Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Green Party Members in New York Voting In A Presidential Primary By Mail Ballot




FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Gloria Mattera, Co-Chair, Green Party of New York State
Peter LaVenia, Co-chair, Green Party of New York State

Albany, New York Registered Green Party members throughout New York State will vote in their presidential primary by mail ballot this week. Four candidates qualified to appear on the Green Party Ballot, Jesse Johnson, Cynthia McKinney, Kent Mesplay, and Kat Swift.

New Yorker voters may enroll in the Green Party simply by checking off the “other” box on the voter registration form and writing in “Green Party”. The Green party of New York State won this right via a court case against New York State Board of Elections in 2002, along with the Libertarian, Liberal, and Right to Life parties.

Despite having enrollment, the Green Party does not have ballot status in New York and therefore was not allowed to participate in the State funded presidential primary this past February. The Green Party raised funds to pay for a mailing to all registered Greens in New York State with a current address on file with the New York State Board of Elections.

The Green Party ballots allow voters to rank every candidate in order of preference, which allows voters who support losing candidates to transfer their support to candidates still in the running for additional delegates. The Green Party advocates for ranked choice voting as a more democratic voting method. The Green Party ballots will be publicly hand counted on May 31st, and must be postmarked by May 21st.

New York will also be selecting delegates to attend the Green Party’s national convention, to take place in Chicago, July 10-13. (http://www.gp. org/2008- elections/index.shtml) . The Green Party of New York is allotted 40
delegates out of a total of 836 at the convention (http://www.gp. org/2008- elections/ Delegation- Size.php).

Five states held Green Party primaries this year: California, Massachusetts, DC, Arkansas, and Illinois. The Green Party has ballot status in a total of 21 states; the full list is available at http://www.gp. org/committees/ ballot/ballotsta tus.shtml.

The Green Party stands for real change. From the start we opposed the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. We want our troops brought home from Iraq immediately and demand an end to the U.S. occupations of other countries. The Green Party supports single payer health care and has led the fight worldwide to curb climate change
through energy conservation, renewable energy, organic farming and local food, as well as investments in mass transit.

In contrast, both the Democratic and Republican Parties support a continued military presence in Iraq as well as threatening military intervention in Iran and Pakistan. Neither of the Democratic or the Republican presidential candidates has made a commitment to sign the next Kyoto Agreement that seeks global reductions in greenhouse gas pollution.

These ballots must be postmarked by May 21.

Green may also wish to become a delegate to the GP-US convention being held this July in Chicago. These delegates will be chosen by the GPNY regions. If you are an enrolled Green and want more information, you can contact either your Executive Committee regional representative, or other party officers

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Greens call the 60th anniversary of Israel an occasion to affirm international law, enact human rights, and end the illegal occupation of Palestine


Greens call the 60th anniversary of Israel an occasion to affirm international law, enact human rights, and end the illegal occupation of Palestinian territories

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

For Immediate Release:
Monday, May 19, 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

Uncritical support for Israel's actions by Clinton, Obama, and McCain ensure continued Middle East hostilities after 2008

Resolving the conflict is essential to healing the rift between the West and Middle Eastern nations, say Greens, who note that the 60th birthday of Israel is also the 60th anniversary of the Nakba -- the 'catastrophe' for Palestinians


WASHINGTON, DC -- Green Party leaders urged the White House and Congress to recognize the 60th anniversary of the establishment of Israel as an occasion to press for long overdue human rights and equality for all Israelis, including Arabs and Muslims, and an end to the illegal occupation of Palestinian lands.

"The 60th birthday of Israel is also the 60th anniversary of the Palestinian Nakba," said Dr. Justine McCabe, co-chair of the International Committee of the Green Party of the United States. "Its founding was based on the ethnic cleansing of the native Muslim and Christian populations. Because of this formative injustice, instead of becoming a haven for Jews, Palestine-Israel remains insecure for all those living there. Peace in the Middle East depends on recognizing this historical injustice and taking steps to reverse it. It means ensuring full equality, human rights, and democracy regardless of religion or ethnicity, and it means withdrawingIsraeli forces from the occupied territories."

The Green Party has called for a cutoff of US military aid and a general economic boycott until Israel complies with UN directives demanding observance of human rights and an end to the occupation, displacement, and brutal treatment of Palestinians. The Green Party also supports the Palestinian right of return.

"At over 6 million, Palestinian refugees constitute the oldest and largest refugee population awaiting a resolution," said Steve Alesch, Green Party Nominee for Congress in Illinois (District 13) (http://www.votesteve.org). "2008 also marks the 60th anniversary of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Article 13 of which recognizes the right to leave one's country and return home. It establishes this right of return for all refugees to return home, regardless of how a conflict began."

