Sunday, August 31, 2008

Cindy Sheehan Endorses McKinney/Clemente and talks about the Green Party in Denver

Cynthia and Cindy Sheehan Pt1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOZlpLmL7wk
Link

Cindy Sheehan Pt2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRNA6nnT2OY
Link

Cindy Sheehan endorsed McKinney/Clemente not only because she agrees
with the message but because she is building the party.

Cynthia McKinney introduces Cindy Sheehan. Cindy's message about
building the Green Party, welcoming the growth. She endorses McKinney/
Clemente and the Green Party for building and institution and a
vehicle for change.

2009 CANDIDATE ENDORSEMENT QUESTIONNAIRE

GREEN PARTY OF MONROE COUNTY
CANDIDATE ENDORSEMENT QUESTIONNAIRE


Mail To:
Green Party of Monroe County
PO Box 40282
Rochester, NY 14604
(585) 324-6470

Name: _________________________________________________________________

Office Sought:_________________________________________________________________

Telephone: _________________________________________________________________

E-mail: _________________________________________________________________

Mailing Address:_______________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________

URL (Web site):________________________________________________________________

Campaign slogan: ______________________________________________________________

Please list names and contact information for key staff members
Campaign Manger: _____________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________

Treasurer: _________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________

Webmaster: _________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________

Volunteer Coordinator:__________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________

RESUME
Please attach a copy of your resume.

QUESTIONS

Why are you running?

What are the goals of your campaign?

Have you ever held an elected office? [if yes please list when and for what offices]

Have you run for office before? [if yes please list when and for what offices]

Will running or winning create a conflict of interest with any of your current positions, please discuss.

What resources are available to you?

How will your campaign be funded, will your campaign accept contributions from Corporate entities,PAC's, etc.?

If you are not a registered Green, explain some of the reasons why having a Green Party endorsement will help your campaign.

What other political party lines are you seeking and why?

What endorsements are actively seeking?

How much time are you personally willing/planning to spend on your campaign?

Are any members of your staff paid?

Have you ever attended a Green Party Meeting?

Once elected how often will you meet with the Green Party, and what role will the Green Party have in your administration?

Do you know of any issues that you do not agree with the Green Party's position, please explain.

GREEN VALUES

Listed below are the Green Party’s four defining characteristics. Please explain briefly how your campaign will embody each of these values, or how your past experience has led to a strengthening of these values in our community.

• Ecological Responsibility:
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________

• Nonviolence:
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________

• Grassroots Democracy:
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________

• Social and Economic Justice:
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________

MAJOR ISSUES

Please choose two major issues confronting our community, and then list one innovative, Green friendly idea for dealing with the issue.

• Issue #1: _____________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________

• Issue #2: _____________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________

WHY GREEN?

Please explain briefly why you are seeking the Green endorsement, and what support you expect for your campaign from the Green Party of Monroe County.
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________________________________

Thank you for your interest in the Green Party of Monroe County. We will contact you about setting up an interview. If you have questions about this form, or about the endorsement process, please call 585.234.6470.

A Green Party Perspective on Denver

Listen to Rosa Clemente interviewed by Kojo Nnamdi on WAMU 88.5 FM (Washington, DC, but broadcast from Denver) on Tuesday:
http://wamu.org/programs/kn/08/08/26.php#22631

Rosa did an outstanding job, covering everything from the politics of the Hip Hop Generation to the Green Party to the retreat of the Democratic Party and Barack Obama on issue after issue.

Democrats aren't the only party in Denver this week. Republicans have a war-room, quick response team on-site. And the Green Party is trying to make it's presence felt outside the security perimeter around the Pepsi Center. We speak with Rosa Clemente, a hip-hop scholar, journalist, and the Green Party Vice Presidential candidate.
Guests
Rosa Clemente, Vice Presidential candidate, Green Party

It's Time for Real Change How the Democrats Helped Bush Hijack the Country By CYNTHIA McKINNEY

It's Time for Real Change
How the Democrats Helped Bush Hijack the Country

By CYNTHIA McKINNEY

http://www.counterpunch.org/mckinney08272008.html

Our country has been hijacked and the Democrats have proven themselves to have been in on the plan. When it came to the Constitution, the Democratic leadership showed us that aiding and abetting illegal spying on us was more important to them than protecting our civil liberties.

When it came to war and occupation, the Democratic leadership showed us that financing an illegal and immoral war, based on lies, was more important to them than the people's desire for peace.

And when the people, hurting from the financial mismanagement of this country, called for accountability for the crimes that have been committed against the people here, against the global community, against nature, itself, the Democratic leadership took impeachment off the table!

Grassroots Democratic Party activists want a livable wage! A "Medicare-for-all" type of health care system, repeal of the Bush tax cuts that have ushered in the greatest income inequality in this country since the Great Depression. But the Democratic Party has shown itself to be incapable of providing even a semblance of the values even of its own activists.

The Democratic Party's national leadership didn't even mention Hurricanes Katrina and Rita survivors in their Congressional agenda for the first 100 days.

The Democratic Party's national leadership gave us the Iran Naval Blockade bill, the Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act, and telecom immunity. They continue to fund war and occupation to the tune of $720 million a day while our children graduate from college tens--or even hundreds--of thousands of dollars in debt. Entire cities are going into receivership while the Democratic leadership in Congress gives the Pentagon one half trillion dollars annually with no accountability, no strings attached. That's over and above spending for war.

Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo are the hallmarks of the new U.S. gulag Democrats are helping to create.

They want us to believe that China and Russia are our enemies, in addition to the 60 countries on Dick Cheney's list. They want us to believe that workers, who come to this country to support thier families after Democratic leadership in the country saddl3ed workers with NAFTA, are our enemies. But we are here today to declare that we know who the real enemies are: those false patriots that George Washington warned us of, who wrap themselves in the flag while betraying our values.

We are the true patriots!

We know that the strength of this country lies in the way it countenances dissent. And we are here to dissent. We are not deterred by reports of sleek, new detention facilities or recently-acquired taser guns that kill. For we come to dissent in peace. Indeed, we dissent for peace.

Today, we declare our independence from conformity and "go-along-to-get-along" politics. We declare our willingness to be radical in pursuit of peace and in our hunger for justice. We can see clearly now who the real stickup artists are and that's why we're in Denver!

Our actions here this week begin the disarming of the hijackers. We no longer are afraid. And we won't be deceived. We know that a vote for the Democrats is a vote for more war in Afghanistan and other parts of the world.

But today, we are now free.

Free to stand on the four pillars guiding our political engagement: environmental wisdom, peace, grassroots democratcy, and social justice. And finally, we know our power. We know the power of the people. We know that true power rests in the hands of the people. People who are willing to take a stand.

We need look no further than Haiti, Code,I'voire, Spain, and India to see the power of the people at the ballot box. No further than Brazil, Venezuela, Chile, Argentina, Ecuador, Bolivia, Nicaragua, and Paraguay to know that if they can do it, so can we.

Provided our elections are fair!

And if the Democrats cave in, in the face of fraud, disfranchisement, and theft, then we will be there to demand election integrity!

All over this country, the signs are there. People from New York to Florida, Washington State to California, Colorado to Texas are liberating themselves. We must not stop! Our country is worth it! Let's take our country back! Power to the People!

Cynthia McKinney is the Green Party's nominee for president.

Hawkins For Congress Petitions (Green Populist) challenged by Democrats

Howie Hawkins for Congress
25th District, New York
www.howiehawkins.org

Media Release

For Immediate Release: Saturday, August 30, 2008
For More Information: Howie Hawkins, 315-425-1019, hhawkins@igc.org

Hawkins Asks Why Maffei Is Opposed to Democracy

Howie Hawkins, the Green Populist candidate for Congress in the 25th District, today accused his Democratic opponent of suppressing democracy by challenging Hawkins’ petition to run for Congress. Hawkins filed over 6,300 signatures. 3,500 signatures are required by law to qualify for the ballot.

