A long-running debate over strategy and tactics inside The Greens NSW has resulted in one state MP resigning and three others publicly supporting his campaign as an independent for a seat in the next NSW Legislative Council.
The truce inside the party seems precarious, at best.
Just before the holiday shut-down and three months before the NSW election, Greens NSW MLC Jeremy Buckingham resigned from the party after failing to get his way on a series of ultimatums. This included a call for the party to expel the 鈥渕assive influx鈥 of socialists he said had joined The Greens NSW.
Buckingham also announced that he would run as a 鈥渞eal green Independent鈥 for a seat in the Legislative Council in the March elections. Buckingham had been preselected to the third spot on the Greens NSW Legislative Council ticket, making his re-election highly unlikely.
Buckingham, who has often chosen to make internal party disputes public, spent an entire interview with聽聽on December 20 railing against socialists 鈥渋nside鈥 and 鈥渙utside鈥 The Greens NSW, who, he said, had wrecked the party and his future in it.
Buckingham denied to an incredulous MacDonald that the rebuffed ultimatums and allegations of sexual assault had anything to do with his decision to walk.
In a series of unsupported and outlandish claims, Buckingham said The Greens NSW had been infected by a 鈥渃landestine organised program by socialist organisations to take [it] over鈥.
He said the Socialist Alliance and Solidarity had successfully turned The Greens NSW policy platform into 鈥渙ne of pure socialism, pure Marxism鈥.
鈥淲e鈥檝e seen a massive influx of people out of those organisations,鈥 Buckingham said. 鈥淗undreds come in to affect pre-selections, to take over office bearing roles鈥 and it has been happening for more than a decade, he added.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a malaise of political parties, particularly small ones like the Greens,鈥 Buckingham insisted, arguing that the party鈥檚 internal structures are 鈥渧ulnerable to entryism鈥 and 鈥渙rganised groups seizing control鈥.
Socialist Alliance national co-convenor Susan Price said Buckingham鈥檚 claim was nonsense.
鈥淚t is laughable to suggest that the Socialist Alliance organises its members to join the Greens with a view to influencing policy,鈥 she told 麻豆传媒 Weekly.
鈥淪ure, we would be happy if the Greens wanted to adopt more of our policies.
鈥淏ut the only way we do that is by working alongside Greens members in the various campaigns, including to stop the coal and the unconventional gas industries.鈥
Asked by the ABC if these 鈥渟ocialists鈥 care about the environment, Buckingham replied: 鈥淚 think they do, but their agenda is to end capitalism鈥.
He accused Left Renewal, a group of young Greens in NSW, of running a toxic campaign against sitting Greens NSW MLCs Cate Faehrmann and Justin Field.
Buckingham also attacked them for daring to criticise former Greens national leader Bob Brown after he demanded that former NSW Greens Senator Lee Rhiannon step down from parliament.
Buckingham said Left Renewal had been formed to 鈥渞emove [Cate and Justin] and to end capitalism and pull down our mixed market economy鈥.
Asked why he is only leaving now if the Greens have been heading in this direction for 10 years, Buckingham said he was leaving because the party had made 鈥渁 lot of undemocratic decisions鈥 including, he said, 12 attempts to expel him.
He then blamed Rhiannon 鈥 whom Buckingham claimed is 鈥渁 member of the Communist Party of Australia鈥 鈥 for the party鈥檚 decay.
Rhiannon has denied ever being a member of the CPA. The Greens NSW have a rule proscribing members of other political parties.
Buckingham blamed 鈥渄emocratic centralism鈥 for the problems in The Greens NSW, which he described as 鈥渢he socialist theory鈥 of 鈥渆lecting committees that elect committees, that elect committees, that elect committees, that take decisions away from the grassroots鈥.
Buckingham tried to draw a parallel between the current debates in The Greens NSW and those between the 鈥淔undis鈥 and the 鈥淩ealos鈥 in the German Greens in the 1980s. He wrongly claimed that the Fundis were entryists, largely fleeing from East Germany, who had tried to expel the Realos, which he described as the 鈥渆nvironmental Greens鈥.