(See "Why does the Green Party in the U.S. support Palestinians' Right of Return?", position paper by the Green Party's International Committee, http://www.gp.org/committees/intl/response_on_palestine.html)

Greens warned that uncritical support for Israel by Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and John McCain, under the influence of AIPAC and other lobbies, and their rejection of talks with the democratically elected Palestinian government indicate a lack of seriousness about resolving the Middle East conflict.

Republican and Democratic administrations have made the US a dishonest broker in any peace deal, said Greens, who pointed to the recent revelation of President Bush's 2004 letter to Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon endorsing the expansion and retention of Israeli Jewish settlements in the West Bank ("Israelis Claim Secret Agreement With US," The Washington Post, April 24, 2008).

Party leaders also condemned Sen. Clinton's threat to "obliterate" Iran if it should attack Israel with nuclear weapons; Iran does not possess nuclear weapons, while Israel does.

"Resolving the Israel-Palestine conflict is essential to healing the rift between the West and Muslim nations and establishing global security," said John Wages, Green candidate for Congress in Mississippi's First District (http://www.votejohnwages.com). "Peace will be achieved through nonviolent means -- negotiation, affirmation of universal human rights, democratic self-determination for both Israelis and Palestinians, and respect for international law -- not through threats, terror, and military assaults."

"Greens have called for the one-state solution to be placed on the table. The two-state option is increasingly unfeasible, because the Israeli government, through the occupation, settlements, displacement of Palestinians, and destruction of infrastructure, has made it more difficult for an independent Palestinian state to emerge. The secular one-state solution may be the only one that can assure real political equality, democracy, and freedom for everyone in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories," added Mr. Wages.


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

Links to Green Presidential Candidates' web sites
http://www.gp.org/committees/pcsc/index.shtml

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

2008 Green National Convention: Live Green, Vote Green
http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/index.shtml

Media credentialing
http://www.gp.org/forms/media

International Committee of the Green Party
http://www.gp.org/committees/intl/

Peace Action Committee (GPAX)
http://www.gp.org/committees/peace/

"Sharing the Land of Canaan: Human Rights and the Israeli-Palestinian Struggle"
Book by Mazin B. Qumsiyeh, Pluto Press (2004)

Wheels of Justice: Nonviolent education and action against war and occupation in Iraq and Palestine for justice and universal human rights
http://justicewheels.org/

"Greens urge economic pressure and cutoff of all military aid to Israel as Gaza situation worsens" Green Party news release, March 3, 2008
http://www.gp.org/press/pr-national.php?ID=35

"Forget the two-state solution: Israelis and Palestinians must share the land. Equally." By Saree Makdisi, The Los Angeles Times, May 11, 2008
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-op-makdisi11-2008may11,0,25537\69.story
~ END ~

Cynthia McKinney remarks at Al Nakba Rally, "Not in My Name"

Cynthia McKinney Remarks
Al Nakba Rally, "Not in My Name"
United Nations, New York
May 16, 2008

On my birthday last year, I declared my independence from a national leadership that, through its votes in support of the war machine, is now complicit in war crimes, torture, crimes against humanity, and crimes against the peace.

I declared my independence from every bomb dropped, every veteran maimed, and every child killed.

I noted that the Democratic leadership in Congress had failed to restore this country to Constitutional rule by repealing the Patriot Acts, the Secret Evidence Act, and the Military Commissions Act.

That it had aided and abetted illegal spying against the American people. And that it took impeachment off the table.

In addition, the Democratic Congressional leadership failed to promote the economic integrity of this country by not repealing the Bush tax cuts. They failed to institute a livable wage, Medicare-for-all health care, and gave even more money to the Pentagon as it misuses our hard-earned dollars.

We can add to that list, too, an abject failure to stand up for human rights and dignity.

If the Democratic and Republican leadership won't respect the right of return for Hurricanes Katrina and Rita survivors, how can we expect them to champion the right of return for Palestinians?

If this country's leadership tolerates the wanton murder of unarmed black and Latino men by law enforcement officials—extra-judicial killings—how can we expect them to stop or even speak out against targeted assassinations in the Middle East?

If the Democratic and Republican leadership accept ethnic cleansing in this country by way of gentrification and predatory lending, why should we expect them to put an end to it in Palestine?

If the leadership of this country impedes self-determination for native peoples in this country, why should we expect them to support indigenous rights for anyone abroad?

And sadly, the sensationalist corporate media would rather trick us into thinking that reporting on a pastor, a former Vice Presidential nominee, and a former cable TV magnate constitutes this country's much-needed discussion of its own apartheid past and present, so why should we expect an honest discussion of apartheid and Zionism?

I hope by now it is clear. Our values will never be reflected in public policy as long as our political parties and our country remain hijacked.

Hijacked by false patriots who usurp the applause of the people and all the while betray our values.

I've decided that neither the Democrats nor the Republicans will operate any longer as business as usual—not in my name.

