Gutter Boy
Tim Sherwood
What will be very interesting is how Reform supporters become interested in the Greens over the next few years.
A core part of the Brexit vote and following UKIP, Reform etc is a call for an improvement in life and a change to the Status Quo.
Greens (5) and Reform (8) have similar number of MPs now.
The narrative will now look at the Greens in the same way it did Farage Inc a few years ago.
The Greens need to make sure they have they're ducks in a row about policy substance.
The Lib Dems should be very worried.
A historic issue with the Greens is that they don't have a tradition of authoritarian leadership and they actively encourage being a broad church internally. So they are both very anti-EU (e.g. Jenny Jones) and very pro-EU. They are both very pro-Trans and also a bit TERF-y. The idea of party discipline is a bit alien to them. So that respectful disagreement could be quite refreshing for voters to see, but it will likely cause them issues too.