greens Party room were “incredibly capable”, but they did not support the following leader.
“I will not be one of these people who are now hanging from side lines and lines in my year.”
Hanson Jong Pands described as a “wonderful leader” and praised his strategy to present the lower seats to Green.
“He shook the party’s regime forever,” she wrote on social media. “His dedication to making the world a best place is unwilling. Greens throughout the country are shocking.
“Adam is one of the greatest vegetables ever. His political intelligence, along with sympathy and courage to fight, has made him a huge leader and a great colleague.”
Chocbridge Pandt described as “a real friend, an incredible companion and man.”
Brown and Millin also supported Panda’s leadership. Brown described him as an “unusual politician”, and supports “his integrity and sincerity”; Meanwhile said that he “built a movement that works with people” in Melbourne, which will be more powerful.
De Natalie claimed that the vegetables were “bad luck”, saying even some small changes in voting patterns could lead to “three or four seats.”
“Our vote was very strong, but we lost some support in the wrong areas and cost us our seats. Silver lining is that we have reached a large group of new people.”
De Natal said he believed that the vegetables could restore the seats they lost.
He said: “The work is now the government with very great expectations and they usually have scary people.” “I expect it with hard work and little luck, we will choose these seats again.
“Every time you vote for you once, they are more likely to do this again. So we now have a large group of people who voted in green, and although some have not voted in green this time, we can recover them.”