That Democrats and Republicans will use my tax dollars and betray my values, not one day longer—not in my name.

That neither the Democrats nor the Republicans have earned my most precious political asset—my vote.

And that now is the time to do some things I've never done before in order to have some things I've never had before.

And so here today, I declare my independence from weapons transfers: including Apache Helicopters; F'16s; sidewinder, hellfire, and Stinger missiles.

I declare my independence from occupation, demolished homes, political prisoners, and babies dying at checkpoints.

I declare my independence from UN vetoes, expropriated land, stolen resources, and the installation of puppet regimes.

I declare my independence from all forms of dehumanization and am not afraid to speak truth to power.

And I am happy to join with peace-loving people around the world who know that there can be no peace without justice.

Let us never tire in our work for justice.

Thank you.

Broward, Palm Beach New Times: Show Us Some Green

Show Us Some Green
America's most colorful third party could use some attention and some cash.

New Times - Broward, Palm Beach
By Deirdra Funcheon
Published on May 15, 2008

http://www.browardpalmbeach.com/2008-05-15/news/show-us-some-green/








Move over, Dubya —
the Green Party's
Kent Mesplay
wants your job.


You might not know it from watching TV or listening to the radio, but a
local landowner recently bulldozed a community garden, a power plant is
set to be constructed between two wildlife refuges in the Everglades,
and there are still four candidates from the Green Party running for
president of the United States of America.

Frustrated by the lack of media attention toward issues it feels are
important, the Palm Beach County chapter of the Green Party in March
hatched the idea of launching an internet radio station. On April 25, a
Friday just weeks after the idea had been pitched, about 30 people
gathered at the Little Owl Bar in Lake Worth. Their goal: to raise
$1,000 to buy a mixer ? a piece of broadcasting equipment for the
station. In sustainable style, the fundraiser was a vegetarian potluck.

"The station is going to be a forum for local music, for local writers
and artists, for commentators who want to talk about social justice or
the environment," said Green Party chapter secretary Jayne King, a
former schoolteacher who taught for years on a military base in Spain.
She was passing around a sign-up sheet for anyone who wanted to propose
hosting a show. A sociology professor from Barry University pitched a
program about criminology and the war on drugs. King herself planned a
show about urban farming. A guy named Roland on Piano hoped to showcase
his musical talents. He says he plays "save-the-planet-type music."

Mainstream radio ? hell, even shamelessly left-wing radio ? simply
wasn't doing it for the Greens. "Randi Rhodes irritates the hell out of
me," said chapter treasurer Bonnie Redding, referring to the former Air
America host. "She's just a shill for the Democratic Party." Most
political parties and media outlets, Greens say, are driven by
corporations and profits. Even programs on National Public Radio are
underwritten by sponsors. To remain free from corporate influence, the
new radio station, like Green political candidates, will refuse to
accept money from businesses.

At the fundraiser, which managed to come off as both low-tech (there was
a cakewalk) and high-tech (two DJs battled with tunes from their
laptops), conversation inevitably turned to the presidential election.
Four candidates are in the running for the Green Party nomination; the
winner will be decided at a national convention in Chicago July 10 to
13. With environmental concerns so prevalent in the national
consciousness, locals lamented that more individuals aren't paying
attention to the Green Party cause.

"People think the Democratic Party is going to [change the status quo],"
King said. But even with that party floating history-making candidates ?
a white woman and a black man ? "there are too many people entrenched,"
she said. "It's business as usual."

Party cochair Echo Steiner laughed at the idea that Democrats would
bring about policies much different from the Bush administration's.
"Look at their party platform," she said. "Half of it's about war and
military spending."

Greens advocate "Ten Key Values" that include "grassroots democracy,"
"non-violence," and "community-based economics." The same essential
values are shared by the international Green Party, which is more
popular abroad ? in Mexico, Brazil, and throughout Europe, where Greens
are regularly elected to parliaments. Currently, 229 Greens hold office
in the United States, mostly school board or library board positions,
with a handful of mayors and city commissioners.

The Green Party's political director, Washington-based Brent McMillan,
suggests that many voters share Green values already ? they need only
make the connection and identify with the party. "Look at the exit
polling from 2006 ? it looks like the Green Party platform," he says.
McMillan points out three positions where the Green Party differs
significantly from Democrats: the war in Iraq (Democrats authorized it,
and most support a small but continued presence there, while the Greens
advocate a complete withdrawal of troops); inaction on climate change
("Al Gore has done a good job getting the message out, but the biggest
cheerleader for the international trade that contributes to global
warming was Al Gore!" McMillan says); and health care (Hillary Clinton,
McMillan says, is beholden to health-care companies that have funded
much of her campaign ? "In other words, she has almost no credibility.").