Hawkins noted that due to New York State’s biased election laws, independents must collect nearly three times the 1250 signatures that Democrats and Republicans need to run for Congress. Hawkins submitted over five times the signatures the major party candidates needed.

“To hear Barack Obama tell it, change comes from the bottom up. Apparently Maffei didn’t get the message. Maffei doesn’t want an independent upstart to even have a chance of coming from the bottom up,” Hawkins said.

"Major party politicians like Dan Maffei support sending US troops to Iraq and Afghanistan under the guise of installing democracy, but they write anti-democratic election laws that suppress debate and democracy here in America," stated Hawkins.

"Maffei is trying to fix the election. He doesn’t want the competition. He wants to take for granted voters who are antiwar, for universal healthcare, and for clean energy. He doesn’t want to have to debate my platform of all troops home from Iraq and Afghanistan, comprehensive health care for all through a single public insurer, and cutting the military budget at least $300 billion a year in order to fund a clean energy transition of sufficient speed and scale to achieve climate stability, energy security, and economic revitalization," said Hawkins.

If Hawkins’ petition survives Maffei’s objections, he will be the only independent candidate for Congress in New York State this year. The few other candidates who may have an additional line on the ballot through an independent nominating petition are also running as Democrats or Republicans.

“Independents have to go out and spend long hours every day for the limited six week petitioning period to convince thousands of voters to sign their petitions. Independent candidates not only have to get three times more signatures, we don’t have the patronage-based structures of the old established parties to gather them for us. The major party candidates don’t have to work for a single signature. Their party committees do it for them. In the course of doing their own petition for the county committee seats, the committee members present party voters with a stack of petitions to sign for all the party’s designated candidates. Many don’t even know whom the candidates are that they signed for,” Hawkins noted.

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Elizabeth May welcomes Blair Wilson as first Green Party MP

29.08.2008
http://www.greenparty.ca/

OTTAWA – Green Party leader Elizabeth May is welcoming MP Blair Wilson to the Green Party as the first Green Member of Parliament in Canada. Mr. Wilson, MP for West Vancouver—Sunshine Coast—Sea to Sky Country, will serve in the Green Party Shadow Cabinet.

"Today we make history," said Ms. May. "I am grateful for Mr. Wilson's principled belief that the Green Party deserves a voice in Parliament and for his firm commitment to democracy. With a Green MP sitting in the House of Commons, it will now be impossible to exclude the Green Party from the televised leaders' debates in the next election.

"I am also pleased that Mr. Wilson has agreed to join our Shadow Cabinet as Immigration Critic. As a past member of the House of Commons Immigration Committee, he is well-qualified for this role and brings expertise to this position that will prove invaluable to the Green Party."

Mr. Wilson has served as an Independent MP since autumn of 2007.

"Not only do I embrace the policies of my new party, I will feel that all my past difficulties are justified if, by my actions, I can make a real difference by ensuring Elizabeth May is included in the leaders' debates," said Mr. Wilson. "There is a democracy deficit in Canadian politics and this is one step in restoring effective democracy in Canada.

"Democracy is threatened when legitimate national leaders are barred from what is arguably the single most important political event in an election – the televised debates. It is shocking that the Green Party was excluded from the debates in the past, but by joining the Green Party, I can help guarantee that this travesty will not be repeated in the next election.

"More now than ever before, it is critical that the voice of the Green Party is heard. I am looking forward to working hard as Canada's first Green MP."

Rosa Clemente Green VP at "Open the Debates" Rally in Denver

Green Party Vice-Presidential Candidate Rosa Clemente To Participate In "Open The Debates" Rally In Denver

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lamR9BDDSqE

Forwarded by the Green Party of the United States http://www.gp.org

*Press Advisory*

*For immediate release*

Contact: John Judge, 202-584-1021, press-secretary@runcynthiarun.org

Washington, DC -- Rosa Clemente, the recently nominated vice-presidential candidate running with former Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney on the Green Party ticket, will join Ralph Nader, Matt Gonzalez, Val Kilmer, Sean Penn, Cindy Sheehan, Tom Morello, Jello Biafra, Nellie McKay, and Ike Reilly at the "Open the Debates" Super Rally on Wednesday, August 27, 2008 at 6:00 p.m. at the University of Denver Magness Arena in Denver, Colorado.

Green Party and other third party and independent candidates in the 2008 presidential race have been consistently excluded from national and local debates, including progressive Congressman Dennis Kucinich from national media debates. The Green Party is demanding that presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney to be included in the upcoming Google and YouTube debates in New Orleans.

"It is critical for the Hip Hop generation and young people, among whom only one in fourteen vote or participate in elections, and who see the current two-party system as antiquated and unable to address their issues, to be able to hear other alternatives at all political debates so they can have informed voter choice and become engaged in real democracy. The Green Party ticket represents something my generation can vote for, not just an alternative, but an imperative. This push to have third party and independent voices in national and local debates helps all of us to make democracy work," Clemente noted.

The Denver Super Rally, organized by independent candidate Ralph Nader is being held to coincide with the Democratic National Convention. A second Super Rally is planned for Minneapolis on September 4th at Orchestra Hall during the week of the Republican National Convention. The Super Rallies will be part of an outpouring of protest in Denver and Minneapolis against the two corporate controlled parties and their policies of perpetual militarism and war, at the expense of the necessities here at home.

"Our focus at the Denver Super Rally will be to expand the debates beyond just two parties," Nader said. "It's an issue of central concern to many Americans and extends far beyond any one candidate. It is a first amendment matter of speech, petition and assembly during a Presidential election for both the candidates and the voters."

For more information see:
http://www.votetruth08.org/
http://www.rosaclemente.com/
http://www.allthingscynthiamckinney.com
~ END ~

Rosa Clemente Green Party VP Candidate Denver DNC

Rosa Clemente spoke to a large crowd at the Mercury Cafe in Denver, Colorado. She is introduced by Green Party Presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney.

Part1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5aD9d8vNCEQ

Part 2
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UdtpbCSCPiQ

Both women have attended many events including anti-war protests during the DNC in 2008.

Rosa speaks about Hip Hop, Puerto Rico, COINTELPRO, and unity. She also talks about her struggles and how members of CodePink have recently helped her out. Rosa further talks about how groups both inside and out of the government infiltrate and coerce political movements.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

McKinney on Biden

From Cynthia Mckinney:


Hi! I was just asked to comment on Joe Biden's speech. Here is my statement:

"It's clear that Joe Biden will be the Democrats' Dick Cheney. that means Democrats, just like the Republicans, represent more war and brutal occupation. They are playing with the notion that 60 enemies on Dick Cheney's list aren't enough and that nuclear Russia and nuclear China should be added to the enemies list.

"Joe Biden is handmaiden to the special interests in Washington, D.C. that rely on war, death, untold carnage, and the insecurity of average, ordinary American citizens to have their way. It is clear that a vote for the Democratic Party is a vote for more war.

"It is time to derail the war machine or we will become victims of it--just as our children are victimized by the police state and the prison-industrial complex."

Please visit our website, www.runcynthiarun.org and donate to our campaign. Rosa and I cannot travel and satisfy all the requests we are receiving without your additional help. I understand that CNN's Roland Martin even acknowledged our campaign. And that's after CNN's Joe Johns did an interview with us at the Denver protests! Please donate today either by U.S.P.S. or online. For U.S.P.S. contributions, please make checks payable to:

Power to the People Committee

and send them to:

P.O. Box 311759
Atlanta, GA 31131

Thank you for your support!

