BRENTWOOD School’s Sir Antony Browne Society welcomed the familiar face and voice of former leader of The Green Party, Natalie Bennett, to talk to them about ‘Real Change in British Politics’.

Ms Bennett, who appeared on the televised debates during the 2015 election campaign, started her talk by apologising to the students for the "mess" that her generation had made of the planet and explained how the UK was consuming a staggering three planets’ worth of energy.

She went on to say how British politics hadn’t really changed since the election of Margaret Thatcher and that the first-past-the-post electoral system was outdated.

She explained how she thought that we were experiencing a very worrying time in global politics where polar opposites (from Donald Trump and Brexit on the right to Bernie Sanders and Jeremy Corbyn on the left) were attracting far more popularity than ever before.

Ms Bennett confidently and authoritatively answered a myriad of questions from students on topics such as proportional representation, Brexit and the European Single Market, European environmental progress, the British tax system and fracking.

She spoke of an ideal world where a local company would source locally manufactured products, and use local services to maintain it.

Ms Bennett said she first realised she was politically minded at the age of five, when she was told that she couldn’t ride a bike ‘because she was a girl’, and her passion for campaigning really came across during the talk. Head of Politics, Mr Mike Willis, said: “It was a pleasure to welcome Ms Bennett back to the School to give her view on what is an ever-changing but vitally important political issue, which always sparks much debate among students.”