Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Take Action for Kenya & Wangari Maathai

URGENT ACTION: Death threats/Fear for safety
Wangari Maathai, human rights defender


KENYA
Wangari Maathai (f), human rights defender

Human rights defender Professor Wangari Maathai received three death threats by mobile phone text message at around 12.30 am on 19 February, which read, “Because of your opposing the government at all times, Prof Wangari Maathai, we have decided to look for your head very soon, you are number three after Were, take care of your life.”

Two people working for her received similar threats on 19 and 21 February. The threats were signed “Mungiki”, the name of an outlawed gang mainly of Kikuyu ethnicity, that has claimed responsibility for beheadings and other murders involving mutilation.

Prof Wangari Maathai is a former Member of Parliament. “Number three after Were” refers to MP Melitus Mugabe Were, who was killed outside his home in Nairobi on 29 January. A second MP, David Kimutai Too, was killed in Eldoret town on 31 January.

Prof Wangari Maathai believes the threats were a response to her call for increased pressure on both President Kibaki and opposition Orange Democratic Movement leader Raila Odinga to reach an agreement to deal with the political crisis in Kenya, and for her criticisms of politicians allied to the ruling Party of National Unity.

The Kenyan national press has reported Police Commissioner Major General Hussein Ali as saying that the Kenyan police are investigating the threats. The police recently removed the police bodyguard they had been providing to Prof Wangari Maathai after she won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004.

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
A number of human rights defenders have been receiving death threats since the general election, with pamphlets circulated which call them traitors to their community. At least one of them has been attacked as a result, and been forced to flee the country.

Following the 30 December announcement of the results of a general election that saw President Mwai Kibaki returned to power, violence broke out in different parts of Kenya. While the violence involved mass protests and riots, it quickly assumed an ethnic aspect, pitting ethnic communities which supported the opposition presidential candidate, Raila Odinga, against members of communities perceived to have supported President Kibaki. The Kikuyu ethnic group is largely perceived to have supported President Kibaki, while the Luo and Kalenjin ethnic groups are thought to have supported Raila Odinga. Over 1,000 people have died in the violence, many as a result of attacks by armed ethnic militia. Others have been killed by the police deployed to quell the violence and break up mass protests. Over 300,000 have been forced to flee their homes, and over 10,000 have fled as refugees into neighboring Uganda. Since early February, the violence has reduced and largely stopped, as negotiations led by Kofi Annan have made progress towards a political settlement and possible power-sharing agreement.

RECOMMENDED ACTION: Please send appeals to arrive as quickly as possible:
- expressing concern that Prof Wangari Maathai received death threats on 19 February;
- calling on the authorities to investigate these threats and to bring those responsible to justice;
- urging the authorities to protect her and other human rights defenders.

APPEALS TO:
Hon. Mwai Kibaki C.G.H. M.P
President of Kenya
PO Box 30510-00100, Nairobi, Kenya
Fax: 011 254 20 313600
Email: pps@statehousekenya.go.ke
Salutation: Your Excellency

Major General Mohamed Hussein Ali, M.G.H.
Commissioner of Police
PO Box 30083, Nairobi, Kenya
Fax: 011 254 20 240955
Salutation: Dear Commissioner

Hon. Prof George Saitoti
Minister of State for Internal Security
Harambee House, Harambee Avenue
P. O. Box 30510-00100, Nairobi, Kenya
Fax: 011 254 20 313600
Salutation: Dear Minister

COPIES TO:
Ambassador Peter N.R.O. Ogego
Embassy of the Republic of Kenya
2249 R St. NW
Washington DC 20008
Fax: 1 202 462 3829
Email: public.diplomacy@kenyaembassy.com

PLEASE SEND APPEALS IMMEDIATELY.
Check with the AIUSA Urgent Action office if sending appeals after 4 April 2008.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

The Green Party of Monroe County Officers for 2008

The Green Party of Monroe County elected new officers for 2008 at their annual membership meeting on Thursday, February 21st. Bonnie Cannan and Deborah Magone-Fragale were elected to serve as Co-Chairs and Timothy Saunders was re-elected to as Treasurer.

Bonnie Cannan of Rochester is a long time labor activist and a former candidate for New York State Assembly and Rochester City Council.

Deborah Magone-Fragale of Greece is a local musician as well as the host and producer of Greenline, a local cable access television program, Deborah formerly served as Vice-Chair of the Green Party of Monroe County.

Timothy Saunders of Rochester is a long time Green Party activist, this will be his second term as Treasurer.

Cynthia McKinney at Nyumburu Cultural Center, at the University of Maryland in College Park

From C-SPAN:

"Former Representative Cynthia McKinney talked about her bid for the Green Party presidential nomination which she announced in December 2007. She focused on racial issues.

"She spoke to students and faculty at the Nyumburu Cultural Center, at the University of Maryland in College Park."

To view this one hour program, with the Q&A which followed her brief remarks, please click here.

The Green Party of the United States is having a Mountain Party

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

West Virginia Mountain Party
http://www.mtparty.org/


For Immediate Release
22 February 2008

Contact: Joel Brown, 703 864 5199


The Green Party of the United States is having a
Mountain Party

• West Virginia Law Upholds Green Party Ballot
Line


"It's taken more than half a year to get where we
are today, but the fight was worth it. No
political party should be denied access to ballot
lines based on arbitrary rulings of civil
servants or elected officials," commented former
West Virginia Mountain Party Chair Jesse Johnson.


Johnson who with Mountain Party Treasurer Frank
Young lead the fight for ballot status for the
Green Party in their home state began the battle
after the Mountain Party affiliated with the
national organization.

"It's far too common all across this country that
states deny access to bone fide candidates that
run for lesser known political parties thereby
stunting and in some cases effectively
eliminating growth among those parties,"
continued Johnson. "It's often our toughest
battle to secure and keep these ballot lines. Our
candidates have much to contribute and our
country has even more to gain by having viable
choices to the current reigning parties and it's
anti-democratic and unconstitutional to keep us
off the ballot."

Because of the perseverance of Johnson and Young,
West Virginia 2008 general election ballot will
bear the name of whomever the national Green
Party selects for their presidential and vice
presidential nominees at their national
convention this July in Chicago.

Since his victory in the ballot access issue, Mr.
Johnson has resigned from his post as West
Virginia Mountain Party chair and is free now to
pursue his prior intention to run for president
of the United States for the Green Party.

The Green Party's 2004 nominee for Vice
President, Pat LaMarche commented on the addition
of another ballot line to the Green Party's
rapidly expanding slate of ballot access, saying,
"We are so very grateful to Mr. Johnson for his
vigorous loyalty to our party. We are extremely
excited about his intention to run for president.
If every candidate for every political party had
the experience that Mr. Johnson has fighting for
democracy; we would have better leaders who are
far more respectful of the democratic process at
every level of government."

Monday Feb. 25th: Rally Against Marriage Appeal!!

On Friday, County Executive Maggie Brooks announced Monroe County's decision to file a motion to appeal the recent ruling of the Appellate Division, 4th Department, of the New York State Supreme Court that same-sex marriages performed in other states or nations must be recognized in New York State.

Express Your Outrage!

Join with fairminded Rochesterians Monday at protest rallies being held in front of the County Office Bldg

(37 West Main St.) from Noon - 1:00 & 4:00 - 6:00 PM


Be Counted!

Tell Monroe County that lesbian & gay families deserve equal protection under the law.

Stand up and be counted on February 25th !


For more information contact WNY Field Organizer Todd Plank at 585.278.4190

Email: todd.plank@gmail.com or call the Gay Alliance at 585.244.8640

Nader to Run Ror President, Remains Undecided About the Green Party

Ralph Nader announced his candidacy for President of the United States today, but remains undecided on whether or not he will seek the Green Party's nomination in 2008. We are expecting him to make that decision later this week.


Nader Launches Presidential Bid
Sunday, February 24, 2008 at 02:23:00 PM

Washington, D.C. – Ralph Nader today threw his hat into the 2008 Presidential ring.

Nader announced his candidacy on NBC’s Meet the Press with Tim Russert.

At the same time, the Nader campaign launched a web site – votenader.org.

The campaign web site highlights twelve fundamental differences between the Nader campaign and the corporate Republicans and corporate Democrats.

In a letter posted on the campaign web site this morning, titled Civics Test, a group of Nader supporters ask:

“Of the following Presidential candidates – Ralph Nader, Hillary Clinton, Barak Obama and John McCain – which one supports a single payer, Canadian style, free choice, Medicare for all health care system?

Answer: Ralph Nader

Which one supports solar energy and would take nuclear power off the table?

Answer: Ralph Nader

Which one would cut the huge bloated wasteful military budget?

Answer: Ralph Nader

Which one would reverse U.S. Middle East policy in Israel/Palestine, Iraq and Iran?

Answer: Ralph Nader

Which one would launch an aggressive crackdown on corporate crime and corporate welfare?

Answer: Again, only Ralph Nader.”

