Party hopes decision will encourage Labour to support Sarah Olney in cross-party effort to defeat former Tory MP for Richmond Park

The Green party has backed the Liberal Democrat candidate in the Richmond Park byelection against former Conservative Zac Goldsmith, who quit his seat in protest at the government’s decision to expand Heathrow airport.

The party said they hoped the decision would put pressure on the local Labour party to not stand a candidate of their own and instead swing behind the Lib Dems as the best chance of beating Goldsmith, who is standing as an independent and has been endorsed by Ukip.

Andree Frieze, who was the Greens’ selected candidate for the seat, told her local party she was keen not to contest it, a decision agreed on Thursday night with Kingston Greens. “I believe, wholeheartedly, that I am the right person to do the right thing – for the people, for the planet,” she said.

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“Realistically, however, I am not going to win and my standing could allow Zac, yet again, to be the wrong person representing our community. Furthermore, by not standing and helping a non-Tory win, we have the chance to seriously dent the Conservative majority.”

The Conservatives are not putting up their own candidate for the byelection on 1 December but Goldsmith has been endorsed by the local Tory party and supported by his neighbouring Conservative MP Tania Mathias.



The Liberal Democrats have already confirmed Sarah Olney, a local accountant who is also anti-Heathrow expansion, as their candidate to run against Goldsmith. The party, which held the seat until 2010, has put huge resources into winning it back and are pinning their hopes for victory on being able switch the conversation from Heathrow to Brexit in the pro-remain constituency.

Goldsmith, a keen environmentalist, voted to leave the EU. He was also widely criticised for his mayoral campaign, which opponents said used dog-whistle tactics against Labour’s Sadiq Khan.

Jonathan Bartley, the Greens’ co-leader, met local members of the Richmond Greens on Wednesday night, where the decision was taken to endorse Olney to boost parliamentary opposition to a hard Brexit. Kingston Greens also endorsed that decision at a meeting on Thursday.

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“This is no normal byelection,” Bartley said. “A regressive alliance of the Tories and Ukip are working together to reinstall a pro-Brexit MP who ran a racist campaign to be mayor of London.

“The decision not to stand has been made because we believe that a win for a non-Conservative candidate would be a blow to the Tory’s hard Brexit and dent their damaging plans for post-referendum Britain. Ultimately we think Britain is better off without Zac Goldsmith returning to parliament.

“I’d now urge Labour to join us in forming a progressive alliance against the forces of Conservatism and narrow-mindedness.”

Chair of Richmond’s Greens, Richard Bennett, said local Liberal Democrats recognised that in the 2018 council elections the parties should work together in some wards “to ensure people get the best chance both of Green party representation and of a council not controlled by the Conservatives.”

Labour is determined it will contest the seat, however. Alice Perry, who is a Labour national executive committee member, said shortlisting interviews to choose the party’s candidate for Richmond Park had taken place this week and that the candidate will be formally selected by local party members from a shortlist on Saturday.

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“We are definitely standing a candidate,” she said. “The Tory Lib-Dem coalition government made massive cuts to valued public services, including huge cuts to council budgets. The Lib Dems’ actions in government proved they are not a progressive party.”

Labour’s Sachin Patel, who fought the seat at the last general election, has already declared his intention to stand again.

Tim Farron, the Lib Dem leader, said his party had an environmental record that Green voters could support, including pushing for lower emissions targets, paving the way for the Paris agreement, renewables investment, the plastic-bag charge and opposition to airport expansion.

“You only have to compare that with the destructive Conservative Brexit government which is trying to force through Heathrow expansion, release polluters from tough EU environmental laws and slash subsidies for renewables, which has already led to 12,500 job losses in the solar industry alone,” he said.

“It is vital that progressive voters get behind the only credible progressive candidate, Sarah Olney.”

• This article was amended on 4 November 2016. An earlier version said Zac Goldsmith “received the backing of the Green party’s Jenny Jones in his bid to become London’s mayor”. That was based on positive remarks about Goldsmith made by Jones that were reported in the Evening Standard in May 2015, before he entered the mayoral race. However, Jones has asked us to point out that she did not back Goldsmith in the 2016 mayoral election; she voted for the Green party’s Sian Berry, with Labour’s Sadiq Khan as her second preference.