McMillan says it's not just liberals who can identify with the Greens'
message ? he's a former Republican. "I think Greens can appeal to the
old conservative values," he says. Not the neoconservatives, like Bush
and Cheney, he explains, but old-school Republicans who, before Reagan,
traditionally supported ideas like women's rights and Native American
sovereignty. "They didn't trust big business or big government,"
McMillan says.

Jesse Johnson, another former Republican, is one of four candidates
seeking the Green Party nomination for president. "I grew up in a long
line of law officers," Johnson says. "I was once a fireman and a
paramedic." He is now a filmmaker and also operates a tree farm in West
Virginia. "I've watched the Republican Party move away from its own
ideals," he laments. He once considered himself a Republican in the mold
of Abraham Lincoln and Teddy Roosevelt ? "the most environmental
president ever."

Johnson sounds heartbroken when he talks about what he sees happening in
Appalachia. Mining companies, he says, "use 4 million pounds of
explosives every day ? 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a
year," to blow the tops off mountains to access the mines. Toxic residue
contaminates streams, vegetation that could combat greenhouse gases is
destroyed, and animal habitat is ruined. Depleted topsoil means that
trees may never come back. And river tributaries that get blocked with
rubble or contaminated contribute to severe drought problems along the
eastern seaboard ? most notably in Atlanta, where there is a water
crisis. Johnson says such problems can be alleviated with alternative,
deep-mining technologies that would provide eight times as many jobs.
But it's hard to get the word out about his ideas, he says. Even his
local newspaper hasn't done a feature story on him.

Johnson's fellow candidates Kat Swift and Kent Mesplay find it difficult
to campaign when they have to work day jobs four days a week. On a
recent Tuesday, Mesplay, an air-quality technician from San Diego, had
to use his cell phone and step out of a building to take a reporter's
call. He says it can be challenging to fight anonymity on a limited
budget. Federal Election Commission filings show that Mesplay has raised
$6,560 and is in debt $9,604. His biggest contribution from an
individual, he says, was $250.

The Green Party's best-known presidential candidate may be Cynthia
McKinney, an African-American woman who served six terms in Congress
representing a Georgia district; she had more than $91,000 in her
coffers at presstime. McKinney was famously defeated in a 2002
Democratic primary because, she alleged in a lawsuit, Republicans voted
in it, mobilizing to shut her out by voting for her opponent. The
practice was deemed legal, and the lawsuit tossed out. Although McKinley
has stood up for Hurricane Katrina victims, minority farmers, and
government transparency, she is sometimes characterized as haughty. In
one infamous incident, she struck a Capitol police officer who stopped
her when she passed a security checkpoint. She has also introduced
articles of impeachment against George Bush, Condoleezza Rice, and Dick
Cheney.

A stumbling block for the Greens may be the lingering effect of Ralph
Nader's 2000 presidential run, AKA "the spoiler effect." When George
Bush won the presidency in 2000, the election was tipped by Florida,
where Bush eked out a win by just 537 votes. In the aftermath, many
Democrats blamed Nader for diverting votes from Al Gore. "There's a
perception that we're public enemy number one," Mesplay says. Greens
point out that Gore was a weak candidate who didn't win even his home
state and that four times as many Florida Democrats voted for Bush in
that election as voted for Nader. Nader is running for president as an
independent this year.

But the election is still a distant battle as the Greens spend much of
their energy simply trying to get their party on ballots. "Ninety
percent of the time is taken up trying to be treated fairly," Johnson sighs.

Currently, the Greens will be on the presidential ballot in 23 states,
but they are pushing for more. Ballot access varies from state to state.
McMillan says that in Florida, getting on is easy ? any party organized
on a statewide basis can qualify. But in Oklahoma, they'd need to
collect 43,324 signatures, making it a long shot.

At last count, in November 2006, McMillan says, there were 289,177
registered Greens in the country ? but that's counting only the 21
states where a person is even able to register Green. Florida, McMillan
says, listed 6,607 Green voters.

Greens believe their struggle illuminates the cause of third parties
everywhere, and sometimes little-guy candidates help each other out.
Former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel initially ran on the Democratic ticket
and switched to Libertarian but took the time to endorse the Greens'
Jesse Johnson along the way. The Federal Election Commission's website
lists 135 presidential candidates this season. And even though he is
part of the moneyed and highly visible Republican Party, Ron Paul is
still in the running. As recently as the first week of May, Paul still
had $4 million to spend.

"I'm not concerned with national politics," Palm Beach County's Jayne
King says breezily. "It's about local elections and changing the system."

King points out that Lake Worth City Commissioner Cara Jennings is the
highest elected Green in Florida. And this fall, vote-count activist
Ellen Brodsky will run for the Broward County Board of Elections as a Green.

By the end of the radio fundraiser, Jennings had won the cakewalk. King
was preparing a trip to India to buy fair trade goods. And the Greens
had raised $743, largely because Bonnie Redding pledged to donate her
$600 economic stimulus check. You can hear about it all at
www.pbcgreenparty.org ? just as soon as the Greens scrape up the cash to
buy that mixer.