A separate letter, titled “Mr Frugal,” agrees that Hillary Clinton’s campaign spending $3.8 million in January on one consultant alone was “stunning.”

“Give our candidate – we call him Mr. Frugal – $3.8 million and he’ll get us on the ballot all across this country,” the letter reads.

The web site encourages people to join a Road Trip for Ralph – where volunteers will travel the country, getting Nader on the ballot in all fifty states.

On Meet the Press, Nader said that “dissent is the mother of assent.”

Nader said people are feeling “locked out, shut out, marginalized and disrespected.”

“You go from Iraq, to Palestine to Israel, from Enron to Wall Street, from Katrina to the bumbling of the Bush administration, to the complicity of the Democrats in not stopping him on the war, stopping him on the tax cuts (for the wealthy).”

“In that context, I have decided to run for president,” Nader told Russert.

Nader called Obama “the first liberal evangelist in a long time.”

But Nader said that Obama is censoring his better instincts.

“Senator Obama’s record has not been a challenging one,” Nader said. “He’s not been a Senator Wellstone or Senator Abourezk or Senator Metzenbaum by any means. He has leaned, if anything, more toward the pro-corporate side of policymaking. The issue is – do they have the moral courage? Do they have the fortitude to stand up against the corporate powers and get things done? Yes, get things done for the American people?”
Get on the lis

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Cynthia McKinney: The New Face of the Green Party

This article appeared on Essence.com

Former Georgia congresswoman Cynthia McKinney wants Black women to know why they should vote for her during this year’s Presidential election
By Wendy L. Wilson


Cynthia McKinney
Credit: Courtesy of Cynthia McKinney

By now we all know there is both a woman and a Black man running for President of the United States. But most folks may not be aware of another candidate who embodies both of these characteristics. Former Georgia congresswoman Cynthia McKinney is also in the running as a candidate representing the Green Party. A lifelong Democrat, McKinney was a staunch supporter of the party’s involvement in anti-war and human rights legislations. And while these causes are still on her list of priorities, McKinney is now rolling with a new team of policy makers who she says are right up her alley. She recently spoke with essence.com on her underdog bid for the White House.

Essence.com: Why should people consider taking a harder look at the Green Party?

Cynthia McKinney: As I travel, talking to Americans across the country, I’ve learned that there is life outside of the two-party paradigm. We have a generation of folks who watched in horror as young people protested the Vietnam War outside of the Democratic National Convention and saw how they were subsequently treated. That was a tipping point for a lot of people. Today, some feel that their votes won’t be counted because of election integrity. There are people who want to see an end to the war, and that hasn’t happened, despite the Democratic majority in Congress. So you have all these different people who have reached the same conclusion that the two-party paradigm doesn’t serve their interests anymore. But let’s not withdraw from it; let’s change it.

Essence.com: You’ve been a Democrat all your life. Why switch to Green now?

C.M.: You know, I never really got the chance to know the members of the Green Party across the country before. Now, I’m getting to know the most wonderful, idealistic, patriotic people who have made me feel at home. It’s just wonderful to be with people who have thought through the process and how we can work to make it better.

Essence.com: How many votes do you need to be considered?

C.M.: The Green Party needs 5 percent of the votes in the 2008 election to be institutionalized as a third force in American politics.

Essence.com: Why should we consider voting for you?

C.M.: If people feel deep within their hearts that there is still something structurally wrong with the limited choices we have in our two-party system, then I want people to say let me be a part of the 5 percent that changes the structure of our country. Right now, public policy is made in a room where the door is locked. The people are outside; only two representatives [Democrats and Republicans] are in that room hammering out policy. Somebody gave the corporate lobbyists a key so they can come and go as they please. The Green Party will open the door for people who care about impeachment, the war, civil liberties, and economic justice. We will pull up a chair and be a part of the conversation. You’ll get different results and people won’t feel as if they were marginalized out of the process.

Essence.com: You’ve done a lot for the people in New Orleans and the Gulf States after the Hurricanes. Why is their cause still so important to you?

C.M.: I’ve been very active in the treatment against Hurricane Katrina survivors. After having participated in the International Tribunal on Hurricanes Katrina and Rita and visited New Orleans and the Gulf States several times, I have helped to put together a 10-point plan for the survivors, which is based on the Reconstruction Movement and the Reconstruction Party [in Canada]. This 10-point plan includes an electoral system that allows for integrity and voter choice, full employment including the right to organize, reparations, a budget for human needs, policies against police brutality, a way to end the drug war and prisons for profit, means to protect the environment, end militarism and continue to stand for peace. There’s a lot more that our country can do in its own borders and in the global community.

Essence.com: What are some issues you plan to tackle in your campaign?

C.M.: I haven’t visited a single city that isn’t reeling from overpriced housing and gentrification. We want to demystify the phenomenon known as gentrification and that’s a project that I’ll be working on in the days ahead. I want to be at the ground floor of exposing what’s happening to innocent people.

Essence.com: Mumia Abu Jamal, former Black Panther and convicted criminal who currently sits on death row, supports your candidacy. In fact, he has issued a statement for your website. Knowing his background, how do you feel about his endorsement?

C.M.: I’m extremely pleased to have Mumia’s support. I see him as a political prisoner. All one has to do is read the documents to see that. The government clearly spells out what it planned to do to members of the Black Panther Party despite the Constitution. When you decide whether or not to follow the path of truth and justice, then you will see these activities for what they are; illegal and un-American.

Essence.com: What do you think of the two Democratic frontrunners, Sen. Obama and Sen. Clinton?

C.M.: It’s interesting that you asked me about them and not the Republicans. The issue for those of us who decided to take a third path is not about the individual characteristics of a candidate because there are wonderful Democrats and activist Republicans like Ron Paul. But we should be asking ourselves, what are the limits of these parties? We have to look beyond the candidates to see what the party itself stands for. So issues like reparations while it’s a part of the 10-point plan is also a part of the 2008 Green Party platform.

Essence.com: You introduced articles of impeachment against President Bush, Vice President Cheney and Secretary of State Rice for manipulating intelligence and lying to justify the war. Why would you do that?

C.M.: Because it was warranted! These people have lied to the world. They have taken our country to war and they have violated US and International laws with crimes against humanity, peace and torture. The Democratic majority in Congress has failed to provide secure elections so we don’t have to deal with these outdated election machines. They have yet to repeal the Patriot’s Act. These issues that we’re talking about now, will be the issues that must be confronted by the new administration in 2009. They are not going away. They won’t melt into the fabric of America. If anything they are going to soil the fabric of America.

Essence.com: What gave you the courage to try to impeach the President?
C.M.: You can’t be afraid to search for truth, find the truth and then fight injustice. The great people of the world like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., like Rosa Parks, like Patrice Lumumba, stood up for their country and the value of the people. But in doing so, you have to be prepared to fight the injustice that comes along with the knowledge that you gain.

For more information on Cynthia McKinney’s campaign, click on her website, runcynthiarun.com

Green presidential candidates arrive in Arizona to assist state ballot access efforts

Green presidential candidates arrive in Arizona to assist state ballot access efforts

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

ARIZONA GREEN PARTY
http://www.azgp.org

For Immediate Release
Friday, February 22, 2008

Contact: Richard Scott, Media Coordinator, 480-990-8531, scotty@azgp.org

NEWS BRIEFING: Sunday, Feb. 24, 1 pm at the Mesa Public Library (Main), Saguaro Room (2nd Floor), 64 East 1st Street in Mesa, Arizona; a candidates' forum will follow at 1:30 pm at the same location


MESA, ARIZONA -- Five candidates running for the Green Party's presidential and vice presidential nomination will visit Arizona this coming weekend to meet voters and help Arizona Greens with their ballot access petition drive

Green presidential candidates Jesse Johnson, Cynthia McKinney, Kent Mesplay, and Kat Swift and vice presidential candidate Sedinam Kinamo Christin Moyowasifza-Curry will also hold a news briefing on Sunday, February 24 at the Mesa Public Library, Saguaro Room (2nd Floor), 64 East 1st Street in Mesa, Arizona.

The news briefing will begin at 1 pm, and will be followed by a 1:30 pm candidates' forum hosted by the Maricopa County Green Party. Reporters and photographers are invited to both events.

"We've gathered thousands of signatures already and we look forward to handing in far more than the required 20,449 signatures for ballot access by the March 6 due date," said Richard Scott, Media Coordinator for the Arizona Green Party. "Lots of Greens and friends will be pounding the pavement and collecting signatures this weekend. We really appreciate our presidential candidates for coming to Arizona and helping us meet our goal."

Some of the candidates will also attend Parada del Sol and Trail's End in Scottsdale on Saturday, February 23. Parada del Sol/Trail's End, an annual parade and rodeo, will begin 10 am Oak and Scottsdale Roads <http://www.scottsdalejaycees.org/paradadelsol/parade.htm>.