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Greens: Cynthia McKinney deserves to participate in the Sept. 18 presidential debate in New Orleans

GREEN PARTY OF THE UNITED STATES
http://www.gp.org

For Immediate Release:
Monday, August 25, 2008

Contacts:
Scott McLarty, Media Coordinator, 202-518-5624, cell 202-904-7614, mclarty@greens.org
Starlene Rankin, Media Coordinator, 916-995-3805, starlene@gp.org

Green Party leaders cite McKinney's advocacy of the rights of Katrina survivors and criticism of government response to the disaster, saying she will speak for displaced and excluded people of New Orleans if invited to the debate Greens seek an end to presidential debates limited by arbitrary criteria to the two corporate party candidates; pollsters' omission of McKinney amounts to manipulation of the presidential race and censorship of the McKinney-Clemente campaign Cynthia McKinney's speech in Denver, August 24: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzoiIQSanx4


WASHINGTON, DC -- Green Party leaders called for the organizers of the September 18 presidential debate in New Orleans to admit other candidates along with the Democratic and Republican nominees, including Green nominee Cynthia McKinney.

The debate sponsors, Google and You Tube (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3p6Iwu4xMaY), require a 15% showing in three national polls to determine which candidates may participate in the debate.

"Cynthia McKinney deserves a place in the New Orleans debate. Any presidential candidate who has qualified for enough ballot lines to achieve the necessary electoral votes to win to be elected -- regardless of poll numbers -- has earned a place in the debates. The 15% threshold is being used to exclude all candidates outside of the corporate party nominees, John McCain and Barack Obama," said Cliff Thornton, co-chair of the Green Party of the United States.

"Ms. McKinney is more than just the candidate of a viable and growing party. She has played a special role in the movement to help survivors of the 2005 hurricane disaster in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast region. No other presidential candidate can talk about the needs of those who've been displaced or otherwise affected by Katrina the way Ms. McKinney can. Their concerns will be missing from the debate if Cynthia McKinney isn't invited," added Mr. Thornton.

Cynthia McKinney will appear on enough state ballots for an Electoral College victory, should she win in all these states. For the same reason, Greens also support the inclusion of independent candidate Ralph Nader, Libertarian Party nominee Bob Barr, and Constitution Party nominee Chuck Baldwin in the New Orleans debate.

Green Party leaders said that, since pollsters are generally omitting Ms. McKinney in their research, the poll numbers are showing dishonest and manipulated results, with the McKinney-Clemente campaign effectively censored from major media coverage of the race.

"Voters deserve to know about all the names they'll see on the ballot on Election Day, and to know which candidate best represents one's interests and ideals. It's time to end debates limited to candidates approved by sponsoring corporations and pollsters," said Green Party co-chair Sanda Everette.

Greens are appealing to New Orleans area community organizations as well as women's, student, and human rights groups to join the demand for Cynthia McKinney's inclusion in the New Orleans debate.

Greens note that Ms. McKinney, a member of the US House (Dem-Ga.) at the time of the hurricane, has been intimately involved in the post-Katrina survivors' issues, and that she:

Joined the Select Bipartisan Committee to Investigate the Preparation for and Response to Hurricane Katrina, despite the Democratic Party leadership's call for Democratic members to boycott the committee.
http://katrina.house.gov/index.htm

Led a congressional delegation to the site of the devastation, arranged for survivors to testify before the Commission, and inserted a 75-page supplement in the Final Report of the Katrina Commission exposing many problems not otherwise addressed.

Introduced the first legislation concerning the clean-up toxicity in the region and restoring the homes of displaced residents.
http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=109_cong_bills&docid=f:h4197ih.txt

Tracked hundreds of bills and worked closely with other members of Congress on drafting combined legislation that addressed many survivor issues.

Led a march across the bridge to Gretna, Louisiana, with people displaced by Katrina who had been refused passage during the hurricane; introduced a bill to deny funding to the Gretna police department because of its role in turning away thousands of hurricane survivors, mostly African Americans, at the Crescent City Connection bridge. Ms. McKinney was the only member of Congress to join the November 7, 2005 march.
http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=109_cong_bills&docid=f:h4209ih.txt.pdf
http://www.saveourwetlands.org/blockbridge.html

Continues to works actively with the Reconstruction Party, a local political party in New Orleans, and in support of displaced residents' right of return and other survivor issues.
http://www.cwsworkshop.org/katrinareader/node/525


MORE INFORMATION

Green Party of the United States http://www.gp.org
202-319-7191, 866-41GREEN
Fax 202-319-7193
Green candidate database for 2008 and other campaign information: http://www.gp.org/elections.shtml
Green Party News Center http://www.gp.org/newscenter.shtml
Green Party Speakers Bureau http://www.gp.org/speakers
Green Party ballot access page http://www.gp.org/2008-elections

Cynthia McKinney/Rosa Clemente 'Power to the People' Campaign for the White House http://www.runcynthiarun.org

Cynthia McKinney on video
http://www.youtube.com/user/RunCynthiaRun
http://www.youtube.com/profile_videos?user=RunCynthiaRun

Speech in Denver, August 24: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzoiIQSanx4
Music video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gx1NPlQjkqo

"An Opportunity to Open Presidential Debates" By John Nichols, The Nation, July 6, 2008
http://www.thenation.com/blogs/campaignmatters/334812
http://www.greenchange.org/article.php?id=2910

2008 Green National Convention, July 10-13 in Chicago, Illinois http://www.greenparty2008.org

Cynthia's Remarks at Denver DNC Stop the War Protest!

I'm told that we can still make qualifying for matching funds. Please donate to our Campaign now at www.runcynthiarun.org. Here are my remarks at the Denver DNC Stop the War Protest. Hope you enjoy. If you do, please show some love so we can continue this work of building the only real opposition party that exists in this country! Donate today at www.runcynthiarun.org or mail your contribution to Power to the People, P.O. Box 311759, Atlanta, GA 31131! -Cynthia McKinney

Cynthia McKinney
Remarks
DNC Stop the War Protest
August 24, 2008

Our country has been hijacked and the Democrats have proven themselves to have been in on the plan. When it came to the Constitution, the Democratic leadership showed us that aiding and abetting illegal spying on us was more important to them than protecting our civil liberties.

When it came to war and occupation, the Democratic leadership showed us that financing an illegal and immoral war, based on lies, was more important to them than the people's desire for peace.

And when the people, hurting from the financial mismanagement of this country, called for accountability for the crimes that have been committed against the people here, against the global community, against nature, itself, the Democratic leadership took impeachment off the table!

Grassroots Democratic Party activists want a livable wage! A "Medicare-for-all" type of health care system, repeal of the Bush tax cuts that have ushered in the greatest income inequality in this country since the Great Depression. But the Democratic Party has shown itself to be incapable of providing even a semblance of the values even of its own activists.

The Democratic Party's national leadership didn't even mention Hurricanes Katrina and Rita survivors in their Congressional agenda for the first 100 days.

The Democratic Party's national leadership gave us the Iran Naval Blockade bill, the Violent Radicalization and Homegrown Terrorism Prevention Act, and telecom immunity. They continue to fund war and occupation to the tune of $720 million a day while our children graduate from college tens--or even hundreds--of thousands of dollars in debt. Entire cities are going into receivership while the Democratic leadership in Congress gives the Pentagon one half trillion dollars annually with no accountability, no strings attached. That's over and above spending for war.

Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo are the hallmarks of the new U.S. gulag Democrats are helping to create.

They want us to believe that China and Russia are our enemies, in addition to the 60 countries on Dick Cheney's list. They want us to believe that workers, who come to this country to support thier families after Democratic leadership in the country saddl3ed workers with NAFTA, are our enemies. But we are here today to declare that we know who the real enemies are: those false patriots that George Washington warned us of, who wrap themselves in the flag while betraying our values.

We are the true patriots!

