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The Greens have denied a split at the top of the party over trans rights, as they appeal to voters ahead of next week’s local elections.

Carla Denyer defended fellow co-leader Adrian Ramsay after he failed to say whether he still believed “trans women are women”.

This cast doubt over the stance of the defiantly pro-trans party and raised questions over whether the two leaders were at odds.

But as she joined activists on the campaign trail in Kent on Friday, Ms Denyer claimed she and her fellow Green MP were still unified but couldn’t say whether they had spoken about the contentious issue.

She told Sky News: “Green Party policy is clear that trans women are women, trans men are men, and non-binary identities exist and are valid.

“I support that policy and I know that Adrian and I are united in standing up for trans rights and for women’s rights.

“I don’t see those in conflict, I understand some people will express themselves slightly differently, and I absolutely understand why a man, a cis-man, might feel slightly uncomfortable defining womanhood from the outside.”

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Local elections

It may have caused some tricky conversations this week, but the issue is unlikely to have a huge impact on next Thursday’s elections.

And as the campaigners and candidates went from door to door in the town of Dartford, it became clear that they were feeling confident.

Green party co-leaders Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsay.
File pic: PA
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Green Party co-leaders Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsay. File pic: PA

Although the Greens only have five seats on Kent County Council, they are contesting almost all of the 81 up for grabs and believe they can make gains from the Conservatives, who currently have an overwhelming majority.

It’s a pattern they hope to see across the country, building on previous momentum and capitalising as people lose faith in establishment politics.

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Laying out their track record, Ms Denyer said: “In the general election we quadrupled our representation in the House of Commons and not only that, we came second in 40 constituencies as well, and in the local elections, we’ve increased our number of councillors nearly fivefold.”

Critics though have suggested there may be a ceiling on the green vote and cited their inability to grab attention nationally.

A Reform-shaped problem

This is in contrast to other leaders of smaller parties, in particular Nigel Farage, who has relentlessly drawn the spotlight and driven up Reform support since the general election.

They’re now streets ahead of the Greens in the polls despite having the same number of MPs. So, does Ms Denyer think she can learn anything from her anti-establishment rival?

“Nigel Farage’s model of reform is very much about ego and celebrity and a one-man band,” she said.

“That’s never been the Green Party’s values, we’re a grassroots bottom-up organisation.”

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Ultimate guide to local elections

Whether this strategy will deliver the breakthrough moment they are chasing will be decided when voters go to the polls next Thursday.

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SEC approves, then instantly pauses Bitwise’s ETF conversion

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SEC approves, then instantly pauses Bitwise’s ETF conversion

SEC approves, then instantly pauses Bitwise’s ETF conversion

Analysts speculate the Securities and Exchange Commission could be stalling until it creates listing standards for crypto ETFs, or is trying to stop its sole Democrat commissioner from disrupting the approval process.

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21Shares files with SEC for spot ONDO ETF

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21Shares files with SEC for spot ONDO ETF

21Shares files with SEC for spot ONDO ETF

21Shares has filed a preliminary application with the US Securities and Exchange Commission for an ETF tracking the token of the DeFi platform Ondo Finance.

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Goldman Sachs boss sounds warning to Reeves on tax and regulation

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Goldman Sachs boss sounds warning to Reeves on tax and regulation

London and the UK’s leading status in the global financial system is “fragile”, the boss of Goldman Sachs has warned, as the government grapples with a tough economy.

Speaking ahead of a meeting with the prime minister, David Solomon – chairman and chief executive of the huge US investment bank – told Sky News presenter Wilfred Frost’s The Master Investor Podcast of several concerns related to tax and regulation.

He urged the government not to push people and business away through poor policy that would damage its primary aim of securing improved economic growth, arguing that European rivals were currently proving more attractive.

Money latest: Mortgage shake-up to save ‘time and money’

He said: “The financial industry is still driven by talent and capital formation. And those things are much more mobile than they were 25 years ago.

“London continues to be an important financial centre. But because of Brexit, because of the way the world’s evolving, the talent that was more centred here is more mobile.

“We as a firm have many more people on the continent. Policy matters, incentives matter.

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“I’m encouraged by some of what the current government is talking about in terms of supporting business and trying to support a more growth oriented agenda.

“But if you don’t set a policy that keeps talent here, that encourages capital formation here, I think over time you risk that.”

He had a stark warning about the recent reversal of the “Non Dom” tax policy, which occurred across both the prior Conservative government and the current Labour government, which has played a part in some senior Goldman partners relocating away from London.

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Chancellor will not be drawn on wealth tax

Richard Gnodde, one of the bank’s vice-chairs, left for Milan earlier this year.

“Incentives matter if you create tax policy or incentives that push people away, you harm your economy,” Mr Solomon continued.

“If you go back, you know, ten years ago, I think we probably had 80 people in Paris. You know, we have 400 people in Paris now… And so in Goldman Sachs today, if you’re in Europe, you can live in London, you can live in Paris, you can live in Germany, in Frankfurt or Munich, you can live in Italy, you can live in Switzerland.

“And we’ve got, you know, real offices. You just have to recognise talent is more mobile.”

Goldman is understood to have about 6,000 employees in the UK.

Rachel Reeves is currently seeking ways to fill a black hole in the public finances and has refused to rule out wealth taxes at the next budget.

Mr Solomon expressed sympathy for her as her tears in parliament earlier this month led to speculation about the pressure of the job.

“I have sympathy, I have empathy not just for the chancellor, but for anyone who’s serving in one of these governments,” he said, referring to the turbulent political landscape globally.

Commenting on the chancellor’s Mansion House speech last week, he added: “The chancellor spoke here about regulation, she’s talking about regulation not just for safety and soundness, but also for growth.

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Takeaways from chancellor’s Mansion House speech

“And now we have to see the action steps that actually follow through and encourage that.”

One area he was particularly keen to see follow through from her Mansion House speech was ringfencing – the post financial crisis regulation that requires banks to separate their retail activities from their investment banking activities.

“It’s a place where the UK is an outlier, and by being an outlier, it prevents capital formation and growth.

“What’s the justification for being an outlier? Why is this so difficult to change? It’s hard to make a substantive policy argument that this is like a great policy for the UK. So why is it so hard to change?”

The Master Investor Podcast with Wilfred Frost is available across multiple podcast platforms

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