The Green Party's 2008 nomination will take place July 10-13 at the Green Party's National Convention in Chicago, Illinois. Five state Green Parties have already participated in primary elections, and more state Green Parties have scheduled statewide meetings and caucuses to vote for presidential candidates.

Presidential candidates visiting Arizona:

Jesse Johnson, 2006 US Senate candidate and 2004 gubernatorial candidate for the Mountain Party in West Virginia (now an affiliate state party of the Green Party of the United States); filmmaker http://www.jesse08.org

Cynthia McKinney, former member of the US House of Representatives (Georgia), 1993 to 2003, 2005 to 2007; former member of the Georgia House of Representatives, 1988-1992 http://www.runcynthiarun.org http://www.americanblackout.org

Kent Mesplay, 2004 candidate for the Green presidential nomination; former president of Turtle Island Institute; environmental engineer, alternative energy activist; California Green organizer http://www.mesplay.org

Kat Swift, Texas Green Party organizer & former co-chair; first Green Party Candidate for City Council in San Antonio 2007; former activist with Clean Money San Antonio and San Antonio Democracy Now http://www.voteswift.org

Vice Presidential candidate visiting Arizona:

Sedinam Kinamo Christin Moyowasifza-Curry (SKCM Curry), Green Party activist and organizer for six years at local, state, national levels and internationally; leader in efforts to involve women and people of color in the Green Party and electoral politics http://curry08.wetpaint.com

Also in the race for the Green presidential nomination is Howie Hawkins <http://www.draftnader.org>, who is serving as a stand-in candidate for Ralph Nader until Mr. Nader declares his intentions for the 2008 race; Mr. Nader has established an Exploratory Committee <http://www.naderexplore08.org>.


MORE INFORMATION

Arizona Green Party http://www.azgp.org/

Green Party of the United States
http://www.gp.org
202-319-7191, 866-41GREEN
Fax 202-319-7193

Video of Green presidential candidates
http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/presidential-videos.php

Green candidate database for 2007 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

Media credentialing
http://www.gp.org/committees/media/kit.shtml

Mckinney get Coverage in College Papers

Green Party Presidential Candidate Cynthia McKinney Comes to Locke
By Vanessa Rozier
The Hilltop
Howard University

Back when Bill Clinton was president of the United States, a White House intern made a decision of her lifetime. Not Monica Lewinski, but Ingrid Drake, a young, aspiring politician, lost hope in the Democratic Party.

"I was disgusted for them not standing by women and blacks," Drake said. She was an advocate for Proposition 209, a proposed amendment that would have stopped public institutions from considering race or gender for admission.

Tuesday night, in the auditorium of Locke Hall, Drake recalled her disgust and outrage toward the Democratic Party before listening to presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney.

McKinney, another former Democrat, made the last stop of the night at Howard University on Tuesday to show the documentary "American Blackout" and to raise awareness of the independent party she is now affiliated with, the Green Party.

"We know she's not going to get elected this election," said David W. Schwartzman, a biology professor at Howard. "But she'll raise a lot of issues."

Of the Green Party primaries thus far, McKinney is the clear leader, winning in Arkansas, Illinois and Washington, D.C.

Schwartzman, an active Green Party member and Howard professor for more than 30 years, said McKinney's candidacy will bring to light issues such as the tax system, global warming, divestment and the job market.

His support shows through his ballot as he voted for her during the D.C. primary and through his wallet as he donated $1,000 toward her campaign.

"Speaking for myself, I want to see that Democrats win but I'm supporting McKinney because we need a voice that speaks to millions to speak truth to power," he said. Schwartzman is currently active in the party by pushing for a D.C. Congestion Charge that would charge people for driving into the city, therefore pushing commuters to the Metro and using the funds to improve the public transportation system.

"I demonstrated outside of the Rayburn Building during the 2004 election debate on the Hill," he said as he described his activist history.

The majority of the visit was the documentary that McKinney shared with the audience, which was comprised mostly by area residents and Green supporters.

The documentary chronicled McKinney's fight for a seat in Congress and for investigation into the controversial election of 2000 and 2004.

In the film, a commentator said, "If the votes had been counted in Florida and if all blacks were able to vote, Bush wouldn't be president, there would be no invasion of Iraq and there would be different judges serving on the Supreme Court."

Ray Baker, one of the few Howard students who sat in the audience, said that he came in hopes of meeting the former Georgia Representative.

"She is what people hope that Barack Obama is," said Baker, a senior broadcast journalism major. "She is interested in what's best for black fold, what's best for poor people and people at large."

Baker said that he will be voting for McKinney during the general election but does not believe that she will actually win. Like Schwartzman, Baker said that her campaign will draw attention to issues that otherwise would be ignored.

Schwartzman announced that students interested in forming an official Campus Greens chapter on Howard's campus can contact him. There are hundreds of chapters across the country, according to the Campus Green Web site. These students are advocates of this new third party and hope for change.

Scott McLarty, media coordinator for the Green Party, came in support of McKinney and said that, by being a member of Campus Greens, students would be able to get involved in the presidential campaigns and even become a candidate themselves.

"One of the best ways of learning about politics is getting some experience," McLarty said. © Copyright 2008 The Hilltop

====================


Candidate for Green Party strives to defeat two-party domination

By Megan Kaldis
The Daily Texan
University of Texas

Cynthia McKinney, former Georgia congresswoman and current Green Party Presidential candidate, takes questions from reporters Wednesday evening. McKinney held a fundraiser at Ruta Maya Coffee House Wendesday in South Austin.
Cynthia McKinney, former Georgia congresswoman and current Green Party Presidential candidate, takes questions from reporters Wednesday evening. McKinney held a fundraiser at Ruta Maya Coffee House Wendesday in South Austin.

Social justice, peace and the rejection of current foreign policies that promote war were some of points advocated by a presidential candidate of the Green Party Wednesday.

People should leave "behind the constraints inherent in the current political paradigm that forces you to accept torture and war," said Cynthia McKinney, presidential candidate for the Green Party and former Democratic member of the U.S. House of Representatives.

People who believe in the values of social justice and peace and want to live them find it difficult to vote for the values in the paradigm of a two-party political system, Mckinney said. The Green Party creates a new paradigm for these values.

After six terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, McKinney became a presidential candidate for the Green Party.

"I do not begin things that I expect to fail. That's not rational," McKinney said.

The Green Party of the United States, created in 2001, is committed to environmentalism, peace and social justice, according to the party's Web site. They try to provide solutions to alternative energy, universal health care and corporate globalization problems, according to the site.

"My relationship with the Green Party had been long standing," McKinney said.

She became a member of the Georgia Green Party in order to reciprocate the support and love received from the party throughout her terms in the Georgia legislature and the House, McKinney said.

The choice to not support the war in Iraq and working around racial justice were her hallmark achievements in the Georgia legislature and gained the support of the Georgia Green Party, McKinney said.

Though not the Democratic and Republican parties of today, the U.S. has had a tradition of supporting a two-party system since the beginning. So it is very hard for a third party to be successful, said James Galbraith, chair in government and business relations at the LBJ School of Public Affairs.

"None of these third parties survive past more than one or two elections," Galbraith said. "They cannot qualify for federal funding and cannot elect anyone to Congress, so they have no permanent foundation."

The purpose of third parties in the U.S. is to take away enough votes from one party and deliver the election to the other party, Galbraith said.

"Third parties are spoiler parties," Galbraith said.

McKinney said she believes people who make these suggestions do not have a clear grasp on the facts.

"When one million black people did not get their votes counted, then who's the spoiler? This is exactly what happened to these Florida voters in the 2000 election," McKinney said.

The dependence on a third party for action would be counterproductive with what people want to achieve, Galbraith said.

"If a problem is going to be solved, it will be done by a major party," he said.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

8 US Senate Policy Priorities

The Green Senatorial Campaign Committee has adopted Eight policy priorities which it urges its Green-supported candidates to advocate vigorously. Explanations of these priorities can be read by clicking on them. These policy priorities are:

-Bringing all U.S. troops home from Iraq immediately.

-Repeal of the Patriot Act and its successors.

-Full compliance with the Kyoto Treaty on global warming.

-Ending the bogus "War on Drugs".

- Reproductive justice.

- Marriage equality for everyone.

-Universal single-payer health care.

-Ending Fast Track Presidential Trade Promotion Authority.

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

An Insightful Personal Conversation with Cynthia McKinney


An insightful personal conversation with Cynthia McKinney, Green Presidential hopeful. McKinney reveals her personal journey growing into a political activist with her father as mentor.

She talks about her entrance into the electoral arena from Georgia State Legislator to Congressperson and the trials, tribulations and wisdom gained and her desire to create meaningful change in people's lives by running for President as a Green.

Public Defenders Organizing Meeting

There is a movement building in response to the public defends appointment and how the matter was handled at last weeks county legislature meeting. I know many of you where there, but those that haven't read about at least part of the story in last week's City.
We're asking Greens to attained a community organizing meeting on Thursday, February 21, at 7pm at the Central Church of Christ, 101 Plymouth Avenue, south of Broad Street.