Photos and video from the Global Greens Second Congress 2008


Photo Essays from the Global Greens Second Congress 2008

http://www.eugenioheer.com.ar/flashgallery/index.html

http://picasaweb.google.com.br/roberta.globalgreens/GlobalGreens2008

********************************************************

VIDEO: Global Greens 2008 - Ross Mirkarimi (USA) (English)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyT1q2ebHlo
12:25

Ross Mirkarimi, San Francisco Board of Supervisors, speaks about actions
he's taken on the municipal level to deal with climate change.
Global Greens Second Congress 2008. May 1-4, 2008.
Fundacao Memorial da America Latina. São Paulo, Brazil.
www.sfgov.org/mirkarimi www.rossmirkarimi.com
www.cagreens.org www.gp.org www.globalgreens.org

For videos of each individual speaker at the entire Congress, see
www.globalgreens.org/brazil2008/videos

For streaming video of the Congress as a whole, see
www.proempresa.inf.br/sites/600/657/00000311.html

Friday, May 16, 2008

One hundred Green letters by May 31!

The Media Committee challenges Greens all over to put the Green Party and our candidates on the media map!

Our goal is to see ONE HUNDRED letters to the editor sent by Greens to newspapers throughout the US by the end of May. If enough letters get sent, a good percentage will get published, and hundreds of thousands -- maybe millions -- of voters will read about the Green Party and Green candidates.

If you'd rather submit an op-ed column or an article to the newspaper of your choice, that's fine too!

What should you write about? It's up to you:

• Your favorite Green candidate for President of the United States

• Your favorite Green candidate for the US House, US Senate, state legislature, county commissioner, city council, mayor, school board, or any other office

• The upcoming Green National Convention in Chicago, July 10-13

• The Green Party's demand for immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq

• The Green Party's demand for real action on global warming, rather than ineffective corporate-friendly half measures

• The Green Party's support for single-payer national health care

• Another Green Party position that you consider important

• Anything else you can think of about the Green Party or Green candidates!


Here are some suggestions:

• Keep your letter concise & focused. Five or six sentences is good, but in most larger newspapers, anything longer is in danger of getting edited or immediately rejected. In many local papers, they'll be happy to print a longer letter. Op-eds & articles can be longer, too. Check the newspaper's guidelines on submissions.

• Use the word GREEN at least once, preferably a few times, so it's clear that your favorite candidate is a Green candidate, or the position you're espousing is a Green position. Mention that you're a Green Party member and try to work in the web site of the national party (gp.org) or your local or state party.

• If you can, use a personal angle. For example, if a family member can't pay a medical bill or is on the front line in Iraq, it might be worth mentioning in a letter to the editor about the Green Party's position on health care or the war.

• Respond to an already published article or column. For example, a recent column in The Progressive by Adolph Reed (May 2008 issue, http://www.progressive.org/mag_reed0508) on why he isn't supporting Barack Obama deserves a Green reply: why doesn't Mr. Reed mention the Green presidential candidates?

• Read "How to Place an Op-Ed or Letter in the Top 100 US Newspapers" http://theopedproject.org/content/view/8/8/

Start writing letters! If you get published, let us know -- and post it on Green Party discussion lists too, so other Greens can read it too.

Scott McLarty
mclarty at greens.org
Media Committee
Green Party of the United States
http://www.gp.org

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Live Green Vote Green! Register now for the 2008 Green Party of the United States Presidential Nominating Convention

The 2008 Green Party of the United States Presidential Nominating Convention and Annual Meeting is in downtown Chicago from July 10-13th. This year's event is shaping up to be one of the best events of the year. Please visit http://www.greenparty2008.org for all the information related to the convention, including registration and the link to reserve your room at the headquarter hotel, the Palmer House Hilton. Staying at the Palmer House is a very important aspect of this onvention,
the party needs to fill rooms to get the best rates on space, plus don't you want to be where all the action is? If you share a room it is reasonable, especially for such a beautiful hotel in the heart of downtown Chicago.

The workshop selection will be top notch, with expert activists from across the country discussing an array of issues. From foreign policy issues related to the Middle East and Iran, working toward immigrant and LGBTQ rights or to how to campaign on a shoestring budget, attendees have the ability for much education and continued learning.

Thursday evening's International Reception will feature Greens from all over the world. In 2004 we had over 35 International guests representing at least 15 countries.

The Annual National Meeting Committee urges you to register as soon as you can and to reserve you room at the Palmer House Hilton. It is most financially helpful to the party to have the attendees staying at the Palmer House, our headquarter hotel. Downtown Chicago is an epicenter of activity, especially in the summer months, with Grant Park and the magnificent Lake Michigan only a couple of blocks away the location is awesome.