We know that the strength of this country lies in the way it countenances dissent. And we are here to dissent. We are not deterred by reports of sleek, new detention facilities or recently-acquired taser guns that kill. For we come to dissent in peace. Indeed, we dissent for peace.

Today, we declare our independence from conformity and "go-along-to-get-along" politics. We declare our willingness to be radical in pursuit of peace and in our hunger for justice. We can see clearly now who the real stickup artists are and that's why we're in Denver!

Our actions here this week begin the disarming of the hijackers. We no longer are afraid. And we won't be deceived. We know that a vote for the Democrats is a vote for more war in Afghanistan and other parts of the world.

But today, we are now free.

Free to stand on the four pillars guiding our political engagement: environmental wisdom, peace, grassroots democratcy, and social justice. And finally, we know our power. We know the power of the people. We know that true power rests in the hands of the people. People who are willing to take a stand.

We need look no further than Hiati, Code,I'voire, Spain, and India to see the power of the people at the ballot box. No further than Brazil, Venezuela, Chile, Argentina, Ecuador, Bolivia, Nicaragua, and Paraguay to know that if they can do it, so can we.

Provided our elections are fair!

And if the Democrats cave in, in the face of fraud, disfranchisement, and theft, then we will be there to demand election integrity!

All over this country, the signs are there. People from New York to Florida, Washington State to California, Colorado to Texas are liberating themselves. We must not stop! Our country is worth it! Let's take our country back! Power to the People!

Sunday, August 24, 2008

McKinney/Clemente in Denver for DNC Protests

Green Party presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney and running mate Rosa Clemente will be in Denver this week protesting the DNC Convention. "We dissent and we celebrate that we can take our country back!"

Check out the video of Cynthia McKinney on where the Democratic Party has failed.


Here's the schedule as it currently stands, more events are still being finalized: (all times are Colorado Mountain time):

Sunday, August 24:

End the Occupations March and Rally — West Steps of the Colorado State Capitol Building, Sunday, August 24, 9am

World Can't Wait Stop the War on Iran - Cleo Parker Robinson Dance Theater, 119 Park Avenue West, 7:00 pm

Monday, August 25:
Rosa Clemente Speaks, Freedom March, Civic Center Park 9:00 am

Resurrection City Free University, City of Ceurnivaca Park, 20th Street & Little Raven, attend the Lecture of Dr. Vincent Harding, 12:00 noon

McKinney Lecture, Resurrection City Free University, 1:00 pm

Mercury Cafe, 2199 California Street, 80205 (303) 294-9258 6:00 pm

Wednesday, August 27:

Rosa Clemente Speaks at the Open the Debates Rally sponsored by Nader/Gonzalez! 7:00 pm

Cynthia McKinney Schedualed to Appear on C-Span, Sunday, September 7


Cynthia McKinney was recently videotaped in the C-SPAN studio on a recent campaign visit to DC for half-hour interview for Road to the White House, which is *scheduled to air on Sunday, September 7 at 6:30 pm EST and *again at 9:30 pm EST the same night*.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Greens blast military-style police measures, drug-war violation of citizens' rights

GREEN PARTY OF THE UNITED STATES
http://www.gp.org

For Immediate Release:
Monday, August 18, 2008

Contacts:
Scott McLarty, Media Coordinator, 202-518-5624, cell 202-904-7614, mclarty@greens.org
Starlene Rankin, Media Coordinator, 916-995-3805, starlene@gp.org


Greens call military-style police measures and violation of citizens' rights a "breakdown of law"

• Greens condemn curfews, anticonstitutional police harassment of innocent citizens in Arkansas and DC, and the War on Drugs as "self-defeating" in efforts to eliminate crime


WASHINGTON, DC -- Green Party candidates and leaders called the 24-hour curfew imposed on the city of Helena-West Helena, Arkansas, a gross violation of the rights of local citizens and a symptom of the rapid growth of unrestrained police power over the past two decades.

Politicians and law enforcement officials have justified such measures as part of the war on drugs. Greens have endorsed an immediate end to the drug war, calling it a catastrophic failure.

"A city that hands its police force a license to trash the constitutional rights of its citizens is not a city that is upholding law and order and protecting its citizens. On the contrary, unlimited police power is a complete breakdown of the law," said Joshua Drake, Arkansas Green Party nominee for Congress (4th District) (http://www.drake08.com).

The curfew in Helena-West Helena (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/26171820/), a response to the crime rate in some neighborhoods, empowers officers armed with military rifles to stop and interrogate citizens without warrent or any semblance of probable cause.

A similar curfew has been imposed on Washington, DC's Trinidad neighborhood, where the police have established checkpoints allowing officers to question all drivers entering the area. Citizens must convince the police they have a "legitimate reason" for their presence in the neighborhood.

"These interrogations and checkpoints are comparable to police practices in authoritarian regimes and especially apartheid-era South Africa -- which is even more ominous given the fact the residents of these new 'Red Zones' are mostly African American and poor," said Rosa Clemente, the Green Party's nominee for Vice President of the United States (http://www.rosaclemente.com). "Such measures also recall the repression by police and private security firms in post-Katrina New Orleans, which accompanied the obstruction and expulsion of mostly poor and black residents from their homes."

"These policies have only empowered criminal gangs involved in the drug trade, just as Prohibition fed the growth of organized crime. The ACLU is right -- two of our most important freedoms, the right of mobility and protection against warrantless search and seizure, are being nullified for the sake of the disastrous war on drugs, in violation of local law and the US Constitution," added Ms. Clemente. (August 8 letter from the ACLU of Arkansas to Helena-West Helena Mayor J.F. Valley: http://www.acluarkansas.org/content/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=89&Itemid=4)

Greens noted that curfews and harassment of citizens reflect the militarization of civilian police departments enacted by the Clinton Administration in the mid 1990s, with officers trained in military tactics to fight the drug war.

Along with police militarization and the expanded war on drugs, the Nixon, Bush Sr., Reagan, Clinton and Bush Jr. administrations also oversaw the rapid growth of the private prison industry, which profits from filling up prison cells with more and more inmates. The outcome has been record incarceration of US citizens, especially of young African American and Latino men locked up on nonviolent offenses and plea-bargaining deals.

"Democratic and Republican politicians are equally responsible for the transformation of civilian police into militias," said Abel Tomlinson, Green nominee for Congress in Arkansas' 3rd District (http://www.abelforcongress.com). "The drug war has very little to do with drugs -- it's about control, coercion, and power. It's about money. America won't get sane drug laws and law enforcement until enough Greens get elected to public office to overturn these self-defeating, unconstitutional policies."

The Green Party supports the principle that governments can best address crime and drug use by promoting local self-determination and residents' ownership of their own communities, observing citizens' rights, and recognizing that addiction is above all a medical problem.


MORE INFORMATION

Green Party of the United States http://www.gp.org
202-319-7191, 866-41GREEN
Fax 202-319-7193
• Green candidate database for 2008 and other campaign information: http://www.gp.org/elections.shtml
• Green Party News Center http://www.gp.org/newscenter.shtml
• Green Party Speakers Bureau http://www.gp.org/speakers
• Green Party ballot access page http://www.gp.org/2008-elections

Cynthia McKinney/Rosa Clemente 'Power to the People' Campaign for the White House http://www.runcynthiarun.org

2008 Green National Convention, July 10-13 in Chicago, Illinois http://www.greenparty2008.org

Omar Lopez & the Browning of the Greens

Despite conflict between environmentalists and the immigrants' rights
movement, congressional candidate Omar Lopez thinks the Greens could
supplant the Democrats as Latinos' party of choice.