Monday, February 18, 2008

Sign Up for March 4 Hunger Action / ES 2 lobby day



Please join us on Tuesday, March 4th for our Legislative Education & Action Day in Albany. Join us to fight for:

Þ Universal Health Care; Supporting expansion of Medicaid and CHP
Þ Raising the Welfare Grant; improve Welfare to Work
Þ Real Jobs for Low-Income New Yorkers; and
Þ Fair Taxes, not service cuts

We will also be urging the legislature to support funding for emergency food programs, affordable housing ($400 million for Housing Opportunities Program), education and training opportunities, and affordable childcare.

With a projected $4 to 6 billion budget deficit, we need to make sure that essential services are maintained!

Please take the time to come with us, make your voice heard at the State Capitol, and take our message to where the decisions are being made! Let’s pack the buses to Albany and tell our legislators that we demand economic security for all New Yorkers!

Please call us at (212) 741-8192 or (518)434-7371 or fax (212) 741-7236 the enclosed sign-up form to RSVP, to learn more about transportation options from your area and so that we can arrange legislative appointments for your group!

Please take action and send your competed forms back to Hunger Action today! See you on March 4th!

In Solidarity,

Mark Dunlea
Executive Director



LEGISLATIVE Education and ACTION DAY
TUESDAY, March 4, 2008
SPONSORED BY:
Hunger Action Network of NYS
The Empire State Economic Security (ES2) CAMPAIGN



LET’S HIT THE ROAD TO ALBANY AND URGE THE NYS LEGISLATURE TO:

* ENACT A FAIR STATE TAX SYSTEM INSTEAD OF CUTTING SERVICES
* raise the welfare grant
* ENSURE QUALITY HEALTH CARE FOR ALL
* create real jobs FOR LOW-INCOME NEW YORKERS


MAKE OUR VOICES HEARD AT THE STATE CAPITOL !
SPEAK WHILE THE DEALS ARE BEING MADE !

CALL (212) 741-8192 or (518) 434-7371 to register Or fax the following RSVP form to us at fax # (212) 741-7236

Or email your RSVP to: info@hungeractionnys.org

*Breakfast and lunch will be provided in Albany.
Westminster Presbyterian Church,
85 Chestnut St.
Registration at 9:30am, briefing 10, rally noon, lobby 1pm to 4pm

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Next Meeting and Officer Elections: Thursday Febuary 21


Our next meeting will be Thursday February 21, from 7pm-9pm at the GAGV on the 5th floor of The Rochester Auditorium Center, 875 E.Main St at the corner of Prince St.

GPoMC will be electing new officers. We are currently looking for residents of Monroe County that are registered to vote in the Green Part to run for the following positions:




Chair
The Chair shall be responsible for filing all required notices with the State and County Board of Elections, except those that have to do with financial matters, or that by law or by party by-laws or rules are required to be filed by some other officer. The Chair shall be the Presiding Officer of the Green Party of Monroe County.


Notetaker
The Notetaker is responsible for taking minutes of membership and steering committee meetings for distribution to the general membership and steering committee.


Treasurer
The Treasurer shall be responsible for the collection of funds for party purposes and for the County Organization. The Treasurer shall see that such funds are properly disbursed, and shall file with the proper offices and with the board of elections all financial reports and statements required by law. In general, the Treasurer shall perform the duties ordinarily performed by the Treasurer of a political party, and such other duties relating to financial matters as the Green Party of Monroe County may require.


Committee Chair
Electoral Committee: this committee will interface with representatives from the national and statewide party to update local party, assist local candidates in managing campaigns and recruit future candidates.


Committee Chair
Issues Committee: this committee is responsible for keeping abreast of local, state and national issues consistent with party key values, party platform and progressive agenda. Key functions would include serving as liason to local organizations who actively pursue progressive issues and providing support to enable members to organize around specific local issues of interest to greens and the community.


Committee Chair
Public Relations/Media: the bulwark of any organization, the public relations committee would recruit new members, advertise the party, develop media strategy and provide general information about party events. The committee would also include greenline and the website.


Committee Chair
Fundraising: to develop and coordinate fundraising activities.


Contact the Green Party of Monroe County if you are interested in holding one of these positions.

kat swift: petitioning in Arizona


kat swift: petitioning in Arizona
http://www.bexargreens.org/katforprez/news.php

Kat Swift will be traveling to Arizona to help petition for the ballot line for the final weekend of petitioning, she will be joined there by Kent Mesplay, Jesse Johnson and SKCM Curry! Kat has pledged to collect signatures as long as there are people to sign and a local person to serve as a witness to the signature.

They will need Arizona volunteers with them at all times.

You can meet them and help with the petitioning efforts on February 22 through February 24, 2008. Contact the Arizona Green Party or just meet up with them between 7:30-9:30am at the Scottsdale Rodeo Parade, in Scottsdale, Arizona.

Thank you candidates!

-jason nabewaniec, delegate from ny

Friday, February 15, 2008

Green presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney wins the DC Statehood Green primary with 41.48%

THE DC STATEHOOD GREEN PARTY
http://www.dcstatehoodgreen.org

For immediate release:
Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Contact:
Scott McLarty, DC Statehood Green Party Media Coordinator, 202-518-5624, cell 202-904-7614, mclarty@greens.org

Ms. McKinney will visit DC on Tuesday, Feb. 19 and speak at Howard University; details to be announced


WASHINGTON, DC -- According to unofficial election night results released by the DC Board of Elections and Ethics, Cynthia McKinney has won the DC Statehood Green Party primary in the February 12 presidential primary in the District of Columbia.

The DC Statehood Green Party is one five state Green Parties participating in their respective state primaries in 2008.

On Tuesday, February 19, Cynthia McKinney, a former Georgia member of Congress, will visit Washington, DC, for an evening appearance at Howard University, a press conference, and other area appearances. Details of Ms. McKinney's visit will be announced soon.

The board's unofficial summary report announced the following numbers and percentages, as of 11 pm Tuesday evening:

Registered DC Statehood Green voters 4,532 Primary Election Day turnout of Statehood Greens 10.86% 492 votes


  • Cynthia McKinney 41.48% 202 votes

  • Jared A. Ball 3.90% 19 votes *

  • Kat Swift 4.11% 20 votes

  • Jesse Johnson 2.87% 14 votes

  • Kent P. Mesplay 3.08% 15 votes

  • Howie Hawkins 6.57% 32 votes **

  • No candidate 11.09% 54 votes

  • Write In 26.90% 131 votes ***


Source: http://www.dcboee.org/nws/news_frame.asp?filename=nr_140.pdf&mid=2&yid=2008&type=News%20Releases&hl=t

* Dr. Jared Ball had withdrawn from the race and endorsed Ms. McKinney; however, his name was submitted before his withdrawal and remained on the February 12 ballot.

** Howie Hawkins consented to serve as a 'placeholder' candidate on the DC ballot for Ralph Nader until Mr. Nader announces his intentions for the 2008 election. Mr. Nader has established an exploratory committee for the 2008 race <http://www.naderexplore08.org>.

*** The names of the write-in candidates on 131 of the Statehood Green ballots have not been released yet. The DC Statehood Green Party anticipates learning the names of the write-ins from the Board of Elections and Ethics, in case any of them received enough votes to affect the party's apportioning of delegates.

Party leaders attributed the low turnout to very poor weather Tuesday evening, with freezing rain and ice-covered streets and sidewalks, and the lack of coverage of Green candidates in the District's major media.

In recent elections, DC Statehood Green candidates have collectively won more votes than Republican candidates, including the 2006 election, when the two parties ran the same number of candidates for partisan office. The Statehood Green Party is now 'DC's Second Party' in terms of electoral clout. Statehood Green candidates receive most of their votes in the general election from voters registered in other parties.

DC Statehood Green leaders look forward to a possible milestone in 2008: the Green presidential candidate placing second on Election Day, ahead of the Republican candidate.


GREEN PRIMARIES AND THE CONVENTION

The DC Statehood Green Party has qualified to send 16 delegates to the Green Party's 2008 Green National Nominating Convention in Chicago, July 10-13, at which 836 Green delegates will choose the party's presidential and vice presidential nominees.

Results from the four states where Green Parties that participated in the February 5 Super Tuesday primaries showed a landslide for Ralph Nader in California (61%), a lead among candidates for Cynthia McKinney in Arkansas and Illinois, and close but unconfirmed numbers for Ms. McKinney and Mr. Nader in Massachusetts. For details on Green Super Tuesday results, visit http://www.gp.org/press/pr-national.php?ID=22.

Green Parties not participating in primaries are choosing presidential candidates by caucus voting and by election of national convention delegates at state party conventions.

The Green Party has opened a new web page featuring videos of Green presidential candidates and debates <http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/presidential-videos.php>.