So, please visit http://www.greenparty2008.org for registration, room reservations and general questions.

The actual nomination vote will take place on Saturday, July 12 at the Symphony Center. As part of the Nominating Convention day, the Green Party will host keynote speeches from Malik Rahim, Kathy Kelly, and Cliff Thornton.

Malik Rahim is a long-time community activist from New Orleans, a former Black Panther, and in the last election was the Green Party candidate for Mayor of New Orleans. Malik co-founded the Common Ground Collective/Relief, an organization that provides short term relief to victims of hurricane disasters in the Gulf region. Please visit http://www.commongroundrelief.org for more information.

Kathy Kelly Is a familiar name to many Greens. Kathy co-founded Voices in the Wilderness in 1996, an organization that worked to end the sanctions on Iraq. She has visited Iraq and other locations in the Middle East on several occasions. Voices in the Wilderness has since become Voices for Creative Non-Violence, and you can read more about Kathy's recent work at http://www.vcnv.org.

Cliff Thornton Jr. is a long-time social justice activist who has done much work on drug policy reform, recently receiving the Robert C. Randall Award for Achievement in the Field of Citizen Action from the Drug Policy Alliance. Cliff was the Green Party's candidate for Governor of Connecticut in 2006, and is currently co-chair of the Green Party of the United States. Read more about Cliff's organization Efficacy, Inc. at http://www.efficacy-online.org.

Numerous workshops will be held across the days of the convention, with expert activists from across the country discussing an array of issues, including foreign policy (especially Iran and the Middle East), immigrant rights, GLBTIQ rights, campaign school workshops, and much more. Attendees will have the ability for much education and continued learning.

The national Green Party's Annual National Meeting Committee and the Illinois Green Party's convention host committee urge you to register as soon as you can and to reserve your room at the Palmer House Hilton. It is most financially helpful to the party to have the attendees staying at the Palmer House, our headquarter hotel. Downtown Chicago is an epicenter of activity, especially in the summer months. With Grant Park and the magnificent Lake Michigan only a couple of blocks away the location is awesome. Attendees are encouraged to come early or stay longer to see the attractions that Chicago has to offer, and to visit the neighborhoods where Green Party activity has been steadily increasing for years.

More speakers, workshops, and events will be announced in upcoming weeks. Also visit http://www.greenparty2008.org for new information as it becomes available, as well as for registration, room reservation, and other general questions.

Thank you and we look forward to seeing you in July.

-Green Party of the United States Annual National Meeting Committee
-Illinois Green Party Convention Host Committee

Greens urge defeat of current Farm Bill, urge legislation to assist small local farms instead of big agribusiness

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

For Immediate Release:
Tuesday, May 13, 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

Main Street, not Wall Street: Green Party calls for bill to assist local economies, promote local production of nutritious food, and end hunger in the US and around the world


WASHINGTON, DC -- Green Party leaders called for national defeat of the $300 billion Farm Bill, calling it a capitulation to major agribusiness interests and a blow to small farmers.

"While the bill contains a funding for nutrition and some environmental reforms, the bill would provide huge subsidies for powerful agricultural corporations, giving them greater power to crush and absorb family farms," said Rodger Jennings, Green candidate for Congress (http://www.rodgerjennings.org) in District 12 of Illinois, a large part of which is farm land. "Corporate welfare will not solve the world food crisis."

The bill, which comes up for renewal every five years, is the result of a House-Senate compromise and has strong bipartisan support, especially from Democratic leadership. Congress is expected to vote on it in July.

Greens drew attention to several problems with the current bill:


* The bill provides no real relief for US counties with the highest rates of poverty, since subsidies mainly benefit the wealthy owners of corporate farms.


* The bill grants subsidies for crops like corn, wheat, cotton, rice and soybeans -- US imports dumped into poorer countries, hurting subsistence farmers in these countries and hindering farmers in other countries from competing in international markets. When prices for food plummet as a result, local farms fail and are replaced by giant agribusinesses, and poverty increases.


* The bill does not support cultivation of fruits and vegetables, and instead promotes an economy that encourages cheap calories and drives up the price of nutritious foods, aggravating obesity and other health problems.


* The bill encourages production of sugar and corn to be used for ethanol, which Greens call an inefficient replacement for fossil fuels; the rise in ethanol-based energy has converted land that could be used for food production into a source of fuel. This conversion has caused economic and food supply crises in several African countries, as agricultural land now benefits the high energy-consumption demands of the US and other western nations.


* The richest 5% of US farm owners would win more than half of the bill's federal subsidies. Black farmers complain that they would be excluded from the subsidies program.



"The Green Party urges passage of legislation that would strengthen small, locally owned farms and give them protection against the takeover of land by giant agricultural corporations. We support strong local economies, with farms that provide nutritious food and numerous financial benefits for the surrounding community," said Carol Brouillet, California Green candidate for the US House in District 14 (http://www.communitycurrency.org).

