Skip to main content
Inside the Scottish Greens’ civil war over austerity
COLL MCCAIL reveals how party members rebelled against the current leadership’s attempts to block democratic debate on opposing SNP budget cuts at their Greenock conference
Scottish Greens co-leader Lorna Slater addresses members, March 2023

PATRICK HARVIE noted the importance of political discipline as he opened the Scottish Green Party conference in Greenock on Saturday. The Greens “must continue becoming the effective and professional political force we are capable of being,” said the party’s co-leader.
 
Hours after he stepped off stage, the gathering descended into chaos as Green members voted to abandon the day’s proceedings by comprehensively rejecting their proposed agenda. Much to the leadership’s chagrin, the hall emptied for the day without a single motion going to the floor.
 
In a procedural dogfight that would have tested even this newspaper’s most rule-bookish readers, grassroots Greens scored a major victory over their co-leaders, both of whom — together with most of their MSP group — voted to retain the day’s agenda.

Far from a tedious breach of standing orders, the political disagreement which underpinned these shenanigans may yet have significant ramifications for the rest of Scotland.
 
When members sought to amend an emergency motion on this year’s Scottish Budget brought by Ross Greer MSP and Gillian McKay MSP, their path was blocked.

The conference’s standing orders committee (SOC) sought to hear the amendment — which would have bound Scottish Green MSPs to vote against any SNP Budget package which included local authority cuts — from the floor rather than by default.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
SOMETHING CHANGED: Nigel Farage, seen here chased through the streets of Edinburgh in 2013, now commands the support of some 10,000 Scots
Features / 29 April 2025
29 April 2025

COLL McCAIL rejects the Scottish Establishment’s attempt at an ‘elite lockout’ of Reform UK and says the unions should be wary of co-option by their class enemies in Holyrood just to keep one set of austerity-mongers in power instead of Reform UK

Coins and Scottish bank notes
Features / 19 April 2025
19 April 2025
From Labour MPs obsessing over Easter egg shapes to SNP ministers celebrating pay rises while marking zoo animals’ arrivals, Scottish politics is really deteriorating, says COLL McCAIL
Flames and smoke rise from an Israeli airstrike in Dahiyeh,
Voices of Scotland / 8 October 2024
8 October 2024
The British government actively supports Israel’s escalating violence across the Middle East through arms sales, military assistance, and diplomatic cover, writes COLL McCAIL
Features / 17 September 2024
17 September 2024
The independence referendum’s youthful energy has dissipated, leaving Holyrood disconnected from voters as the constitutional question fades and Labour gains ground from a stagnant SNP, writes COLL MCCAIL
Similar stories
Members of the House of Lords seated ahead of the State Open
Britain / 31 October 2024
31 October 2024
Scottish Green Party co-leader Patrick Harvie during the par
Britain / 10 October 2024
10 October 2024
Scottish Refugee Council warns plans remains as elusive