By Kari Lydersen
Chicago Reader, August 14, 2008
http://www.chicagoreader.com/features/stories/greenparty/

Omar Lopez - photo by Jim Newberry

The most impressive thing about the Green Party's national nominating
convention, held at Symphony Center July 10-13, might've been how
multiracial it was. In the crowd, black nationalists and young
activists of all colors mingled with white hippies. Fiery former
congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, who's African-American, was named the
Greens' presidential candidate, and Rosa Clemente, a Latina hip-hop
activist and journalist from New York, was slated for vice president.

But when keynote speaker Omar Lopez took the podium, it became clear
that there's more to the browning of the Green Party than just putting
nonwhite candidates up for office. There's a move, especially in
Chicago, to incorporate immigration rights as a central issue for
progressive Greens, whose focus on environmentalism has sometimes
pitted them directly against immigrants.

Lopez, a Mexican-American and longtime immigrants' rights organizer,
is running for the Fourth District congressional seat against
incumbent representative Luis Gutierrez, who has represented the
mostly Latino district for almost 16 years and is known for his own
advocacy of immigrants' rights. A leader of the March 10 Movement,
Lopez was part of the coalition that staged the massive downtown
immigrants' rights marches in 2006 and smaller May Day marches in 2007
and 2008. He's run unsuccessfully for political office twice as a
Democrat?both times against Gutierrez.

Lopez and his supporters say Gutierrez isn't doing enough for the
cause, and they're calling on Latinos to make the Green Party their
route to change. (It might be easier to do that now than ever before:
Since Green gubernatorial candidate Rich Whitney got more than 10
percent of the vote in the 2006 election, the party now qualifies as
"established" through 2010 under Illinois election law. That means
that, like Republican and Democratic candidates, Green candidates need
only 5,000 valid signatures on their nominating petitions, as opposed
to the 25,000 a candidate from a "new" party has to gather. It also
allows the party to slate candidates for office in the general
election.)

The Greens have been active in Pilsen for the last eight years. A
handful of them cofounded the Pilsen Environmental Rights and Reform
Organization (PERRO), which spurred city and state agencies to order
the H. Kramer smelting plant to clean up its operations and has
spearheaded several nonbinding ballot initiatives demanding that the
Fisk coal-burning power plant in Pilsen reduce its emissions. But
despite long hours of knocking on doors, the party's been slow to gain
widespread support in the neighborhood, a longtime power base for the
Daley-allied Hispanic Democratic Organization.

With Lopez's candidacy, local Green activists?the majority of them
still white?hope to build meaningful relationships with immigrants and
the immigrants' rights movement. The alliance is equally important to
Latino activists.

"We knew we had to have a candidate come out of the March 10
Movement," says Lopez. "The slogan of the marches was 'Today we march,
tomorrow we vote.' It would be an empty slogan if we didn't have a
candidate."

On the national level, the environmental movement has been largely
divorced from or even hostile to immigrants' rights movements.
Advocates of drastically reduced immigration targets, ranging from
"zero population growth" to "replacement level" immigration levels,
include Earth Day founder Gaylord Nelson (a former Wisconsin senator),
Earth First! founder Dave Foreman, Sea Shepherds and Greenpeace
activist Paul Watson, and Randy Hayes, former leader of the Rainforest
Action Network.

Since the mid-1980s anti-immigrant forces have repeatedly launched
attempts to gain control of the national board of the Sierra Club, and
in the early 90s the California Sierra Club joined with explicitly
anti-immigrant groups to form the Coalition to Stabilize Population.
In 1998 a petition drive by members forced a vote which could have
forced the board to adopt a stringent immigration-control position.
The measure failed, and the board maintained neutrality on the issue.
But in 2004 a slate of five outspokenly anti-immigrant candidates,
including former Colorado governor Dick Lamm, launched what was
described as a "hostile takeover attempt" of the 15-member national
board, which already included five members with anti-immigration
views. White power groups even lobbied their members to join the
Sierra Club so they could vote in the election?Morris Dees of the
watchdog Southern Poverty Law Center called it "the greening of hate."

But local Greens say they have long seen a nexus between immigrants'
rights issues and the environmental, racial, and economic justice
policies of their party. At the nominating convention the Greens
adopted a new immigration-related platform that includes permanent
border passes for Mexican and Canadian citizens, an end to
immigration-related racial profiling and English-only laws, and
immigration laws that "promote fairness, nondiscrimination and family
reunification."

"Immigration hasn't been a central issue in past campaigns, but that's
changing this year," said Jerry Mead-Lucero, a Green activist who met
his wife, Claudia Mead-Lucero, through the March 10 Movement. "Our
platform on immigration is much better than the Democrats'. It's tying
in to positions on globalization and free trade. Any free trade pact
should have free passage over borders, like in the EU."

And with the quickly growing Latino immigrant population nationwide
and its widespread disillusionment with the Republican and Democratic
parties' failure to pass immigration reform, immigrant communities are
fertile ground for new party members.

"This will be a reflection of what the Green Party can offer
minorities," says Lopez. "The Green Party is not well known by Latinos
yet, but this is an opportunity for the party."

Lopez, 63, is himself an immigrant: he came to Humboldt Park with his
parents from San Luis Potosi, Mexico, in 1958. He became politicized
in the wake of riots that swept the Puerto Rican community when a
police officer shot a youth after the Puerto Rican Parade in June
1966. His first and second wives were Puerto Rican (he's now
divorced), and he's been an activist in the Puerto Rican community for
years.

In the late 60s he served as minister of information for the Young
Lords, an organization formed by local Puerto Rican street gang
members to address community issues. Based in Lincoln Park, then a
rough Puerto Rican neighborhood, it was similar in genesis and
philosophy to the better-known Black Panthers, with gang member and
activist Jose "Cha Cha" Jimenez its highest-profile figure.

"The mission was basically self-deter?mina?tion for Puerto Rico and
for the neighborhood," Jimenez says. "Community empowerment and the
whole question of Puerto Rico being a direct colony of the U.S."

In 1969 the Young Lords joined the Black Panthers and the Young
Patriots, an Uptown-based group of white working-class young people
with Appalachian roots, to form the Rainbow Coalition. "We were all
organizations fighting against displacement," Jimenez says. "Prior to
that no one had really fought back against the Daley machine." They
worked with Mexican, Chicano, Chinese, and other ethnic activists in a
larger multiracial organizing movement in Chicago, and chapters in
other cities spun off from the Chicago organization.

They used a formula similar to the Panthers, "a
survival-pending-revolution model of organizing," says James Tracy,
author of a forthcoming book on the Rainbow Coalition. Also like the
Panthers, the group sometimes invited suspicion because of its gang
ties: "A certain element was definitely not interested in dropping the
drugs and the violence," he says. But "they had extensive social
services, breakfast programs, literacy programs, Puerto Rican history
classes. They were communicating and meeting basic needs of their
community while agitating against urban renewal plans."

Lopez was also a founding member of the mostly Puerto Rican Latin
American Defense Organization, which advocated for tenants' rights and
other issues in Humboldt Park. In the 70s he taught in the public
schools, joining the fight for bilingual education. From there he
moved into a post as a bilingual-education specialist for the Board of
Education, where he worked from 1977 to 1983.

In 1982 he was named assistant general supervisor for the Park
District under Daley loyalist Ed Kelly, a position Lopez says he
gained through his advocacy for more soccer fields. In this role he
helped secure the Pilsen Park District building that now houses the
National Museum of Mexican Art. In 1986, after the amnesty immigration
law was passed by the Reagan administration, Lopez left the Park
District to help undocumented immigrants get their papers and served
as president of the Little Village Chamber of Commerce. Since the
mid-90s he's been director of CALOR, a nonprofit organization serving
Latinos with HIV/AIDS.

Lopez first threw his hat in the ring against Gutierrez in 1986, when
he chal?lenged him for alderman and committeeman of the 26th Ward, but
he withdrew from the race early on. He tried for committeeman again in
1988 but lost by a wide margin. He knows most people probably expect a
similar result in November.

