Waters emerges as Greens leader, promising to challenge Labor and usher in new era

Larissa Waters is the second woman to take the helm of the Greens in its history.

A woman wearing a green dress standing in front of microphones. Two women standing behind her are clapping.

Larissa Waters (centre) has become the new leader of the Greens, with senator Mehreen Faruqi (left) continuing as deputy leader, and Senator Sarah Hanson-Young (right) continuing as the party's manager of business in the upper house. Source: AAP / Joel Carrett

Queensland Greens senator Larissa Waters has taken the party's top job after former leader Adam Bandt lost his seat at the federal election.

Waters was elected leader unopposed on Thursday when the party's 11 senators and one MP met in Melbourne. Her win followed media reports the party was considering a co-leadership arrangement between Waters, NSW senator Mehreen Faruqi, and South Australian senator Sarah Hanson-Young.

Faruqi was elected deputy leader, while Hanson-Young — the longest-serving Greens member in federal parliament — retained her role as manager of business in the upper house.

Waters is the second woman to lead the progressive left-wing party, after Christine Milne. Her ascent comes after Bandt lost the seat of Melbourne to Labor's Sarah Witty at the 3 May federal election.
Speaking to reporters on Thursday, Waters signalled the party would continue to push the government on the same key issues it has in recent years as she called for a "progressive parliament with heart".

"The issues that people are facing are getting harder and are getting worse," she said.

"We need strong action on the climate, on nature, on the housing crisis, on the cost of living crisis, and we need our parliament to work to actually meet the needs of the people that it's been elected to represent."

But she also said she would take "a different approach" to Bandt, as she paid tribute to the former leader saying the party missed him "desperately" and hoped to welcome him back.

"I'm really proud as a woman to have worked on issues for women's health and equality," she said, adding the Greens would be "firm but constructive under this government and any future government".
She said voters had elected the Greens to "get shit done" and challenged the second-term Albanese Labor government, saying it could either choose to work with them to "pass good reforms that help people and the planet", or the Coalition.

"They're going to need to pick because they don't have the numbers in the Senate to pass the legislation that they want to work on," she said.

Faruqi said it was "exciting" time for the party, with two women in leadership positions.

She said the Greens were not "going to take a step backwards on action on climate, on the environment, on housing and for justice for Palestine".
Five people smiling as they pose for a photo while standing outside.
(Left to right) Greens Senator Penny Allman-Payne, deputy leader Mehreen Faruqi, party leader Larissa Waters, Senator Sarah Hanson-Young, and Senator Nick McKim. Source: AAP / Joel Carrett
Asked why she didn't contest for the party's leadership, Hanson-Young said: "This team that we have had elected by our party room today, I think is the best team for us at this moment."

She added: "This team provides stability. This team provides the skills and the grunt that we are going to need for this next three years."

The number of Greens MPs in the House of Representatives collapsed at the recent poll, with Bandt, housing spokesperson Max Chandler-Mather, and Queensland MP Stephen Bates losing their seats.

Queensland Greens MP Elizabeth Watson-Brown is expected to be their sole representative in the lower house, but the Greens are still set to hold the balance of power in the Senate.

Waters — a former environmental lawyer, who was the party's leader in the Senate while holding its democracy and women portfolios — was first elected in 2012 and served until 2017 when she was disqualified under section 44 of the constitution, along with several other politicians, for unknowingly holding dual citizenship with Canada — where she was born.

She subsequently renounced her Canadian citizenship and returned to parliament in 2018 when she was selected to fill a Senate vacancy.

Her elevation to party leader this week comes after the Liberals decided former deputy leader Sussan Ley should lead the party, while its junior Coalition partner the Nationals re-elected David Littleproud.


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By David Aidone
Source: SBS News


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