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Zack Polanski has just brilliantly answered his critics

Jamie Driscoll by Jamie Driscoll
22 March 2026
in Opinion
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Green Party leader Zack Polanski just got serious on the economy.  Not just on substance.  His 32-minute speech at the New Economics Foundation on Wednesday 18 March saw a change in tone.

“Our fiscal framework is hypersensitive to market movements, and this creates policy uncertainty that then fuels the very market jitters it was there to supposedly prevent” is one phrase that stood out for me.  There was lots of talk of productivity and fiscal multipliers.

This was Zack answering his critics.  He can do the heavyweight economics.

Zack Polanski: a shift

Is this a shift away from insurgency?  Kind of.  It had to happen.  To hold power in this country, especially with a media that is equally hostile and banal, you have to talk money.  The vast majority of the British people agree that the Iran war is terrible and the Gaza genocide is criminal.  But they feel the cost-of-living crisis every day.

I’ve been advocating that we need to appeal to the “Green Curious”.  The people who would like to see a government serious about climate action, on poverty.  On restoring crumbling infrastructure and creaking public services.  There are millions of Green Curious people who see the benefits of compassion and long-term investment.  But they want reassurance that their taxes will be spent wisely and their mortgages won’t shoot up.  If you want their cross on the ballot paper, you have to look like a safe pair of hands.

Polanski still communicates clearly in everyday language.  Rents have gone up by £3300 per household since 2022, he said.  That’s £18 billion countrywide.  That could have been an extra £18 billion people spent with local businesses.  The bakery on the way to work.  The local pub at the end of the week.  That’s why we’ve got hollowed out high streets.  He’s right, and that’s a clear way to explain it.

It’s a welcome change from the long shopping lists the left often recite.  We want more money on schools, colleges and universities.  Hospitals and care homes.  Trains, buses, metros and trams.  Of course we do.  But unless you answer the question “how?” the public are justified in being sceptical.  They’ve been let down by too many politicians too many times.

This speech gets us into the territory of how you actually fix things.  Something I’ve been banging on about for years.

Fixing

A wealth tax is a day one priority.  Not because it can fund everything, said Polanski.  Although £15 billion a year will buy you quite a bit.  But because it’s far better for society to spend that on productive infrastructure and long term investment in energy, housing, health and education than it is sitting in private equity funds.  The billionaires will still be mega-rich.

There was detail on equalising Capital Gains Tax with Income Tax.  That’s another £12 billion.  This is bleeding obvious and it’s a scandal that Labour haven’t done it.  We should not tax people more for working for a living than we do for owning things.  Unlike Income Tax, it’s only taxed on the profits made, anyway.

There was detail on replacing the Office of Budget Responsibility.  Established in 2010 to bring down the debt and the deficit, it has obviously failed. I’ve written about it before.  It makes unfounded assumptions and always, and I mean always, gets its forecasts wrong.  So let’s have an Office for Fiscal Transparency whose job it is to publish the hidden assumptions in Treasury and Bank of England forecasts.

Instead of assuming that all investment has no benefit after five years, let’s get the real evidence.  And let’s stop obsessing over GDP as the only measure of economic success.

Polanski is working for everyone

Let’s have a wellbeing measure than includes health, education, and economic security.

I was the first Mayor to introduce one.  We used it to guide policy decisions.  We still smashed the job creation target, beating our 15 year target in just four years.  Every £1 we invested in job creation returned over £3 to Treasury in payroll taxes alone, above and beyond the economic benefits of people having money in their pockets.  This stuff works.

And yes, we’d look at borrowing for investment, and when there are adverse economic events, we’d look at quantitative easing.  “I’m not an ideologue,” said Polanski, “I’m a pragmatist.”

I liked it.  You could deliver it all in the first term of a government.  Realistic.  Effective.  It would make life better for everyone.  Even the billionaires would live in a safer country.