"People say I'm crazy," he says. "Gutierrez is very powerful. He'll
probably harness most of the money, but I'll run a very grassroots
campaign with the community groups, soccer leagues, churches."

Pilsen Green Party activist and 2006 state senate candidate Dorian
Breuer notes that Green Party candidates consider themselves flush if
they're outspent by their opponents only by a measure of ten to one.
Jorge Mujica, another March 10 Movement organizer, says one of the
campaign's resources will be undocumented residents, who can't vote
"but can hand out flyers and knock on doors."

In some ways the race between Gutierrez and Lopez will epitomize a
bitter split in the immigrants' rights movement. Gutierrez is
cosponsor of one 2007 immigration reform proposal, the STRIVE Act
(Security Through Regularized Immigration and a Vibrant Economy),
which remains stalled in a House committee more than a year after the
failure of the McCain-Kennedy immigration reform bill in the Senate.
One immigrants' rights faction, including the powerful local group
Centro Sin Fronteras, endorses STRIVE as a needed vehicle for family
reunification and a means of securing legal residency for many
undocumented immigrants. But another, including the March 10 Movement,
has decried the bill, which among other things calls for building new
immigration deten?tion centers, increasing border security and
surveillance with the help of the Depart?ment of Defense, and
instituting a guest worker program with stringent requirements
including a $500 application fee.

"People see [Gutierrez] as a champion of immigrants, but the proposals
he's put forth are far from that," said Lopez. "I don't see
immigration as a problem of national security where you need to
militarize the border. I see it as a labor issue. As long as you
criminalize immigrants and ignore their economic contribution, you're
shooting yourself in the foot."

Gutierrez declined to comment for this story.

Mujica thinks the Fourth District race will also pit the Mexican
community against the Puerto Rican community. The obviously
gerrymandered Fourth District is shaped like a horseshoe, with a
largely Puerto Rican north-side chunk encompassing Humboldt Park and
Logan Square connected by a thin strip hugging I-294 down to mostly
Mexican suburbs and neighborhoods including Stone Park, Cicero, Little
Village, Pilsen, and Back of the Yards.

But Lopez?who might have more Puerto Rican support than your average
Mexican-American candidate?sees it as a split between Latinos who have
benefited or hope to benefit from the Latino arm of Daley's Democratic
machine and those who want to strike out on their own. At the
nominating convention Lopez didn't mince words in describing the
former: "We are going to stumble on many Latinos who will reject the
Green Party because they joined the Democratic Party in search of
privileges, a job, to be elected to a political position, even to get
some consulting and patronage contracts," he said. These "mercenary
political activists close the door for others who are sincerely
wanting to participate in the electoral process."

Cha Cha Jimenez sees it in similar terms.

"If I was in Chicago I'd probably work 24 hours a day for [Lopez's]
campaign," he said. "Not to say I don't like Gutierrez?he's done a lot
for our community. But are we here to empower Mayor Daley or empower
the people?"

Hip Hop VP: A Q+A With Rosa Clemente


JEFF CHANG
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Hip Hop VP: A Q+A With Rosa Clemente

http://blogs.vibe.com/jeffchang/2008/08/hip-hop-vp-a-qa-with-rosa-clemente/


As cell phone users await Barack Obama's text message informing them who his Vice President choice is, we present a Q+A with Green Party VP nominee Rosa Clemente.

The 36-year old hip-hop activist took some time in Las Vegas at the National Hip-Hop Political Convention last month to talk candidly with us about her historic run, the state of hip-hop activism, the Green Party and its discontents, and how she really feels about Hillary Clinton and Obama. What follows are excerpts from a long interview.

How did this nomination happen for you?

Cynthia called me on July 5th. It happened very quick. I didn't hesitate because that's just my personality. But by the time I got to the convention in Chicago, it was such a whirlwind. It was so fast, the nomination, meeting hundreds of Green Party members. It wasn't 'til I got off that stage that I was like, holy shit. I'm gonna be on a ballot in 40 states. That is so surreal.

In 2001, I had submitted a proposal to a foundation and it was called Hip-Hop Vote. They rejected me and they said that there was no way that a hip-hop generation--no matter how it was being defined--was going to make headway in voting. They could not see young people being so engaged in the electoral political system. And it's funny because now that's all they do. Any foundation is trying to fund young people like Generation Vote, Russell Simmons (Hip-Hop Summit Action Network), the National Hip-Hop Political Convention.

How is it that you got involved with Cynthia McKinney?

I came to know about Cynthia McKinney when she had the hearings on political prisoners in Congress. And then she started talking about Tupac and his files and trying to get the files from the FBI. I was in the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement and we were working on so much around political prisoners. She started bringing me out to her brain trust as part of the Congressional Black Caucus. She was involved in the State of the Black World with Ron Daniels which I was involved with. And then she brought me out to this big Tupac event in Atlanta with Chuck D. Of course when they got her out of office, she went to Cornell to teach one of those two-week things and she just got so harassed. She got death threats. This was after the September 11 hearings where she was grilling Rumsfeld, after they arrested her--whatever the capitol police did to her. I hadn't talked to her in a long time. I just know that I joined the Green Party in Brooklyn.

People always say they want their officials to be held accountable. Here she is, being held accountable, because her party didn't keep to their promises in '06 when they all got in. Pelosi and Conyers and all them finally get these ranks and--no impeachment and no pullout of the war. She actually stood to their principles. She could just have stayed in the DNC. She could have stayed the incumbent and she just didn't. People have always said, 'You gotta tone it down Rosa, you're too honest. You can't always say what you say.' And I think everything I did got me to this position, because I think I am genuine and I think that a lot of cats aren't. It has come at the expense of a lot of shit. I know that. But I can't be any other way. And I think Cynthia is just, she's completely uncompromising. That is the most needed value right now in our movement.

Were you prepared to understand what the politics of the Green Party itself was, particularly the racial politics of the Green Party? Because this ticket is a big departure and it seems like there's been a little bit of a backlash within the Party around Cynthia's nomination and your nomination.

I feel much of that is based on some serious misinformation on who we are as a generation but also the non-ability for most progressives to particularly see women of color leading. I'm still grasping how local people feel about the Greens. I don't know I just, I'm ready to follow Cynthia in that regard. And second, I don't see hip-hop being represented any way politically at the level that it should be. So I'm going with people who are at least moving out the way for us to have space.

I haven't felt uncomfortable. The young people in the Green Party--the mostly white young people--have whole different racial and class analysis. (They) were clear that they came into politics because they had gone to some hip-hop event. They had seen Dead Prez perform, they had seen Immortal Technique, they had read something on Tupac, and they said they felt no other party was paying attention to their issues. So I don't want to be like Pollyanna and say I ignore it. But the Greens are a national party, it's a national organization, and there are over a hundred Greens running for all different types of offices. They nominated me and Cynthia.

The hip-hop generation has been successful in terms of bringing more folks out to the polls. Every election has been landmark numbers. But the numbers that, in terms of registration, they're mostly the college kids. How do you reach the working-class young people, the youths of color who are completely alienated, the overwhelming majority of young people who still aren't even registed to vote?

That's what I'm trying to stay focused on. It's a difficult situation. You can get into the communities because you now have a name, but you might not even have the resources to get a flight there. And that's how real it is in our campaign. Even though the Green Party has been infrastructured for 25 years, they don't get matching funds. And the less we're in the media, the less people know we exist so there's no money in the coffers to do that type of campaigning which is what I want to do. I want to get to the cats that aren't even registered to vote. I don't give a fuck about turning no Barack Obama Democrat around. I'm not even trying to waste my time.

