Green Party leader slammed for ‘offensive insult’ towards King Charles | Politics | News


GREEN Party leader Zack Polanski has been told to apologise after apparently snubbing the King with his annual Christmas message. The hard-left leader, who wants to abolish the royal family, published his festive video update at 3pm today, the exact same time as the monarchโ€™s annual television broadcast.

The Green Partyโ€™s press release implied this had been done deliberately, sparking accusations of โ€œdisrespectโ€. The Conservative Party chairman Kevin Hollinrake blasted: โ€œWho does Zac Polanski think he is? Releasing a political video on Christmas Day, deliberately timed to clash with the Kingโ€™s Christmas message, is shameless and disrespectful.”

“As the nation comes together to listen to His Majesty speak, the Green Party leader chooses to stage a tone deaf, self-promoting stunt calling for more spending on asylum seekers.”

The top Tory added: โ€Polanski must to apologise.โ€

The Green Party leader, who has overseen an astonishing rise in support for his party since being elected in September, used his Christmas broadcast to call on the government to spend ยฃ400 million more on illegal migrants.

Mr Polanksi said the money should be spent to show โ€œkindnessโ€ to the undocumented young men flooding across the English Channel.

In his online video, he said: โ€œThis has to stop – the constant political rhetoric and demonisation of people who are just trying to survive in unimaginable living conditions.

โ€œI donโ€™t believe weโ€™re the country who the media paint us to be. I donโ€™t believe that weโ€™re cruel and heartless. And I donโ€™t believe that if people saw what Iโ€™ve seen in recent days, they would turn away.

โ€œWe should be diverting that money to a humanitarian and compassionate response.

โ€œThe rhetoric we hear about โ€˜stopping the boatsโ€™ and โ€˜smashing the gangsโ€™ – none of this is working.โ€

Speaking about his desire to abolish the monarchy previously, Mr Polanksi argued that the historic and beloved institution is a “clear symbol of the inequality that exists in our societyโ€.

โ€œItโ€™s not my number one priority because thereโ€™s lots of other things to do, and we know the country is divided by how they feel about monarchy, but if the straight question is, โ€˜would I abolish the monarchy,โ€™ yeah, absolutely.โ€

According to a poll in September, just 15% of Britons back the Green Partyโ€™s call to abolish the monarchy.

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