Featured image via the Canary

Tags: economicsGreen party
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Comments 11

  1. Ed McKeon says:
    3 months ago

    I hope the Greens also have plans in place to counter the right wing insurgency that would. follow a successful election. Leveson 2 would seem to be one aspect of that. Another has to be rewiring accountability systems to facilitate justice for corporate malfeasance or individual misdemeanours (eg simplifying the tax code to close large tax evasion loopholes). The use of structural mechanisms to ensure the absence of personal accountability has provided a shield for elites that has reinforced their class solidarity. Remove that, and they’ll knife each other in the back. Imagine the popular relief to see prison time for some of the worst offenders in the Grenfell ‘disaster’ (crime scene), the water industry pollution scandal, the Post Office Horizon scandal, the ‘defence industry’ use of bribery etc.

    Reply
  2. Airlane1979 says:
    3 months ago

    Greens admit to being capitalists just like Tories… and Canary praises them for it. No wonder this site runs so many advertorials for dodgy cryptocurrency and gambling – the very essence of capitalist economics which is anything but safe. Quantitative Easing handed billions of pounds to the wealthy elite and wrecked our economy. Its effect was to prop up banks and asset owners, inflate financial asset prices, and deepen the long-term burdens borne by working people. That it is offered as a solution to anything by writers on this site shows how anti-socialist Canary is in reality.

    Reply
  3. Stephen Branscombe says:
    3 months ago

    Brilliant, this is what makes it the politics of hope and care that the country desperately needs.

    Reply
  4. Lynette Ellingford says:
    3 months ago

    How will Jack deal with the inevitable massive job losses from AI. What is the plan for that. Will people still have an income to spend. I have only heard it is coming fast, but nothing on how we will deal with. Many very poor people? It sounds like a hellish world ahead. Can someone explain what will happen.

    Reply
    • Tom Clother says:
      3 months ago

      There is a lot of hyperbole about AI. Some companies that have been attempting to use it have had to backtrack when the AI systems were malfunctioning and attempting to cover up the resultant problems. It is in the interests of the AI companies to boast about the transformative nature of their product but as it currently has the looks of a pyramid scheme, best to take it with a pinch of salt.

      Reply
  5. Red Star2000 says:
    3 months ago

    Good old Jamie Driscoll … stalwart member of Your Party until it became obvious that he wasn’t going to be one of the leaders.

    Reply
    • clive matthews says:
      3 months ago

      Driscolls road to becoming a senior player in the Green Party of England and Wales will not be through cronyism or similar. He will need to convince membership through a transparent democratic process.

      Reply
      • Red Star2000 says:
        3 months ago

        He still wont want to play if he cant be a leader. The Driscolls of this world dont feel they have to start at the bottom and work their way up.

        And he was gifted a candidacy in the forthcoming Newcastle City council elections less than a month after he announced he was joining the Greens – obviously the transparent democratic process of the Greens works very quickly.

        Did any Green member in the ward have a say in it ?

        Reply
        • Geordie Steve says:
          3 months ago

          Every member of Newcastle Green Party got to vote on the candidates in an open meeting and they chose Jamie because he is obviously a very strong candidate.
          You’re completely wrong about him he is one of the hardest working grassroots activists there is and spends loads of time helping people out and training them up.
          When he was the mayor he always had time for grassroots campaigns and put in a shift rolling his sleeves up with activists and meeting and supporting grassroots campaign groups. We need more people like him.

          Reply
          • Red Star2000 says:
            3 months ago

            And obviously after less than a month after he joined the Greens his credentials were considered impeccable.

            Apart from his brief flirtation with Your Party, his whole record is as a Labour member – a party he only left after he was denied a shot at the NE mayorship by that party. After less than a month, he hardly had time to embrance GP principles.

            So “every member” of Newcastle GP who voted for candidates at an “open meeting” (how many GP members actually attended this “open meeting” ?) and who voted for him, did so based on his record as a Labour politician.

            This, along with all the Labour councillors jumping ship now that Starmer has pretty much wrecked their chances of re-election on a Labour ticket, just goes to reinforce what others have been saying on here for a while – the Greens are the new Labour, just as Reform are the new Tories

  6. TheUnderdog says:
    3 months ago

    He’s a liberal zionist and I still do not trust him. He could write a 4,000 word treatise on peace for all I care. The fact he even willingly is or was a part of zionism when it is a genocidal regime through-and-through, is like saying you have a ‘former member of the Nazi party’ leading the Greens.
    Canary needs to stop shilling Polanski and start exposing him along with the other zionists in Labour, Conservatives, Reform, Restore, etc.

    Reply

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