It's interesting that with the new vote rising, it's defaulting to the Democrats. Who is gonna vote for John McCain? So what it essentially is, the Democrats in the back of their minds gotta be thinking we ain't even got to talk about these young people's issues. There's this fervor because of all the work we've been putting down since 2003--all these hip-hop organizations--there's the fervor to get out there and to register vote but it's essentially defaulted Democrat anyway.

I think the Greens are gonna have to put in some serious infrastructure planning for the next 20 years, if we're gonna even move all the people who aren't even registered to vote to have any faith in the political system. Because that's essentially what they're saying--they're withholding their vote.

So what it becomes incumbent upon me to say is: am I doing this for the Green party or am I doing it for my generation? Is that connected? If it is, how does that play out? And I'm trying to stay really focused on getting to the people that are completely dissatisfied and completely marginalized, not necessarily from joining the Green Party which would be great, but to begin to tell them that this two-party system--that has to stop now. We cannot afford another two-party election. But within hip-hop, actually, that conversation becomes very difficult.

How do you mean?

I think anybody running a hip-hop organization now that has a grant, they can't just drop their shit and support the Green party. I think that's the danger of the whole non-profit grant system that most of the hip-hop organizations are in. Finally you have a party that if 5% of the hip-hoppers voted would give us 5% of the electorate, and everybody's scared now? Now that it's right in front of you everybody's backing up. Well, they're going to Obama.

Of course. They're either going to Obama or they're saying they're not, but they default to that. You have a voter registration drive, would you be pushing the Greens? We're not even on the ballots. You can't push us in 10 states. Most cats are not registering Republican. Default to the Democrats.

That's gonna require a lot of cats in hip-hop making some real choices right now. Are you gonna back up a party that nominated not me, but nominated a hip-hop activist, a person that's been out here for 7-8 years on the forefront of hip-hop work? At this moment, cats can't say they're for me and Cynthia because they're afraid they're gonna lose their GOTV money?

But on the other hand, Nader didn't have any problem raising any money. He raised millions of dollars. Has the Green party abandoned you and Cynthia?

I think (when Nader ran) in 1996 and 2000, it was so much easier to have a third party, in that the media was still at least doing its job, giving equal time. Eight years after the stolen election and Bush, the media is such a farce. The fact that they will not let Nader, Bob Barr, or Cynthia in any of the debates speaks volumes. And I think that is simply because at the end of the day, the Democratic machine and the Republican machine would rather ebb and flow power than concede power together to a third, fourth, or fifth party.

Has the Green Party abandoned us? I don't know. I've only been here for less than a month. I don't think the Green party is ready, I don't think the apparatus is there.

Is it the Green Party apparatus? Is it will? Or is it race?

I think it's the apparatus and I think it also has to do with how you fundraise in this day and age and how media is used as it relates to young people. I don't think they have a grasp of any of that. I truly believe that you have to market this. You have to brand it and there's not a brand. Nader was the brand. So when Nader in 2000 gets 2% of the vote, that's a big deal. But now 8 years later, look at how they destroyed Nader. If it wasn't for him Gore would have won, now we're the spoiler spoiler spoiler. So no longer are we the third party, the Green party is now the spoiler party.

Talk about the platform. What do you think the Green Party has over the other parties?

This is the only party that even has social justice as its core principle. When we say ending the war, we mean all the wars. We need to get all the military out of every country, we need to begin to deal with issues of what peace can look like, how do you sustain that. Obviously, the green party is at the forefront of pushing the environment as a core value, that was innovative then. There should be an end to imprisoning young people, an immediate stop to the death penalty, a livable wage, not a minimum wage. Impeachment for George Bush and them is critical. I think if we don't hold them accountable as a people, then anybody can do the same shit that they did.

Words are words, but we can make the words into deeds. If people would even open up the platform, they would see that neither the Democrats and Republicans would even talk about young people having rights and that we should be signing some of these international treaties, like the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The hardest part is to literally get people to open it up and want to be exposed.

Do you think the Obama campaign is a false hope? A false kind of change? It's hard for me to see Obama and not feel like there's a good heart in that. So I feel like it's not false hope if he's not a pessimistic or opportunistic person. Because when I see him, sometimes it's magical. You're like, damn. But then I weigh it. Is it just because we've been under 8 years of Bush and company?

When Obama comes around, first it's historical. No matter how it goes down, it's history. There's a moment when I watched him become the presumptive nominee that I have to recognize that is historic. I'm married to a black man in America. I could see if you're African American in this country and you're over 50, that is a moment of brilliance and shine. Like, this is what I fought for. This is why I fought for the vote.

You respect that. And I don't agree with any of the racial shit that Fox puts out on Michelle or him just like I didn't agree with that when Hillary Clinton was running, even though I'm completely opposed to her politics. As a woman, why you talking about her ankles, her chest? She's running for president of the United States. To me, I've been very clear to people--look, I'm not hating on him because he's Barack Obama or because he's a black man, OK? I'm hating on him because his policies are wack. (laughs) They're wack and we should just say that. We understand the historical nature and then we get back to the accountability factor. That's how I see it.

But if you and Cynthia get elected, that would also be historic. Wouldn't that be incredible. (laughs) That would be amazing.

But it is a question that comes up. "Why even run if you don't really have a chance?" Especially amongst folks in the community who feel like, "We got an historic opportunity now. You don't want to be what Nader was to Gore for us because that's gonna devastate us so much more in so many different types of ways." How do you answer that?

I mean history was made. But history can be good or bad. You know? Cynthia said that when she got to Washington DC, there's a table where people sit at, where the Democrats were and the Republicans were and they had locked the doors and everybody else was looking on the outside. And she said her goal is to get 5% of the electorate so she can pull up a chair at that table. That's what I say. I'm trying to get 5% of that electorate. I want to be at that table. I don't want to be outside. I don't want to be petitioning to get in anymore. Because I think once we're at that table and we're treated as a legitimate major party and get access to it, in the $18 million that each party gets just with taxpayer money, what we could do with that money just in spreading the platform and principles of the Green party--we would conquer this within 4 to 8 more years. I believe that.

Grist: McKinney on the Record

http://www.grist.org/feature/2008/08/22/mckinney/index.html

McKinney on the Record
Green Party presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney talks to Grist
BY KATE SHEPPARD
22 Aug 2008

Green Party presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney sums up her energy policy with a simple, memorable rhyme: "Leave the oil in the soil."

"Right now we've got two energy policies in this country," McKinney told Grist. "One is war, the other is drilling. And neither one of them works." It's a message she hopes will win over voters who have tired of both the Democratic and Republican parties.

McKinney was a Democrat herself for years, representing Georgia's 4th district in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1993 to 2003, and again from 2005 to 2007. She was the first African-American woman to represent her state on the federal level. During her time in the House, McKinney was active on environmental issues, particularly those related to human health.

Her legislative efforts included lead sponsorship of the National Forest Protection and Restoration Act, which would have eliminated commercial logging on federal public lands. In 2001, she introduced a bill that would have suspended use of depleted uranium munitions until their health effects could be studied further. In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2006, McKinney was a vocal critic of the Bush administration's failure to help residents of New Orleans, and she pushed for comprehensive environmental testing of flooded areas.

McKinney lost her bid for reelection in 2006, and in September 2007 announced that she was leaving the Democratic Party. She soon launched a campaign to become the presidential nominee of the Green Party, and in July the Greens gave her the official nod at their convention in Chicago. McKinney tapped hip-hop activist and indie journalist Rosa Clemente to run as her VP candidate.

Grist caught McKinney by phone at her current home in California, where she's pursuing a Ph.D. at the University of California at Berkeley.



Why should voters consider you the strongest candidate on environmental issues?

I have a record that includes authorship of the National Forest Protection and Restoration Act. From that to drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to my position on offshore drilling, I think my record is pretty clear. And then there is the greatest need we have in this country, and that is for investment in infrastructure and a greening of our economy.

