
Greens Co-Founder Says Party Must Return to Environmental Roots After Election Setback
Drew Hutton founded the Queensland Greens, and co-founded the Australian Greens alongside retired Senator Bob Brown in the early 1990s.
Hutton now is on the party outer and his membership suspended after opposing the participation of male-to-female trans people in women's activities and sports.
The environmental activist, who once chained himself to a tree in the Brisbane's Queen Street Mall, said that if the Greens wanted to expand their base, they needed to promote proper green causes.
'It wasn't a disaster for the Greens. But the Greens have plateaued in their support,' Hutton told The Epoch Times, adding that preferences contributed to the end result.
'My concern is that they are not pursuing strategies which allow them to talk to ordinary Australians,' he said.
Related Stories
4/9/2025
9/6/2022
Activist Drew Hutton in his heyday chained to a tree in Brisbane's Queen Street Mall. The co-founder of the Australian Greens and founder of the Queensland Greens, is now at odds with the party he founded over his support of women's rights. He remains active.
Courtesy of Drew Hutton
'They locked into the youth vote, but the older people get, the less they vote the Greens.'
While the party's overall vote only declined by 0.2 percent, the swing of preferences saw the party lose three of its four lower house seats, including party leader Adam Bandt's seat of Melbourne, which he has held since 2010.
Bandt recorded a 4.8 percent primary swing away from him.
'I think what puts people off is they talk down to people too much and they're not pragmatic enough, they've been too combative,' Hutton said.
'I'm not convinced the Albanese government is going to be receptive to good environmental reforms ... the Greens need to take it right up to the Labor government.
'I've got no problem being aggressive on those things, but they have to be important (things).'
A new Greens leader is yet to emerge and Hutton says the decision will be critical because it could either drive the party back to its origins, or see it drift further away.
Greens for Gaza
Last year, the Greens leadership had hoped to expand its share of seats across several elections, but this did not eventuate.
One of the main factors blamed has been the party's focus on backing Palestine in the Israel-Hamas War.
Greens MPs was often present at pro-Palestinian rallies and university encampments.
In response, one Melbourne Jewish man even lodged
Following the election, defeated Opposition Leader Peter Dutton said the Gaza issue was their downfall.
'No spin by Adam Bandt can change the reality that he, and other Green members, lost their seats because of their appalling treatment of the Jewish community,' he said.
'Australians were rightly disgusted at their behaviour.'
Executive Council of Australian Jewry co-CEO Alex Ryvchin said Bandt's approach to the conflict, which levelled all blame on Israel for Oct. 7, 2023, was not supportive of Palestinians.
'It shows that he is not a supporter of Palestinians at all,' he told the Australian Jewish News. 'He is an exploiter of them. They only interest him as a gimmick through which he can express his hatred for Israel.
'The Greens claim to be counter-establishment and progressive. But they are rooted in the old, failed ideology of communism and the socialism of fools—anti-Semitism.'
Labor's Foreign Minister Penny Wong criticised Bandt for his 'aggressive' approach.
'I think Australians rejected the politics of conflict and the politics of grievance,' she said.
While Labor Minister Tanya Plibersek said the Greens were no longer a party of environmentalists.
'I don't think the Greens is the party of (founder) Bob Brown anymore,' she said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
29 minutes ago
- Fox News
Tammy Bruce: Hamas is 'weaponizing' food aid amid Gaza's growing hunger crisis
State Department spokesperson Tammy Bruce joins 'Fox News Live' to react to the U.S. and Israel limiting ceasefire talks with Hamas amid the deepening food shortage in Gaza.


Bloomberg
29 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
France Maintains Tough Stand on Israel Despite Pause in Gaza War
French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said the European Union is having 'tough discussions' with Israel to help speed humanitarian and financial aid to Palestinians in war-ravaged Gaza. The Israeli government has made 'first commitments that have not been fulfilled yet,' Barrot said on CBS's Face the Nation on Sunday. 'We expect the Israeli government to stop the operations of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation that has caused a bloodbath in humanitarian help distribution lines in Gaza.'


Fox News
29 minutes ago
- Fox News
Trump hits EU for lack of Gaza aid, says Israel needs to 'make a decision' with Hamas not releasing hostages
President Donald Trump blasted the European Union for not providing aid to Gaza on Sunday, adding that Israel must "make a decision" about how to handle the region with Hamas still holding hostages. Trump made the comments while meeting with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen in Scotland. He said that the U.S. has given millions in aid to Gazans, but claimed there has been no assistance from European countries. Trump went on to note that a deal needs to be made between Israel and Hamas to end the war and return the last remaining hostages to Israel, despite many of them being dead. "But we have a lot of bodies, and the parents want those bodies as much as they would want their child if that child were alive," Trump said of the hostages and their families. He suggested that Hamas is reluctant to make a deal for the final hostages because they feel it would be "the end for them" if they lose leverage against Israel. "You know, they had a routine discussion the other day and all of a sudden they hardened up. They don't want to give them back. And so Israel is going to have to make a decision," Trump said. The meeting comes as the IDF highlighted its efforts to deliver aid into Gaza after restricting the flow in recent months. Israel is now conducting airdrops for aid throughout the region, and the IDF says it conducted 28 drops in a matter of hours on Sunday. "Let me be clear: Israel supports aid for civilians, not for Hamas. The IDF will continue to support the flow of humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza," an IDF spokesperson said, claiming Israel transferred roughly 250 trucks full of aid into Gaza this week. The IDF argues the reports about starvation in Gaza were a false campaign promoted by Hamas, but hunger is spreading across the region after the United Nations and the IDF previously failed to reach an agreement about aid distribution, Fox News' Trey Yingst reported.