Jonathan Sriranganathan

Greens MP Michael Berkman with campaigners on polling day

While the听Liberal National Party had been predicted to win听the October 26 Queensland election,听its victory was not on the scale of Labor鈥檚 decimation in 2012, as some had feared. Alex Bainbridge reports.

Marching for Palestine, March 9

In a moving display of anti-colonial solidarity, protesters carried more than 100 Palestinian flags from Reddacliff Place over the Victoria Bridge.听Kamala Emanuel reports.

Greens mayoral candidate Jonathan Sriranganathan hopes to expand the party鈥檚 representation on the Brisbane City Council and told Alex Bainbridge it has听policies that point to transformational change.

Jonathan Sriranganathan reflects on听his time in a听wide ranging interview听with Alex Banbridgejust before stepping down as Gabba Ward councillor in the Brisbane City Council.

Jonathan Sri at a protest defending the right to protest in 2019.

Brisbane City Council has听charged Greens councillor Jonathan Sri in connection with a protest in the Queen Street Mall in September 2020. Alex Bainbridge reports.

Greens听Councillor Jonathan Sri, who represents The Gabba听ward in Brisbane, says he will not be installing the COVID-19 surveillance app and explains why other measures, without any nasty stings, would be more effective in helping reduce the spread of the pandemic.

The South Brisbane Greens held a on "Communal Luxury: how to create a future for all of us" on February 28.

Speakers included Greens' Griffith candidate Max Chandler-Mather, Natalie Osborne from Griffith University and Gabba ward Councillor Jonathan Sri.

Campaigners against the inappropriate Absoe development in Brisbane's West End scored a small but important victory on September 14. The state government 鈥渃alled in鈥 the approval that had previously been granted by the Brisbane City Council. This means the state government will reassess the development approval.

This decision comes on the back of a concerted community campaign supported by Greens councillor Jonathan Sri.

"We can't afford your units and we can't afford the bus; if you keep ignoring us, we're gonna make a fuss!" rang through the streets of West End as 150 people marched against the proposed development of the old Absoe site on August 21. Greens councillor on the Brisbane City Council and one of the organisers of the rally, Jonathan Sri, told the crowd that the original proposal for the site involved seven tall buildings with no connection to the street or the surrounding community.