In fact, the disagreements between the Fundi and Realo currents in the German Greens were over policy and tactics towards the major parties.
Many Fundis left or were expelled by the Realos in the 1990s after the German Greens voted to support NATO and adopt a principle of almost unqualified support to forming coalition governments with the Social Democratic Party.
Buckingham accused Greens leader Richard Di Natale of being 鈥渨eak鈥 and The Greens NSW leadership of being 鈥渢oxic鈥 after its NSW State Delegates Council resolved to聽ask him to step down from the NSW Legislative Council ticket over sexual assault allegations against him.
Asked how he would reply to those asking whether to support The Greens NSW in the federal election, he said people should look closely at the party because it wants to 鈥渘ationalise all industries鈥.
His priority, he said, is to 鈥渃ome up with sophisticated ways to deal with climate change鈥 by working 鈥渨ith the market鈥 to phase out fossil fuels.
The Greens NSW co-convenor Sylvia Hale told 麻豆传媒 Weekly聽that 鈥渄espite Buckingham's unfounded assertions, The Greens NSW has never ... sought to hound critics of capitalism or advocates of socialism from its ranks.鈥
鈥淔rom its very beginnings, The Greens has been a progressive party that has attracted members from across the left political spectrum on the basis of its four foundational principles: ecological sustainability, grassroots participatory democracy, social justice, peace and nonviolence.鈥
Hale described Buckingham鈥檚 red-baiting as 鈥渄iscredited 1950s McCarthyism鈥 that is 鈥渙ut of touch with modern political reality鈥.
鈥淥ne can only assume it is a desperate attempt to seek re-election to the NSW parliament by appealing to far-right conservative forces, such as One Nation and Peter Dutton adherents.鈥
Faehrmann and Field, who are not facing re-election in 2019, and Dawn Walker, who is, have long been politically aligned with Buckingham. They defended his behaviour over the sexual assault complaint made against him and also signed off on his call to聽expel socialists from the Greens.
Since Buckingham鈥檚 resignation, all three have publicly expressed their best wishes for his campaign, even allowing him to use their Facebook pages to canvass support.
Field, Faehrmann and Walker have been pushing for The Greens NSW to conduct a recount of the NSW Legislative Council ticket, believing it would advantage Walker, who was initially elected to the ticket鈥檚 fourth spot and will now move up to third to fill the vacancy left by Buckingham鈥檚 resignation.
Hale told GLW: 鈥淭here is no provision within The Greens NSW Constitution for a recount,鈥 adding: 鈥淭here are numerous precedents that vacancies in the past have been filled by preselected candidates moving up the ticket sequentially to fill the gap.鈥
She said the State Delegates Council, made up of delegates from 60 local groups across NSW, will decide in February how to proceed.
The red-baiting is not just coming from Buckingham. In Facebook comments that have since been deleted, Field railed against Socialist Alliance members who, he said, 鈥渉ad formed a presence鈥 in the NSW-wide movement to stop coal seam gas.
Field singled out Stop CSG Sydney, which Socialist Alliance members helped form in 2011 (along with Greens and others), as being 鈥渉ostile鈥 to Buckingham.
This was contradicted in the now deleted Facebook thread by Greens Inner West councillor Lou Steer, a former Stop CSG Sydney public officer. She said there had been no hostility towards Buckingham or the Greens and, like many of the anti-unconventional gas groups that formed at the time, the Sydney-based group was clear it would be most effective if it remained politically non-aligned.
It is also on the public record that Stop CSG Sydney hosted and co-hosted events with Buckingham.
Price said Field鈥檚 comments are revealing of just how out of touch he is. 鈥淪ocialist Alliance members have played a positive and consistent role in the movement to stop coal seam gas in New South Wales; they have been re-elected to voluntary roles, which means working with activists from different political backgrounds, year in and out.
鈥淕iven that the anti-CSG movement has managed to hold up all major unconventional gas projects in this state, I'd say the non-partisan approach has proved a success.鈥