The Green Party has vowed to achieve 51 ballot lines in 2008 in all the states and the District of Columbia, and has committed party resources for this purpose. Greens currently have ballot access in 21 states, including Washington, DC <http://www.gp.org/statelist.shtml>.

MORE INFORMATION

The DC Statehood Green Party
http://www.dcstatehoodgreen.org

Green candidates for the White Houseon the February 12 primary ballot DC
http://www.gp.org/press/pr-state.php?ID=14

Web sites of presidential candidates on the
February 12 DC primary ballot:

Jared Ball (withdrawn from the race)
http://www.jaredball.com

Jesse Johnson
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mMxgYnmdHfg

Cynthia McKinney http://www.runcynthiarun.org
http://www.americanblackout.org

Kent Mesplay
http://www.mesplay.org

Howie Hawkins
http://www.draftnader.org

Kat Swift
http://www.voteswift.org

Green Party of the United States
www.gp.org
202-319-7191, 866-41GREEN
Fax 202-319-7193

Video of Green presidential candidates
http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/presidential-videos.php

Green candidate database for 2007 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

Media credentialing
http://www.gp.org/committees/media/kit.shtml


Jesse Johnson Website Launched


Green Party presidential candidate Jesse Johnson has launched his campaign website, check it out at: http://www.jesse08.org/

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Ballot Access Report

In New York State the Green Party will have to collect around 40,000 signatures in about 6 weeks to have our presidential candidate placed on the ballot. This project will be a predominately volunteer effort (and we will be asking for your help) but it is still expected to cost around $18,000 to have a successful result.



The Ballot Access Committee (BAC) approved the disbursement of $4,000 to the Arizona Green Party to assist with their ballot drive. Arizona is considered our top priority because it is a difficult state and has the second-earliest deadline. They need about 30,000 signatures by March 6, and currently have about 11,000. Greens from other states are going to Arizona to assist.

The committee is developing short analysis papers for other state ballot lines. We currently have such papers submitted for Arizona, Connecticut, Georgia, Minnesota, and Utah.

We anticipate having maps, contact information for state parties, signature requirements and deadlines, and much more on gp.org in the near future. We also anticipate that this information will be available on the convention website when it
goes up.

The committee has discussed the need for a Field Director who would concentrate on the raw administrative work of staying on top of what's going on in the various state. The sentiment of the committee has been to ask that the Steering Committee consider such a hire.

Fundraising is a significant concern of the committee. The GPUS website has a page set up for ballot access earmarked contributions but there's not a substantive outreach program for this. It has been suggested that the Field Director could play a role in fundraising.

For many BAC members, the last month has largely consisted of simply getting caught up to speed on some of the exigencies of ballot issues. It is a daunting field because the laws differ so much from state to state. While it has been relatively straightforward for the committee to focus on Arizona, very soon there will be numerous major drives going on, and this will be the first time the committee has really been engaging this process. Trying to figure out what precisely the committee can do to assist when the onslaught of petition drives really takes off will be a thorny matter, but interest and determination are both high.

Click here to donate to this effort.

Saturday, February 09, 2008

Mesplay on the Issues


From Kent Mesplay for President.

A Quick Take on the Issues:

Overview: We are in trouble. The single, over-riding, primary reason that I am running is to help save lives. Climatic instability is the defining issue of our time, dwarfing even nuclear proliferation. One cannot fire missiles at crop failure or indefinitely ignore the on-going suffering of tens of millions of environmental refugees, world-wide. Even if you do not "believe" in human-induced global warming, the solutions to global climate change are the same: live more lightly upon the land in a less wasteful manner. Sustainability is a security issue. The issues of the day are Green, and even mainstream politicians are now green-washing themselves to capture the environmental vote. When I am done with politics I will still be interested in helping societies rapidly adapt. I am an advocate of emergency preparedness, renewable energy, light-rail transportation and treating health care as a human right, not a commodity. I do not trust our government to be able to provide us with leadership. We-the-people must organize and prepare for the worst while expecting the best of ourselves and others. If you are registered with a party other than Green, I will gladly accept your vote should I win the nomination to represent the Green Party in the General Election. Especially if you are not registered to vote, I encourage you to register Green so as to help improve the level of public debate and discussion on important issues. Right now, it is all but illegal to participate in politics outside the main two parties. I am dedicated to improving our political system to provide more accurate, fair representation of ideas, concerns and parties. I am told that we can only have two (seemingly different) political parties in this country. If that is the case, then we need to replace one of the two main parties with the Green Party. This is not for me to do. It is up to you to participate, especially if you are within the half of the people who could vote but do not do so. When elected, I promise to work with members of Congress from both main parties to move our nation away from fear and toward really solving our underlying problems. Thank you.

Leadership: I recently received a commendation from a San Diego County head honcho for "Service Above and Beyond the Call of Duty" during the October 2007 firestorm. I did not actively save lives, but I did serve as a Shelter Manager at an Evacuation Center, having first volunteered and gone through the training some months prior. I work for the county as an Air Quality Inspector II, regularly interacting with businesses to ensure compliance with air quality standards (Yes, I do write tickets, but I hate doing it and I always try to be consistent, fair and understanding. I've previously received awards for customer service. During my periodic evaluations I receive many "above standard" marks). I read, interpret, enforce and help to improve regulatory law. I followed the development and passage of Assembly Bill 32, the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, and I am comfortable with reading and interpreting legislation. Even businesses that didn't support AB32 are beginning to recognize the brand value of being "green."

It is important for our next president to help rebuild our international reputation by being more critical of our nation's tendency to quickly go to war. The war in Iraq is not the "good" war that proponents attempt to make it out to be. I hear conservatives say "they started it" and I disagree. Our current administration started this war and needs to bear responsibility. We need to become an energy-independent nation based upon efficiency and renewable energy so that petroleum is not such a strong part of our foreign policy. In addition to breaking our addiction to oil, breaking the military-industrial-congressional complex will help us break our addiction to war.

Economy: We are in trouble. Without waiting for six months of economic down-turns I think it is safe to say we are in a recession. I would take the forty billion dollars in annual subsidies for fossil fuels and create five million "Green Collar" jobs, with a special emphasis on training and providing jobs for inner city youth and veterans, to retrofit the nation's homes and buildings and conserve 20% of our energy use by 2015, if not sooner. Our new growth, including manufacture "at home," needs to be in the energy sector so that we can quickly become an energy independent nation based upon increased efficiency and municipal power generation. Every roof-top in sunny places of the country needs to be thought of as a power-plant providing electricity and heat. Moving toward structures being "off grid" will improve our basic physical security regardless of threat (terrorist or environmental). Perhaps "homeland security" emphasis can be placed on creating intrinsic, basic physical security in non-militaristic terms. Our politicians tend to not support "people-scale" solutions because of the influence of big business on re-election campaigns. Greens believe in community-scale economies that support small businesses, create a sense of place and require little waste in terms of transportation. I would re-work our farm policy to allow small-scale processing on small farms, to improve the economic viability of farmers (especially organic ones). I question our national addiction to subsidize crops that are harmful in comparison to the alternatives. For example, it makes no sense to generate ethanol from corn. Also, rather than so much use of corn for animal feed it is good to support "grass farming" in which soil health is improved by coordinating grazing with the life-cycle of grass. Also, over-all yields are higher in comparison with corn farming in that on a per-year basis the land can produce more, with fewer imports, less subsidy and healthier ground. I gave up eating beef in 1982. As long as people eat beef, we may as well develop healthier farming habits. I support organic farming, especially small-scale in contrast with industrial farming. It is especially important to purchase local produce. Most items on our plates come from over 1,500 miles away, which becomes an issue of energy waste. (I recently devoured An Omnivore's Dilemma.) So many of our issues are inter-related. There is no quick fix or sound-bite to cover it all.

Iraq, the War on Terror and Other War: We are in trouble. At a time when our nation needs to focus on pulling together for a genuinely more secure future the forces of fear and expedience are pulling us apart. War is terror. I do not subscribe to the notion that "either we fight them over there or we fight them here." Our forces overseas are not "containing" violence; it's not in a box, neatly packaged and sealed up! Rather, by modeling violence and that "might makes right" our foreign policy relies heavily on intimidation and brute force and is regionally providing a target for extremists. Although I recognize that misguided Muslim extremists are behind attacks, I am also concerned by Christian extremists treating the war in Iraq as a war against Islam. It is especially important, now that our civil liberties are being destroyed by politicians at home under the excuse of "protecting" us, that peace-loving Muslims everywhere redouble their efforts at presenting a more accurate representation of their faith in the media. I do not believe for a moment that Abraham intended for his religious descendents (all the Israeli sects, Christian sects and Muslim sects) to perpetually be at one another's throats. By accepting and expecting violence this is the world that is being created and destroyed. We must have peace. We must have diplomatic solutions. Nations that over-extend with their military pursuits tend to be nations in decline. A better way is possible but not if you remain silent and afraid to speak. Both main political parties got us into this war and the front-runners in the presidential race of both parties are not apologizing for the grave mistake of getting us into ongoing conflict in a region that has had such epic instability.

