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Green Party considering legal action against BBC after being left out of election debates

YouGov poll puts party ahead of Lib Dems

Nigel Morris
Thursday 30 October 2014 14:58 EDT
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A petition calling for Natalie Bennett, the leader of the Green Party, to be included has been signed by nearly 200,000 people
A petition calling for Natalie Bennett, the leader of the Green Party, to be included has been signed by nearly 200,000 people (Teri Pengilley/The Independent)

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The Green Party is threatening legal action after the BBC rejected its bid to join a televised leaders’ debate during next year’s general election campaign.

Its move came as a YouGov poll placed the party in fourth place ahead of the Liberal Democrats.

The broadcaster justified the Greens’ exclusion on the grounds that unlike Ukip they had not demonstrated a big recent rise in support.

A petition calling for their leader, Natalie Bennett, to be included has been signed by nearly 200,000 people.

Penny Kemp, the party’s director of communications, said: “We have already met with our lawyers to discuss possible legal action but obviously we would wish to settle this by an amicable route and lines of communication are open with the broadcasters.

“We are meeting them in early November to discuss the leadership debates and at that meeting we will be reiterating why we should have a place at the table. This new opinion poll shows yet again that the Greens have a message that voters want to hear.”

The party received support from the Conservative MP Zac Goldsmith. He tweeted: “Clearly the Greens deserve to be in the Leaders debate. Same number of MPs as UKIP; higher in the polls than the LibDems. Shame on the BBC.”

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