What sets your green platform apart from other candidates'?

We've taken nuclear off the table. When you start talking about sustainable energy, nuclear isn't it. We need to take offshore drilling off the table, we need to take ANWR off the table. We should also make sure that investment in solar and other types of heating and energy supply are made attractive to people, [through] tax schemes that decrease the price to the end user. [We need] also an incentive so that when people are in the process of buying houses, a score is given for the energy consumption that that house represents. Those are just a few things that could be done very easily.

Energy is a hot topic on the political scene right now. Republicans are really driving home the drilling mantra. What do you think should be done to counter that?

My message is to "leave the oil in the soil." Right now we've got two energy policies in this country. One is war, the other is drilling. And neither one of them works. We've got to do something different.

Another talking point on the Hill right now is that regulating greenhouse-gas emissions and shifting away from fossil fuels will be catastrophic for the economy and working families. These scare tactics seem to work, especially in a period of economic downturn. What's the message you're taking to voters on this? How do you talk about these issues when people are already upset about rising gas prices?

I've seen communities over in Europe that have no energy bills at all, and so if we're talking about hardship, the hardship occurs when the elected leadership is stuck in old ways and reticent to invest in new ways that make more sense. And certainly sustainable living makes more sense. Sustainable energy makes more sense. And doing the same thing and getting a worse result is not something that makes more sense. If we continue to do what we've done in the past, on the horizon is nothing more than an extension of war, an extension of the military machine, and reliance on a resource that is not infinite.

You've said that the United States could declare itself carbon- and nuclear-free. How soon do you think that's possible? What do you propose to do to make that happen?

What's on the table now is [a goal of dramatically reducing carbon emissions by] 2050, but of course we don't have that kind of time. Carbon-free communities are being built in other parts of the world, particularly in Europe. There are oil-producing countries in the Middle East that are already at least moving in this direction. We even had the king of Saudi Arabia say, "We're going to leave some of our oil in our soil."

Do you believe we can achieve political consensus on a goal of 80 percent carbon reductions by 2050?

I think that public policy is supposed to reflect the values of the people. To the extent that it doesn't, then it's up to the people to change the policymakers. That's why we have to be engaged at every step of the process of voting -- before we vote, during the vote, during the counting of the vote, and after the election is over -- not only to make sure that the counting process is accountable, but also so that our elected officials remain true to the values that people voted. That has not happened with the Democratic and Republican parties.

When people cast their vote for the Green Party, they're voting for green solutions. They're voting for people who have the attitude that this is possible, that this is doable, and we represent the best alternative for the voting public.

How would you bring China and India to the table on a global climate treaty?

I think the best way is to lead by example. The United States isn't doing that. In fact, there's an effort to make it appear that China and India are enemies. China and India are no more enemies than the United States' behavior toward them would lead them to be. So first of all, the United States needs to do what it must do to reduce the greenhouse gases.

What should be done at a federal level about food issues -- farming, genetically modified foods, etc.?

There is an effort to store seeds in Norway. And at the same time, there's this push to impose particular Monsanto-type seeds on farmers around the world. That needs to stop, and it needs to stop right here in the United States. I would prohibit it. I would ask Congress to prohibit it and allow farmers to grow their crops in the best manner time-tested for thousands of years.

I used to be on the Agriculture Committee and represented farmers in Georgia. I got to visit farmers in Europe, and they have really taken this to an entirely new level, where not only is there the organic farming, but also a level beyond organic. Every aspect of the production is done in a way that has no toxins, no chemicals, nothing that would be harmful to man or any aspect of nature. Those are the kinds of agricultural trends that ought to be supported, for example, in the Farm Bill.

What other environmental issues need more national attention?

There was an effort that we tried to focus on with only limited success, and that was the cleanup of our military bases. Cleanup of these installations would provide far more jobs than one would think, because of the egregious nature of the problem.

We've also got this situation of environmental injustice that hasn't been taken care of. Hurricanes Rita and Katrina coated every building, every item, every living and non-living thing in New Orleans with slime, and we've got the toxic effects of that. The legislation that I introduced was to provide for the testing of the environment -- all of the land, soil, and air in New Orleans -- and then making that known to people so they know what the potential health effects are. That has not even been ascertained by any official governmental body. Basically what was done in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina was looking at the buildings -- they were classified as habitable if they were structurally sound. But nobody tested the mold and the slime and the toxicity of those structurally sound buildings.

And then of course in Louisiana we've got Cancer Alley, which has been noted for a number of health effects.

We've just got massive cleanup that needs to be done inside this country, and it receives very little attention even now as we all talk about environmental issues.

Are Democrats and their presidential candidate, Barack Obama, doing enough on environmental issues?

I think that's a question that voters, those who are particularly interested in environmental issues, will have to sort out for themselves. But there is a party, the Green Party, that is dedicated and founded for the purpose of extending social justice as well as ecological wisdom for people in this country and around the world. And the Green Party is an international collection of parties that help to make policy on the national level in many other countries around the world, and it's about time that we had the influence and the impact of Green Party policies here at home in the U.S.

After Ralph Nader ran on the Green Party ticket in 2000, there was a lot of anger from folks afterward that he tipped the presidency to George W. Bush. Are you concerned about siphoning off votes from the Democrats this year, possibly changing the outcome of the election?

It's a ludicrous assumption, and it's not based on the facts. In 2000, 1 million black people went to the polls and voted, but their votes weren't counted. So now who's responsible for that? Nine hundred thousand of those votes would have gone to the Democrats, but the Democrats conceded the election rather than demanding a recount or an investigation that would have found the guilty parties. Unfortunately, those misconceptions that are put forward by the corporate press have nothing to do with the truth. Seventy-eight thousand black people in Florida alone voted and their votes weren't counted, and that doesn't even include the number of people who went to the polls and attempted to vote, who didn't even get a chance to cast their votes.

It's ludicrous to think that George Bush won the election by 537 votes, but it's also ludicrous for the political party that actually won the election to give it away. The question should be posed to them: Why did they?

What environmental achievement are you proudest of?

The National Forest Protection and Restoration Act was something that was near and dear to my heart.

After the tragedy of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, the piece of legislation that we introduced to ascertain and make public the environmental status of the area was also necessary, particularly given the situation with the first responders at the World Trade Center after Sept. 11. It was clear that there were going to be health effects [after the Sept. 11 attacks], and yet the workers were sent in there anyway to rescue people as best they could and then to find as many bodies as they could. They did that work, and the Bush administration lied to them, and to all of us, and now they truly are suffering the health effects.

The depleted uranium legislation that I introduced is also something that I am proud of. My bill would have stopped the use of all depleted uranium ammunitions until we understood clearly what the health effects were.

Who is your environmental hero?

My heroes are the people who strove for justice, and the ultimate environmental hero in my opinion would be someone who was working to make peace. If we understand the sanctity of human life, then we are, I believe, less apt to destroy that which sustains our life. So perhaps the people who struggle for human rights have to be the environmental heroes. As I think about it, for example, it's the women's suffrage movement who are responsible for me and [my running mate] Rosa being where we are right now with the Green Party ticket. Then of course you've got the abolitionists -- Frederick Douglass and Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman. I certainly wouldn't be where I am without them. And so those are to me the ultimate heroes, because it's on their shoulders that I stand.

What have you done personally to lighten your environmental footprint?

Well, I don't consume very much. Where possible, I'm changing my shopping habits, in terms of the food that I buy. I choose to buy from the local folks as opposed to the mega folks. Of course, you have to go to the supermarket every once in a while to get stuff. I'm trying to live within the 200-mile rule of thumb in terms of my food consumption. As a black person, there's a dearth of services generally and a lack of healthy food in the black community, so that's been a challenge.



Kate Sheppard is Grist's political reporter.