Health Care: I believe that health care is a human right, not a commodity to be traded or denied. I've heard estimates that by shifting to single-payer, publicly financed prevention-based universal health care we would save $350 billion a year. In such systems (and there are many models) practitioners can still make a good living. Opposed, of course, one finds the big lobbying companies of insurance, advertising and drugs. In contrast to socialized medicine, hospitals and clinics would remain private. Our current system is wasteful, bloated and inadequate, with upwards of forty million people lacking any coverage at some point during a given year. I am especially appalled that all children are not covered and I am disgusted by politicians who block improvements to health care. Help improve our national standard of health care. Support Green candidates.

Education: More funding and help for underachieving schools, not less. More freedom for teachers to actually teach, and to not feel pressure to "teach to the test." Better school meal programs so that students are not hungry. Children learn better when their basic needs are better met. More support for art and music, especially at the lower levels, and an affordable or free college education for anyone desiring to better their lives and their economic prospects. The money for this would come from cutting the military budget back to 1999 levels.

Energy: Architects will play a major role in helping us achieve and maintain energy independence. Current buildings are highly energy-inefficient. Older buildings need retrofitting and newer structures need to be designed with as much self-reliance in mind as cost-effectively possible. Renewable energy does not need subsidy to quite the extent that it needs a stable policy environment supporting multi-year (multi-term) investment and development. Having uniform inter-connection laws between the states and net metering standards will help reduce the cost of solar electricity so that the same devices and processes can be used in different states. We have the ability to become energy independent. So far, our nation has lacked leadership on the issue.

Water use is also an electrical issue in that electrical pumps are used to pump water. Conserving water conserves electricity. Also, dependence upon hydroelectricity is tenuous during drought years such as we experienced in the Pacific Northwest in the 90's, since a variable hydrologic cycle can result in lower volume and pressure heads at hydro plants (and less electricity production). In the southwest, 40% of water use goes to operating coal-fired plants for producing electricity. The solution to energy needs will be to reduce the demand by conservation, efficiency and greater diversity of green sources, and cutting down on conspicuous consumption and excess transportation and all take education and action.

Emergency Preparedness: Everyone needs to have a three-day supply of water and food on hand. Beyond this, regional security is enhanced once you get to know your neighbors, their skills and needs, and with everyone having more local access to the basics: water, food, energy and medical clinics. For as strong as our nation is, we are yet brittle when we consider that our ordinary lives could be so seriously interrupted through relatively small disruptions to supplies of electricity, water and food. Again, sustainability is a security issue. We are not prepared. Organize. Register Green. Change the system. Vote Mesplay.

Diversity Issues: Race matters, gender matters, sexual orientation matters, especially in that people who are put into "less than" categories are not adequately represented in government. Greens value diversity. As with libertarians, we also place high value on personal choice and on not having government attempt to be the arbiter of personal responsibility. We are liberal in that we, as a body, are pro-choice on health matters such as abortion, on drug use and on civil unions and marriage between adults who do not fit the "normal" mold. As in a healthy ecosystem, within a healthy society diversity is normal. I understand that there are religious doctrines interpreted to restrict and disallow gay marriage. A century and a half ago religious arguments were used to keep people in slavery. In the same manner, a hundred years from now, bisexuality and homosexuality will be recognized as part of the natural variability in our one human race. Greens represent under-represented groups, and we are strong advocates for the poor, the dispossessed, the disenfranchised, the indigenous.

Friday, February 08, 2008

Stuart on Politics


The Stuart Bedasso Show talked politics this week, hear their take on Cynthia McKinney and Cindy Sheehan.

Jesse Johnson interviewed on radio: Jim Bohannon Show, 11 pm Friday

Everyone,

If you love our environment, you may be
interested to know that the Mountain Party of
WV's own Jesse Johnson will be the radio this
Friday night on the Jim Bohannon show coast to
coast. Just him and Jimbo for an hour. Jimbo
replaced Larry King. He has the 5TH largest
listener-ship in the country just behind Don
Imus.

He is ready to soon formally announce a run for
President as soon as he steps down this Saturday
as State Chair of the Mountain Party. He's
running in order to gain a national platform to
draw attention to the environmental devastation
occurring in WV and the Appalachian region known
as mountaintop removal, a practice by coal
companies of blowing up mountaintops and pushing
the toxic sediment into the valleys and streams.
He calls it "ground zero for global climate
change".

Jesse has been speaking to thousands of people
all across the US. this past year. He battled
with Ralph Nader this past Saturday in DC. He
went toe to toe in debate with Congresswoman
Cynthia McKinney in San Fransisco. He has been
commented on in Forbes Magazine, The S.F.
Chronicle. Pacifica radio has covered him twice
from coast to coast during the last month. The
Washington Times was there in DC as well as indie
& foreign press. TV coverage on LinkTV and
Current TV from local cable access to Germany and
Japan. He is spreading the word like wildfire.
The New Yorker even had a writer in the audience.

Here is a link that will give you or anyone the
ability to find the Jim Bohannon show all over
the country.

1ST click on his show.

2ND click on the state on the US map and it will
drop down and show all the stations in that state
that carries the show with days, time and
frequency on the dial and if it's AM or FM.

If the show does not cover your specific town it
will be best to try and tune in the AM signal
nearest to the town.

http://www.westwoodone.com/stationfinder?programID=309&state=-1&ACTION%28stateSearch%29=Search


* * * * *


Why not Nader? Why Jesse Johnson? Find out why
the Green Party might be Your party, this Friday
on the Jim Bohannon Show!

February 7, 2008

Washington, DC -- Ralph Nader isn’t even a member
of the Green Party, so why turn it over to him?
Give yourself and the United States a real choice
when it comes to 2008 presidential candidates,
and learn about Jesse Johnson of the Green Party.
Listen in as Jesse offers a fresh perspective on
a cleaner, better, more stable future. Jesse will
be speaking with national talk show host and
radio legend Jim Bohannon this Friday night at 11
p.m. Eastern time, 8 p.m. Pacific time.

Give yourself and others a chance to experience
an entirely new conversation. Find out how as
Jesse Johnson goes coast to coast this Friday on
the Jim Bohannon show. He’ll let you know about
how we can clean up the environment, improve the
economy by going green, help America to be a
better world partner, and bring ethics, trust,
and wisdom back to Washington.

“UNIFYING THROUGH COMMUNICATION” is Jesse’s
creed. Make it yours, too, by listening and
calling in. Just dial 1-866-50-JIMBO.

Go to http://www.westwoodone.com/stationfinder
and click on the Jim Bohannon Show to find out
where you can hear Jesse Johnson this Friday at
11 p.m. Eastern, 8 p.m. Pacific.

Auburn WAUB-AM 1590 10:00:00 PM MTWTF--
Binghamton WNBF-AM 1290 10:00:00 PM MTWTF--
Geneva WGVA-AM 1240 10:00:00 PM MTWTF--
Horseheads WWLZ-AM 820 10:00:00 PM MTWTF--
Ithaca WNYY-AM 1470 1:00:00 AM MTWTF--
Jamestown WJTN-AM 1240 10:00:00 PM MTWTF--
Lockport WLVL-AM 1340 12:00:00 AM MTWTF--
Ogdensburg WSLB-AM 1400 10:00:00 PM MTWTF--
Utica WIBX-AM 950 11:00:00 PM MTWTF--
Watertown WTNY-AM 790 10:00:00 PM MTWTF--

Cynthia McKinney - Green Party Presidential Candidate - Interviewed on Issues


Cynthia McKinney, Green Party Presidential Candidate interviewed one on one Feb 3, 2008:

Interview

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-513922812810992833

The Ware in Iraq.
The Department of Peace.
Challenges trying to support Impeachment, bringing the troops home, repealing the Patriot Act, supporting Civil Rights in the Democratic Party.
Voting Your Values and why she's become a Green.
Her friend Dennis Kucinich and the challenge they faced being independent thinkers as Democrats.
Depressing voter turnout as election spoiler.
Economic problems and solutions.
Supporting organized labor.
Greening society. Had she been Speaker of the House. Health Care Issues.
Thoughts about VP and Cabinet and your input.
Taking the next step and becoming a Green.

SPREADING THIS VIDEO HELPS!
Send this video to friends, news sites, blogs, forums and make sure not only Greens but "progressives," independents, civil rights activists, environmental activists and any body and any place else you can think of. It's not enough simply to watch the video. Participate in the campaign by making sure the video is seen by as many people as possible.

Please help increase the numbers of views. PLEASE send the video to various groups. It's YOUR PARTY.

