The Green Party has won two new seats, as its co-leaders Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsay secured victory in Bristol Central and Waveney Valley.
In Bristol, Ms Denyer defeated Labour’s shadow culture secretary Thangam Debbonaire by a majority of 10,000
Mr Ramsay took Waveney Valley from the Conservatives, with a huge swing to his party of 32.1%.
The Green Party also hopes to hold on to its seat in Brighton Pavilion and win in North Herefordshire.
It is currently on course to win seven per cent of the vote which would be its best general election performance yet.
At the last general election in 2019, it secured less than three per cent.
Celebrating her own win, Ms Denyer said Bristol has “made history”.
“As this city’s first Green MP, I promise to be a strong, independent voice for Bristol’s values, pushing the government to be bolder on the issues that matter.”
Speaking to the BBC, Ms Denyer said she believed the public liked the party’s policies – including a proposal to increase the minimum wage and raise taxes to help invest in public services.
She said people had been hesitant about voting for her party in the past because they didn’t think they would win.
However, she said her result proved that “if you want Green, you can vote Green and you will get a Green MP”.
The Green Party won a seat in the House of Commons for the first time in 2010, when Caroline Lucas won in Brighton Pavilion. Last year, she said she would not be standing again.
Youth football teams and grassroots clubs across the country have held a minute’s silence at the start of their games to commemorate a 10-year-old girl who di
10-year-old Poppy Atkinson was killed when she was struck by a car during a training session at Kendal Rugby Club in Cumbria. Clubs from Leeds to London
The high court, sitting in Liverpool, heard Uefa had relied upon the principle that English courts will not inquire into the legality of actions by foreign gove
Caption: Alan Shearer?s Premier League predictions credit: Getty / Metro After some impressive results for English sides in Europe the focus is