"The current bill favors Wall Street. Greens support Main Street. We need a farm bill that will replace hunger with abundant nutritious organic food, help family farms, and promote locally based economic development and self-reliance," added Jason Wallace, Green Candidate for Congress in Illinois' largely agricultural 11th District (http://www.electwallace.us).


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

Links to Green Presidential Candidates' web sites
http://www.gp.org/committees/pcsc/index.shtml

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

2008 Green National Convention: Live Green, Vote Green
http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/index.shtml

Media credentialing
http://www.gp.org/forms/media

Bread for the World: "How to Improve the Farm Bill"
http://www.bread.org/take-action/farm-bill-ol2007/how-to-improve-the-farm-bill.html

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Meet the Candidates

Candidate's websites
Jesse Johnson – http://www.jesse08.org/
Cynthia McKinney – http://www.runcynthiarun.org/
Kent Mesplay – http://www.mesplay.org/
Kat Swift – http://www.voteswift.org/

San Francisco Green Presidential Debate / January 13th, 2008
http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/president/sf_debate.php

Polidoc Productions videos:
Jesse Johnson – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xcXF4AHcVbs
Cynthia McKinney – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iiZkPfx07Pw&feature=related
Kent Mesplay – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BB0exE5kssI
Kat Swift – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZB7f-XHsJD8

Statements to the Green Party of the United States in Reading, PA last
summer:
Jesse Johnson – http://youtube.com/watch?v=mMxgYnmdHfg
Kent Mesplay – http://youtube.com/watch?v=5RzsfsFJS_Q
Kat Swift – http://youtube.com/watch?v=uzHn2D789Wg
Cynthia McKinney was not yet a candidate at that time so she spoke in
a different format at that time –
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=332622179870559068

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Bus Fareness Update

The Bus Fareness Coalition held a public Town Hall meeting on April 3rd at the downtown public library. The purpose was to encourage bus riding citizens and those that support them to speak out regarding the arrogant and non-responsive treatment the average bus rider recives at the hands of the Rochester Genesee Regional Transit Authority. There was a list of concerns but the overall key point focused on the long term practice by the officials at the Transit Authority of demonstrating a total lack of respect for the needs of the average riders. Instead if a corporate business or a City official interested in matters that speaks to business interests have a demand, they are right there. The Authority boosts they hold their own Town Hall meetings but few attend and since there are different persons attending at each meeting, there is no effort to organize a real bus riders response. Another pattern with the RGRTA is to select issues of concern to them and to make an ad like statement to the media with no counter information by those affected, namely the riders who depend totally on the bus to meet many daily needs. This is not just job related. It also affects riders who must often carry groceries, household supplies and other heavy items and abide by bus schedules that often double the time each rider must take to do daily errands. Greater availability to bus schedules, timely modernazation of the shelters and bus overcrowding are problems that have been been neglected for years.

Recently the RGRTA announced they may lower bus fares by one dollar. This is curious as they had recently sited some lose over last year's budget. It does appear however, that again this may be directed at business interests both who have left the city and those who plan to move to the city after being located in the suburbs. Since riders in these situations usually have a destination of downtown and return home, they would benefit from the $1.oo reduction from the current $2.50 for the same travel. However, since most city riders do not work downtown and use the bus for other needs as well they would pay more. To covers thier costs they would have to continue to purchase the $3.00 day pass. This is their only option since the RGRTA discontinued the use of transfers in 2006. We have asked that the day pass as well as the other passes be lowered at the same time the fare becomes $1 so all can benefit. We contacted the media to inform the public of this solution.


We are unsure if the City administration's is in support of our request to have a citizen review board that would relate to the City in oder to assure interests of bus riders are heard and changes made. It is our belief such an approach is legal and would not interfer with the current Board structure which is set up at the state level. The City has members on the RGRTA Board which if they chose could work with us and represent these issues to the Board at their monthly meeting which at this time does not happen. We plan to meet directly with the Mayor's staff to clarify our poisiton and plan. It is our hope that the City and the City Council will agree to endorse our plan which can only strengthen community involvement. As stated previously the lack of a voice for the average city resident is deafening!

Bonnie Cannan CoChair GPOMC

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Greens introduce a plan for environmental action for a Green President's first 100 days in office

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

For Immediate Release:
Wednesday, May 7, 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 seeks bans on mountaintop removal and coal-fired and nuclear power plants, introduces an aggressive plan to curb global warming

An environmental program for Green presidential candidates -- and a challenge to Democrats and Republicans















Green presidential candidates Jesse Johnson, Kat Swift and Kent Mesplay carpooling to a campaign event.

WASHINGTON, DC -- The Green Party's Eco-Action Committee has announced a set of recommendations for environmental actions for the first 100 days of a Green presidency.

