❌

Normal view

There are new articles available, click to refresh the page.
Yesterday β€” 28 June 2024World News

Waveney Valley ought to be a Tory heartland. Could angry voters turn it Green?

28 June 2024 at 08:25

In a new constituency where the river β€˜is our lifeblood’, people speak of being taken for granted by the Tories

By conventional political logic, it is a long jump from the Conservatives to the Green party. But in Waveney Valley, voters are making that leap. Political history, party stereotypes and predictable voter behaviour are sailing away down the river that meanders through this new constituency, carved from five ultra-safe Tory seats on the Norfolk/Suffolk border.

Waveney Valley should be a win so comfortable for the Conservatives that they barely need to turn up. One of its former constituencies has been Tory since 1885; all five had Conservative majorities of more than 18,000 in 2019. β€œIt’s been Tory since the Norman conquest,” says Robert Lindsay, a Green councillor who is part of an eager team of party activists descending on this rural heartland to boost co-leader Adrian Ramsay’s hopes of victory.

Continue reading...

πŸ’Ύ

Β© Composite: The Guardian/Guardian Design Team

πŸ’Ύ

Β© Composite: The Guardian/Guardian Design Team

Before yesterdayWorld News

How Tory neglect flooded Britain’s rivers with sewage

On a journey along the Thames – where fury at pollution has spawned a wave of local activism – it is clear that the decline of rivers is among this government’s worst legacies

Red kites swoop above Fawley Meadows as Dave Wallace dips a sampling beaker into the deep green water of the River Thames on a late spring day. A sharp wind blows droplets upstream towards the arches of Henley Bridge, while the might of the river, its path here straight and wide, pulls downstream towards Windsor, on its 215-mile odyssey to the North Sea.

Today, the water meadows along its banks host blue and white striped marquees, lined up in uniform rows for the Henley regatta. After the rowers depart, the river bears the swimmers who follow. They dip, jump and dive its depths at an annual festival of open water races, echoing the galas that took place in Victorian days.

Continue reading...

πŸ’Ύ

Β© Composite: Guardian Design Team/Getty

πŸ’Ύ

Β© Composite: Guardian Design Team/Getty

❌
❌