Driving a wedge - Plan to paint Labour as 'woke' lies be hind cutting of charity ties
The Guardian|August 11, 2023
The scaling of Rishi Sunak's home to drape the building in black fabric in protest at oil drilling was not the first time that Greenpeace had targeted the home of senior politicians.
Rowena Mason
Driving a wedge - Plan to paint Labour as 'woke' lies be hind cutting of charity ties

The environmental group surrounded David Cameron's Cotswolds cottage in 2014 to campaign against his support for fracking, and mounted the roof of John Prescott's home in 2005 in a demonstration against the government's slowness on climate targets. It has also previously carried out stunts at Sunak's North Yorkshire mansion.

But this time No 10 was in no mood to turn a blind eye. The government ordered an immediate ceasing of ties with the group, which engages with departments on a range of policies. Clambering on to a politician's home was always going to be a controversial move. Some countries, such as Ireland, are taking steps to ban protests outside politicians' houses, and MPs have a right to be concerned about their security after the murders of the MPs Jo Cox and David Amess.

But anyone with a cursory glance at Greenpeace's history would know of its commitment to nonviolence in direct action.

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