Wednesday, February 06, 2008

Victories for McKinney, Nader in four Green primaries on Super Tuesday



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

For Immediate Release:
Wednesday, February 6, 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

Results by state for Green primaries in Arkansas, California, and Illinois; Massachusetts results forthcoming

Widespread voting irregularities hinder Greens in Illinois

WASHINGTON, DC -- Results from the four states where Green Parties participated in the February 5 Super Tuesday primaries show a landslide for Ralph Nader in California (61%) and a lead among candidates for Cynthia McKinney in Arkansas and Illinois.

The office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, responding to an inquiry, said that his state doesn't post unofficial results, and will not announce the numbers until absentee and overseas ballots are counted. Some early returns from Boston and a few other cities show a near tie for Mr. Nader and Ms. McKinney, with Mr. Nader slightly ahead by a few votes, but too inconclusive to call.

Ms. McKinney, a former Democratic US Representative from Georgia (now a Green), won the Illinois primary with a strong lead (57%).

The Arkansas results currently show that over half (nearly 54%) of the state's Green voters decided to remain uncommitted. Arkansas' totals have been delayed because of power outages after severe storms and tornadoes Tuesday evening while voting was still going on.

Mr. Nader has not declared his candidacy, but recently announced the formation of an exploratory committee for a possible presidential run <http://www.naderexplore08.org>.

The Illinois Green Party is currently fielding reports of voting irregularities in Chicago and elsewhere in Illinois, with Green voters told by pollworkers on Tuesday that no Green Party ballots were available at their polling places, or that they had to vote on suspect electronic voting machines, even while other parties used paper ballots. More information: http://www.gp.org/press/pr-state.php?ID=21

After the Super Tuesday primaries, Green candidates will compete in the February 12 primary in the District of Columbia. Currently, 21 state Green Parties hold ballot access within their respective states. Some Green Parties chose presidential candidates by caucus voting and by election of national convention delegates at state party conventions.

The Green Party will hold its 2008 national convention in Chicago from July 10 to 13.


SUPER TUESDAY PRIMARY RESULTS (as of Wednesday, February 6)

ARKANSAS (8 delegates out of 836 delegates at the Green National Convention)
Polling Locations Reporting: 893 of 2081 (43%)
Last Update: February 6, 2:47 pm
http://www.arelections.org/index.php?ac:show:contest_statewide=1&elecid=151&contestid=3

Jared Ball, 55 votes, 10.24% *
Cynthia McKinney, 117 votes, 21.79%
Kent Mesplay, 49 votes, 9.12%
Kat Swift, 27 votes, 5.03%
Uncommitted, 289 votes, 53.82%

Green Party of Arkansas: http://arkgreens.kk5.org/
Media contacts:
Jim Lendall, Public Relations Co-chair, jelendall@comcast.net
Rebekah Kennedy, Elections Co-chair, misskennedyesq@yahoo.com

CALIFORNIA (168 delegates out of 836 delegates at the Green National Convention)
95.4% (22055 of 23109) precincts reporting as of February 6, at 7:15 am
http://vote.sos.ca.gov/Returns/pres/grn/all.htm

Kent Mesplay, 562 votes, 2.0%
Jared Ball, 443 votes, 1.6% *
Jesse Johnson, 506 votes, 1.8%
Kat Swift, 842 votes, 3.0%
Ralph Nader, 16,792 votes, 61.1% **
Elaine Brown, 1,256 votes, 4.6% *
Cynthia McKinney, 7,110 votes, 25.9%

Green Party of California: http://www.cagreens.org/
Media contact:
Crescenzo Vellucci, Party Press Secretary, 916-996-9170, greenparty-press@comcast.net

ILLINOIS (44 delegates out of 836 delegates at the Green National Convention)
11264 of 11574 precincts Reporting - 97%
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/files/elections/2008/by_state/IL_President_0205.html?SITE=ILCHTELN&SECTION=POLITICS
Cynthia McKinney, 1,446 votes, 57%
Howie Hawkins, 438 votes, 17% **
Kent Mesplay, 369 votes, 14%
Jared Ball, 302 votes, 12% *

Illinois Green Party: http://www.ilgp.org
Media contacts:
Patrick Kelly, Media Coordinator, 773-203-9631, media@ilgp.org
Phil Huckelberry, Chair, Government & Elections Committee, 309-268-9974, phil.huckelberry@ilgp.org

MASSACHUSETTS (32 delegates out of 836 delegates at the Green National Convention)
Official results not posted yet by the state:
check later at http://www.gp.org
Green-Rainbow Party of Massachusetts: http://www.massgreens.org/
Media contact:
Eli Beckerman, Communications Director, 617-821-1453, communications.director@green-rainbow.org

* Although their names remain on the ballot in some states, Dr. Ball and Ms. Brown have withdrawn from the Green presidential race.

** Mr. Hawkins is serving as a placeholder candidate on the ballot for Mr. Nader in some states until Mr. Nader announces his intentions for the 2008 election; in other states, Mr. Nader is on the ballot.


WEB SITES for Green presidential candidates, competing as of February 6:
Jesse Johnson http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mMxgYnmdHfg
Cynthia McKinney http://www.runcynthiarun.org - http://www.americanblackout.org/
Kent Mesplay http://www.mesplay.org
Howie Hawkins http://www.draftnader.org
Ralph Nader http://www.naderexplore08.org (Exploratory Committee site)
Kat Swift http://www.voteswift.org


MORE INFORMATION

Green Party of the United States
http://www.gp.org
202-319-7191, 866-41GREEN
Fax 202-319-7193

Video of Green presidential candidates
http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/presidential-videos.php

Green candidate database for 2007 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

Media credentialing
http://www.gp.org/committees/media/kit.shtml


~ END ~

Cynthia McKinney on Democracy Now!


Monday morning, February 4th, Cynthia appeared on Democracy Now! with Amy Goodman.

Hear the full interview click here.

Former Democratic Rep. Cynthia McKinney is now seeking the Green Party presidential nomination. McKinney is among the most outspoken critics of the Bush administration, and one of her last measures in office was to introduce a bill for the impeachment of President Bush and Vice President Cheney. She joins us to talk about her new campaign and why she left the Democratic Party after more than a decade in public office. [includes rush transcript]

Guest:

Cynthia McKinney, Candidate for Green Party Presidential nomination and former Democratic Congresswoman from Georgia.

Rush Transcript

AMY GOODMAN: Former Democratic Congressmember Cynthia McKinney is now seeking the presidency, not as a Democrat, but as a Green Party candidate. McKinney was the first African American woman elected to Congress in Georgia. She is among the most outspoken critics of the Bush administration, and one of her last measures in office was to introduce a bill calling for the impeachment of President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney.

But Congressmember McKinney’s history of opposing war predates the Bush administration. In 1991, she spoke out against another Bush administration for the Persian Gulf War. She spoke out in the Georgia House of Representatives.

But McKinney left the Democratic Party late last year after serving six terms in Congress. She said the Democrats had become “no different than their Republican counterparts.” Today she hopes to be the Green Party nominee for president.

Cynthia McKinney is joining us here in our firehouse studio. Welcome to Democracy Now!

CYNTHIA McKINNEY: Thank you.

AMY GOODMAN: Welcome to New York. What were you doing last night when the Giants won?

CYNTHIA McKINNEY: Oh, very interesting question, because while I guess much of America was captivated by the Super Bowl, I was with people who are trying to form a support committee to support the aspirations and the votes of people in Latin America who have really produced change by the power of the ballot, and looking at supporting Evo Morales in Bolivia and Hugo Chavez, of course, in Venezuela. But, of course, we’ve also got Daniel Ortega now in Nicaragua. So we’ve had a succession of successes, really, demonstrating that it is possible to vote one’s fears and to vote one’s dreams and hopes and aspirations and win. And that’s what Latin America has shown us. That’s what Haiti actually shows us. And so, if we can look at what the Haitian people are doing, people in Latin America are doing, then we have to also say to ourselves, let us vote our dreams and our hopes and our aspirations for our country.

AMY GOODMAN: How did you go from Democratic Party to Green Party?

CYNTHIA McKINNEY: It’s a very good question, and of course, you know, I have now been to twenty-two states across our country, and I ask people who come to my events to hear me, what exactly was your tipping point? And so, I’ve learned that there are –- there is a community of people who have found that life is possible outside of the two-party paradigm. They have searched for resolution of issues that are of grave concern to them, and they have not found it within the two-party-system. But that has sometimes meant that they would withdraw from electoral—the electoral process altogether.

And so, we have a whole huge swath of the potential electorate who don’t even vote at all. And starting in 1968, many of them have said that the treatment of the Democratic Party of people, their children, basically, who were outside of the Democratic National Convention and who wanted only to express their opposition to the Vietnam War, that was a tipping point for them. Others have experienced—have said that 9/11 truth is a tipping point for them. The failure of the Democratic Party to support impeachment, which is really the ultimate form of accountability in our system, is a tipping point for them. And then, of course, we have this huge population of the African American community that has decided to withdraw itself completely from the electoral process. And Hurricane Katrina was like the last straw.

