There are also red/green political alliances and/or electoral agreements between social-democratic or
liberal parties cooperate with green parties • In Canada, the term
red–green alliance has been used to describe the limited co-operation between the
Liberal Party of Canada which uses red as its colour, and the
Green Party of Canada, which is centre-left but not seen as being as radical as many of its overseas sister parties and take a more moderate stance than
New Democratic Party. • A red–green alliance of sorts occurred during the campaign leading up to the
2008 London mayoral election. Incumbent mayor
Ken Livingstone, candidate for the
Labour Party, formed an electoral pact with the
Green Party mayoral candidate
Siân Berry via the
supplementary voting system, in which Labour voters were encouraged to place the Green candidate as their second preference, and vice versa. • In Italy,
The Olive Tree and
The Union coalitions comprised the
Federation of the Greens along with social-democratic,
social Christian,
centrist and other parties in a broad heterogenous centre-left alliance. The successor party to the Olive Tree, the
Democratic Party, maintains an internal faction of greens called the
Democratic Ecologists. • In Australia, the term
red–green alliance has been used to describe the co-operation between the centre-left
Australian Labor Party and the
Australian Greens. The Greens supported Labor to form the
minority government in
2010. As the Greens is the third party in the
Australian Senate which hold the balance power from
crossbench, the Labor minority government needed to rely support from the Greens from 2010 to 2013. • In New Zealand, after the
2017 general election, the
Labour and the
Greens signed a
memorandum of understanding. This formed a loose relationship between the two parties with the goal of working together when possible to unseat the incumbent
National Government. Later, the two parties also agreed to a set of budget responsibility rules, committing both parties to sustainable surpluses and capping debt, amongst other rules. Following the
2020 election, a Labour majority government was formed, supported by the Greens through a confidence and supply arrangement. • In Hungary,
Unity comprised the social democratic
Hungarian Socialist Party and
Democratic Coalition and the green
Dialogue for Hungary alongside smaller liberal parties. • In France,
New Ecological and Social People's Union includes the left-wing
La France Insoumise and
French Communist Party, the centre-left
Socialist Party and the green
Ecologist Pole. • In the Netherlands,
GreenLeft and the
Labour Party formed an
alliance during the
2021-2022 cabinet formation, vowing to only join a government coalition together. In 2023, the parliamentary groups in the
Senate merged following a joint election campaign. In the
2023 snap election, the two parties ran on a joint list, after members of both parties voted in favour. == See also ==