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The Baroness Bennett
of Manor Castle
Official portrait Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle crop 2, 2022.jpg
Official portrait, 2022
Leader of the Green Party of England and Wales
In office
3 September 2012 – 2 September 2016
Deputy Will Duckworth (2012–2014)
Amelia Womack and Shahrar Ali (2014–2016)
Preceded by Caroline Lucas
Succeeded by Jonathan Bartley and
Caroline Lucas
Member of the House of Lords
Lord Temporal
Assumed office
15 October 2019
Life Peerage
Personal details
Born
Natalie Louise Bennett

(1966-02-10) 10 February 1966 (age 58)
Eastwood, New South Wales, Australia
Political party Green Party of England and Wales
Residences Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England
Alma mater University of Sydney
University of New England
University of Leicester

Natalie Louise Bennett, Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle (born 10 February 1966) is an Australian-British politician and journalist who served as Leader of the Green Party of England and Wales from 2012 to 2016. Bennett was given a peerage in Theresa May's 2019 resignation honours.

Born and raised in Australia, she began her career as a journalist with regional newspapers in New South Wales before leaving in 1995 for Thailand, where she worked for Australian Volunteers International and the Bangkok Post newspaper over the next four years. Since settling in Britain in 1999 she has contributed to The Guardian, The Independent, and The Times. Her election as leader of the Greens came six years after she joined the party in January 2006.

Early life

Bennett was born on 10 February 1966 in Eastwood, a suburb of Sydney, Australia, the daughter of John and Joy Bennett. She was born to working class teenage parents: a part-time secretary and an apprentice carpenter. Her mother was killed in a car crash in 1989.

Having been awarded a scholarship, she was educated at MLC School, an independent day school for girls in Burwood, New South Wales. She then took the degrees of Bachelor of Agricultural Science (BAgrSc Hons) at the University of Sydney, Bachelor of Arts (BA Hons) in Asian Studies at the University of New England and Master of Arts (MA) in Mass Communication from the University of Leicester, graduating from the latter in 2001. She was the first member of her family to attend university.

Journalism career

Bennett began her career in journalism in New South Wales, where she worked for various regional newspapers including the Northern Daily Leader in Tamworth. She left Australia in 1995, and lived for four years in Thailand where she worked for Australian Volunteers International in the Office of the National Commission of Women's Affairs, before moving to the Bangkok Post newspaper, where she was chief foreign sub-editor.

She settled in the United Kingdom in 1999, and said in a 2013 interview for the Australian Inside Story website about the country of her birth: "I can’t imagine going there by choice." In Britain, Bennett has written for The Guardian's "Comment is Free" section since 2006. Bennett was also a blogger. She was deputy editor and then editor of The Guardian Weekly from December 2007 until March 2012. She has also worked for the London-based Independent and Times newspapers. In 2012, she took voluntary redundancy and left journalism.

Political career

Natalie Bennett joined the Green Party on 1 January 2006. Later the same year she stood for the Greens in the Camden Council election in the Regent's Park ward and again in the Camden Council election of 2010 in the Somers Town ward, but was not elected on either occasion. She was the internal communications coordinator on the national executive of the party from September 2007 to August 2011.

In January 2010, she was selected to stand for the Parliamentary seat of Holborn and St Pancras. She came fourth with 2.7% of the vote. She stood next in the London Assembly elections of 2012, as the fourth placed candidate on the London-wide list for the Green Party.

Green Party leader

On 3 September 2012, Bennett replaced Caroline Lucas as leader of the Green Party of England and Wales. 3,127 ballot papers were returned in the 2012 Green Party leadership elections, a turnout of 25.1%. This turnout was explained by Bennett in a BBC interview: "if you hold an election in the month of August you kind of expect that turnout won't be particularly high". On election as party leader Bennett told a press conference that the policies of the Green Party were "the only viable way forward for British people, for the world".

In May 2014 she was selected again to contest the Parliamentary seat of Holborn and St Pancras. She was re-elected unopposed as leader of the party in September 2014.

In February 2015, an interview with Bennett regarding the funding of house-building on the talk radio station LBC was described by her as "absolutely excruciating". In a halting interview on LBC in which she struggled to explain how her party would pay for 500,000 new council homes it is pledging to build. She told Nick Ferrari the policy would cost £2.7bn, prompting the presenter to ask: “Five hundred thousand homes – £2.7bn? What are they made of – plywood?”

In January 2015 Ofcom ruled to exclude the Green Party from the televised debates surrounding the 2015 election, on the grounds that the party had not demonstrated "significant past electoral support in General Elections". Bennett called the ruling "disgraceful and indefensible" and David Cameron claimed that he was "quite happy for there to be no debates at all" if the Green Party was not included. This decision was later reversed, after which the Green Party's support increased again. The seven-way debate ultimately took place on 2 April, with Bennett present.

Bennett came third in the election to the Labour and Conservative candidates, and in 2016, at the end of her second two-year term, did not stand for re-election as leader. At the party's 2016 autumn conference in Birmingham, Lucas and Jonathan Bartley were elected as co-leaders of the party in a job-share arrangement.

2017 UK general election

On 7 October 2016, it was announced that Bennett had been selected to contest the Sheffield Central constituency for the Green Party in the 2017 UK general election. Bennett's candidacy saw a drop of 7.8% in the share of Green votes as well as a drop in its position from second to third (out of eight candidates) with 3,848 votes.