And so, what we now want to do is to bring those people back in and to demonstrate to them that it is possible for us once again to have this community of conscience of people who are willing to participate in the process and to make that participation based on shared values. And our values are, first and foremost, peace. The values that we have to express are ending the disparities, the glaring disparities based on race and class that exist in our country.

AMY GOODMAN: Your thoughts on Barack Obama? If he were elected president, he would be the first African American president. Hillary Clinton, if she were elected president, the first woman.

CYNTHIA McKINNEY: You know that as an African American and as a woman, I am extremely excited by the prospect that our country can make history. But I also want our country to make history in making sure that we raise our moral stature in the world, that we raise the values. And I want those people who are able to make history, if they should indeed become the residents at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, to have the latitude within the political process to do the things that are really needed to be done in this country.

For example, as a child of the South, as a child of Georgia, as someone who is not accustomed to coming to New York City very often, I have to tell you that it is with a great sense of awe that I look around at one of the great cities of the world. But your studio right here is across the street from the Rescue Mission. And so, why is it that we are not talking about poverty in this country? Why is it that we’re not talking about cutting the money that we give to the Pentagon? The Pentagon has already admitted that it lost 2.3 trillion of our dollars. Where is the accountability? And why is it that the values that are so easily expressed in public policy are the ones that say we have to cut social programs, we have to ask people who are losing their life’s investment in their homes in this subprime mortgage crisis, that they’re the ones who have to tighten their belts?

AMY GOODMAN: We’re talking to former Congressmember Cynthia McKinney. She is not the Green Party presidential nominee yet. I wanted to play a clip of the Green Party presidential debate that was held in San Francisco a few weeks ago. This is a clip of Cynthia McKinney and her contenders for the Green Party nomination—Jesse Johnson, Kat Swift, Kent Mesplay—responding to a question about ending the war in Iraq.

KENT MESPLAY: It was a mistake. Our troops didn’t make the mistake. I think, support our troops, impeach the President, before he finds whatever specious reasons are necessary to start another war, and really there is no simple solution other than demanding immediate unconditional withdrawal from Iraq.

KAT SWIFT: And we also need to talk about reallocation of money to take care of war veterans. I mean, homelessness after Vietnam spiked dramatically. And we’re already seeing the homelessness with Iraqi veterans starting to spike. And there are very few mental health services for veterans in this country, and VA benefits are decreasing daily.

JESSE JOHNSON: We step away from this disaster capitalism that we’re investing in in this nation. As I said, we demilitarize the economy, we immediately withdraw. Frankly, the Constitution states clearly that we’re not supposed to have a standing army to begin with. We’re not supposed to traipsing around, trying to police the entire world. The veterans are a huge issue. The very moment that we were marching into Baghdad this last time, and frankly, we have been at war in there—in Baghdad, as far as for the people of Baghdad, for sixteen years.

AMY GOODMAN: That was Jesse Johnson, before that, Kat Swift, and first Kent Mesplay. Congressmember McKinney, can you explain how the whole system works within the Green Party? How do you get the nomination?

CYNTHIA McKINNEY: Well, of course, there are some primary states where the voters actually go to the polls, for example, like on Super Tuesday, and they actually vote, so –-

AMY GOODMAN: Who is voting tomorrow?

CYNTHIA McKINNEY: We have California, Illinois, Arkansas, Massachusetts, all voting on Super Tuesday. Then there’s the District of Columbia that is voting on [February] 12, I believe. And then there are various state conventions where delegates are selected at those conventions. And the conventions decide which of the menu of candidates they are going to select and, of course, how those delegates will be apportioned.

AMY GOODMAN: I interviewed Ralph Nader last week, the day he announced he is forming an exploratory committee to run for the presidency.

AMY GOODMAN: Ralph Nader, if you run, would you run as an Independent or would you run for the Green Party nomination?

RALPH NADER: Well, if I run — and we are testing the waters now — I would certainly go for the ballot lines with the Green Party. I would go for—

AMY GOODMAN: So you would go against Cynthia McKinney?

RALPH NADER: We’ll go for — well, that remains to be seen. It’s a little early right now. But we’ll go Independent in states where there aren’t any parties. We’ll look for progressive small parties at the state level. You have to do that just to get on state ballots, where there are very obstructive rules.

AMY GOODMAN: Ralph Nader. Cynthia McKinney, your response to his possible run also for the Green Party nomination?

CYNTHIA McKINNEY: Well, I think it’s wonderful for voters to have choice. In fact, I recall a visit that I had in Washington State, where a gentleman who was also very supportive of my candidacy went into the grocery store and came out and was shaking his head, and he said, “There’s eight different varieties of Oreo cookies in there, but I’m supposed to restrict my choices to two political parties.” And so, really, the whole effort that we are engaged in is trying to make sure that voters have choice and that voters—people who are in the potential electorate become members of the electorate, that we expand the electorate. America can only be better with more people participating in the process. And there are impediments to that participation. Of course, we know that from what happened in Florida, what happened in Ohio, what’s happened with me, quite frankly, in Georgia, and to—

AMY GOODMAN: Explain what happened with you in Georgia.

CYNTHIA McKINNEY: Well, of course, in Georgia, we’ve got some pretty restrictive laws, and we‘ve challenged them in the courts, the open primary, the second primary. And basically, by utilizing the open primary, people can go to the polls and they can pick up a ballot of a political party of which they have never before participated, and that’s what’s happened to me twice.

AMY GOODMAN: Explain what happened exactly. You’re saying that Republicans came and voted in the Democratic primary to get you out?

CYNTHIA McKINNEY: Yes, to determine—and so their votes then determined who the Democratic nominee was going to be. Now, we’ve got some Supreme Court decisions, in 1990, California v. Jones, where the Supreme Court has said that malicious crossover in open primaries could be unconstitutional. And that is something that needs to be tested in the courts. It would, of course, be better if Georgia just changed its open primary statute, but that’s not in the cards. But we also look at, for example, other favorites now in the presidential race who have dropped out. For example, Dennis Kucinich is in a situation in Ohio where he is now being targeted. And so—

AMY GOODMAN: Targeted by?

CYNTHIA McKINNEY: Well, that remains to be seen. But there is an awful lot of money that has been dropped into his opponent—for one of his opponents for his congressional district. And—

AMY GOODMAN: Into another Democrat.

CYNTHIA McKINNEY: Another Democrat, that’s correct. And so, in talking to Dennis, what I have discovered is that, while nominally Ohio does not have an open primary, but in practice it can be open—and he’s got 40 percent independents in his district who could then become active in the Democratic primary, and they could do so in such a way that could endanger Dennis Kucinich.

So, we have to look very carefully at the constructs that have been built that basically deny opportunity to those who have a different point of view. And guaranteed, I have a different point of view. But does that mean that my point of view is invalid in the political—as a part of the political consensus of our country? No, it doesn’t.

But we only also have to look just back at when Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. says, I’ll be speaking tomorrow at SUNY New Paltz and—well, actually tonight at SUNY New Paltz, about the life and the times of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. But, you know, he said that he was greatly, deeply disappointed in America, but there could be no great disappointment where there is no great love. And it was during this time when he was trying to decide what he was going to do, what his position was going to be with respect to the Vietnam War, he said that he had fought his entire life against segregation, and so he couldn’t segregate his moral concerns any longer. He had a compulsion to speak out against the Vietnam War. And we know that one year later, Dr. King was dead. But during the time of his transformation from a civil rights figure, trying to secure the rights of all people in this country, and then moving that into the economic realm to challenge the budget and policy priorities of the United States Congress in the Poor People’s Campaign, he was murdered, and that –- those efforts were cut short with the active participation of people in the media who literally hounded him for the last five years of his life. Is that what we expect to happen to people who voice their dissent in our country?

AMY GOODMAN: Cynthia McKinney, speaking of dissent, one of your last acts in Congress—you were voted out in the last election—one of your last acts in Congress was to call for the impeachment of President Bush and Vice President Dick Cheney. It was not only the Republican Party, obviously, that you criticized, but it was your own leadership; it was the Democratic Party. Can you talk about their response to your call?

CYNTHIA McKINNEY: Well, of course, we’ve seen what happened with Dennis Kucinich’s bill for the impeachment of Dick Cheney. He had mentioned that he was also going to introduce articles of impeachment against Bush. Basically, our Speaker of the House now –- and I have to tell you that I supported Nancy Pelosi for most of my political tenure in the United States Congress, and it was quite a disappointment for her to take impeachment off the table. It is somewhat interesting to watch the dance now that Democrats are making around this issue.

AMY GOODMAN: We have ten seconds. Why do you think they’re doing that? Why do you think it’s off the table.

CYNTHIA MCKINNEY: Well, I mean, they would have to provide an explanation. And one of the explanations that’s been given is that it would be very difficult to defend the action on FOX News. So, I don’t believe that FOX News ought to be setting the agenda for the Congress.

AMY GOODMAN: Cynthia McKinney, I want to thank you very much for being with us, a Green Party presidential candidate.

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