I wonder if The Greens moment has come and gone already.
Arguably, much of their recent success has been down to the deep unpopularity of Starmer, leaving The Greens as the best left leaning option in such circumstances.
Starmer's decision to block Burnham from standing in the Gorton and Denton by-election undoubtedly backfired spectacularly.
The Greens also fielded a decent candidate in Hannah Spencer, but they also did well in the local elections a few weeks ago.
But for now I don't think they'll be capturing many more protest votes due to the leadership of the Labour party. I guess it will depend to a large extent on how things go for Burnham.
If he's a fraction as good at getting things done, as he is at talking about the issues, he could be very good indeed.
He's from a totally different mold imo, he talks like a real person, not like a media spin obsessed puppet, like a large number of today's other politicians, which makes them incredibly dull, evasive, and just lacking any actual content, much of the time, it seems to me.
I thought he was very engaging and impressive in this interview, although I was stoned when I watched it last night,

, and admittedly he was not challenged by the interviewer, but rather encouraged to elaborate on the issues that he plans to address.
He should really have been pressed about the amount of empty or badly maintained properties, that he plans to buy back into public control, for use as public housing stock. Thus solving several problems all at the same time; reducing the blight on the affected communities of empty and badly maintained properties, dealing with rogue landlords, reducing the future costs of housing benefit bills. He made it sound like this is an enormous problem, whereas it seems to me, at least in the areas I see often and know well, that there does not seem to be a huge amount of properties in this category.
Although obviously, It must depend on the area, for instance an extremely deprived shit-hole like Blackpool, which reportedly has rows and rows of such properties, just one block behind the sea front row. The percentage of such properties in somewhere like that is probably very high, but who wants to live in Blackpool? (Although I gather that it is popular with transient benefits claimants that are paedophiles, as well as having a disproportionately high number of registered drug addicts. I guess such things go hand in hand with measures of economic deprivation, and lack of employment opportunities, unfortunately.)
But yeah, he should have been pressed further on some kind of ballpark figure, or percentage figure of the total housing stock, about the numbers of such properties that he is talking about.)