House of Lords

Bennett was nominated for a life peerage in September 2019, and was created Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle on 7 October 2019. She becomes the Green Party of England and Wales' second current member of the House of Lords, joining Jenny Jones, Baroness Jones of Moulsecoomb. She was introduced to the Lords on 15 October 2019 by Baroness Jones of Moulsecoomb and John Bird, Baron Bird, and made her maiden speech on 17 October 2019.

Electoral performance

Local Government

2006 Camden London Borough Council election:Regent's Park (3)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Nasim Ali * 1,329 42.4 -6.0
Labour Theo Blackwell * 1,204 38.4 -7.1
Labour Heather Johnson * 1,172 37.4 -7.3
Conservative Michele Potel 814 26.0 -2.4
Conservative James Morris 804 25.6 -1.6
Conservative John Iredale 792 25.3 -0.7
Green Natalie Bennett 616 19.6 -4.7
Liberal Democrats Anne Brown 586 18.7 +4.1
Green Stephen Plowden 463 14.8 -8.0
Green Joel Derbyshire 434 13.8 -5.6
Liberal Democrats Lawrence Nicholson 424 13.5 +2.7
Liberal Democrats Richard Waddington 330 10.5 -0.3
Turnout 8,968 36.8
Labour hold Swing
Labour hold Swing
Labour hold Swing
2010 Camden London Borough Council election:St Pancras and Somers Town (3)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Roger Robinson * 2,744 52.9 +7.8
Labour Peter Brayshaw 2,650 51.1 +10.4
Labour Samata Khatoon 2,614 50.4 +11.3
Liberal Democrats Abdus Shaheed 1,024 19.7 +5.7
Liberal Democrats Dave Hoefling 1,011 19.5 +8.8
Liberal Democrats Frederic Carver 927 17.9 +7.7
Green Natalie Bennett 738 14.2 -2.5
Conservative Adam Lester 721 13.9 -0.3
Conservative Brian Rice 701 13.5 -0.3
Conservative Patsy Prince 688 13.3 -0.3
Green Matty Mitford 467 9.0 -2.9
Green Cathryn Symons 422 8.1 +1.2
Turnout 5,190 57.2 +18.2
Labour hold Swing
Labour hold Swing
Labour hold Swing

House of Commons

General election 2010: Holborn and St Pancras
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Frank Dobson 25,198 46.1
Liberal Democrats Jo Shaw 15,256 27.9
Conservative George Lee 11,134 20.4
Green Natalie Bennett 1,480 2.7
BNP Robert Carlyle 779 1.4
UKIP Max Spencer 587 1.1
Independent John Chapman 96 0.2
English Democrat Mikel Susperregi 75 0.1
Independent Iain Meek 44 0.1
Majority 9,942 17.8
Turnout 54,649 62.9
Registered electors 86,563
Labour hold Swing
General election 2015: Holborn and St Pancras
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Keir Starmer 29,062 52.9 +6.8
Conservative Will Blair 12,014 21.9 +1.5
Green Natalie Bennett 7,013 12.8 +10.1
Liberal Democrats Jill Fraser 3,555 6.5 −21.4
UKIP Maxine Spencer 2,740 5.0 +3.9
... Is Safer Than Alcohol Shane O'Donnell 252 0.5 New
Animal Welfare Vanessa Hudson 173 0.3 New
Socialist Equality David O'Sullivan 108 0.2 New
Majority 17,048 31.0 +13.2
Turnout 54,917 63.3 +0.4
Registered electors 86,764
Labour hold Swing +2.6
General election 2017: Sheffield Central
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Paul Blomfield 33,963 70.9 +15.9
Conservative Stephanie Roe 6,215 13.0 +1.9
Green Natalie Bennett 3,848 8.0 -7.8
Liberal Democrats Shaffaq Mohammed 2,465 5.1 -4.6
UKIP Dominic Cook 1,060 2.2 -5.3
Yorkshire Jack Carrington 197 0.4 New
Pirate Rob Moran 91 0.2 -0.1
SDP Joe Westnidge 38 0.1 New
Majority 27,748 57.9 +15.7
Turnout 47,877 62.0 +4.6
Labour hold Swing +7.0

Political positions

Natalie Bennett Take Back Our World
Bennett in "Take Back Our World! – Global Justice Now" in 2015.
Natalie Bennett-IMG 4086
Natalie Bennett campaigning in Cambridge during the general election of 2015.

Bennett has considered herself a feminist since she was a young child, claiming that it was her "first politics". She also founded the Green Party women's group and was a trustee of the Fawcett Society between 2010 and 2014. She became interested in environmental issues when she obtained a degree in Agricultural Sciences. She is in favour of abolishing the monarchy. In an April 2015 interview, she said that she supports the Green Party policy of an economic and cultural boycott of Israel, and also thought that Britain should cease arms sales to Saudi Arabia. She has also voiced support for polygamy and polyamorous relationships.

Personal life

Baroness Bennett is single and lives in Sheffield. During her time as leader her partner was Jim Jepps, a left-wing activist who was a member of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) for approximately a decade until 2003.

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Natalie Bennett para niños

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