Titled "First 100 Days: Energy and Environmental Policy" and posted online (http://www.gp.org/committees/ecoaction/documents/First_100_Days.pdf), the recommended executive orders and legislation are addressed to the Green Party's national candidates. Jesse Johnson, Cynthia McKinney, Kent Mespllay, and Kat Swift are the four contenders for the Green presidential nomination; Sedinam Kinamo Christin Moyowasifza-Curry is seeking the vice-presidential nomination.

The Green Party of the United States will hold its 2008 National Nominating Convention in Chicago, Illinois, July 10-13 (http://www.greenparty2008.org).

"We're not only sending the 'First 100 Days' list to Green candidates. The Green Eco-Action recommendations are a challenge to all presidential candidates, regardless of party, including Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and John McCain -- with a plea to set aside their promises to corporate contributors for the sake of our children's lives and our planet's future," said Wes Rolley, co-chair of the Eco-Action Committee.

"The Green Party's concrete proposals stand in sharp contrast to those who would base their election on such short term ideas as a gasoline tax holiday, which they would have to pay for with more borrowing from oil rich sheikdoms," Mr. Rolley added.

The Eco-Action recommendations also provide guidance on major environmental issues for Green candidates for Congress and other offices.

Summary of major recommendations:


* No new coal fired-power plants; no new nuclear power plants; reduce by 90% the mercury emissions of coal-fired power plants by 2012; protect human health and the environment.in the disposal of coal-fired power plant wastes


* Ban mountaintop coal removal; ban the dumping of mountaintop removal wastes in stream beds and valleys


* Reduce CO2 and SO2 emissions by 80% by 2020


* Provide incentives for industry and citizens to reduce energy use through conservation and generate more renewable energy sources; enact a mandatory 25% renewable energy mix in the national grid by 2015; encourage all states to do the same (using oil and nuclear subsidy funds); encouraging local energy generation


* Increase Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards to 60 mpg for cars and 45 mpg for light trucks by 2012


* Set a national phosphorus standard for all US waters that will protect steams from nutrient growth; strengthen bacteria standards to protect human health


* Require labeling of imported foods, foods with growth hormones, and foods produced by Confined Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs)


* Stop export of any technology abroad for projects that involve fossil fuel or deforestation


* Require that all federal agencies continue their policy of direct negotiation with Indian tribes on a government to government basis


* Protect the rights of Environmental Justice communities to be free from new proposals for permits that would potentially increase their burden of toxic contamination, and prioritize these communities for cleanup




The Eco-Action Committee credited Earl Hatley of Oklahoma with most of the writing of the recommendations, with significant contributions from Derek Iverson (California) and detailed discussion among all committee members.


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

Links to Green Presidential Candidates' web sites
http://www.gp.org/committees/pcsc/index.shtml

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

Green Party ballot access page
http://www.gp.org/2008-elections

2008 Green National Convention: Live Green, Vote Green
http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/index.shtml

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

Green presidential candidates:

Jesse Johnson http://www.jesse08.org

Cynthia McKinney http://www.runcynthiarun.org

Kent Mesplay http://www.mesplay.org

Kat Swift http://www.voteswift.org

Vice-presidential candidate: Sedinam Kinamo Christin Moyowasifza-Curry
http://curry08.wetpaint.com

Green Party Eco-Action Committee
http://www.gp.org/committees/ecoaction

Interview with Kat Swift on her presidential campaign (San Antonio Current)

Finally old enough for the Oval Office, Swift
throws a lasso in the ring

Greg Harman
San Antonio Current, May 7, 2008
http://sacurrent.com/news/story.asp?id=68690


Three candidates get all the air time. Ralph’s
defected for an Independent run. “Green” has
become the Holy Grail of marketing kitsch. And
San Antonio’s newest perennial candidate (and
former Current staffer), Kat Swift, is using her
Minervan powers to shake down the last few
uncommitted primary voters to save the world from
anti-human, corporo-fascist domination.





















Greg Harman

Green presidential candidate Kat Swift works the King William Fair crowd

[Q] I was thinking about that Kinky Friedman
saying, “How hard could it be?” What have you
found? How hard is it to run for president?

[A] The FEC filing is insane. I mean, I’ve run
for [San Antonio] City Council … you go online,
it’s straightforward, it makes sense, it matches
the paper forms. You go and use the FEC free
software, you gotta find special characters that
only special programs create and it doesn’t match
the paper. You can see how they sort of made it
where companies can make money off of the
government’s inability to be simplistic and
straightforward.

Then, of course, you have ballot-access issues,
where every state is different. And this is a
federal election, you know, this should be a
uniform ballot-access requirement nationwide. It
just makes it next to impossible. Texas is the
hardest state to get on the ballot.


[Q] Why is that?

[A] Well, we have primary screen-out. We’re the
only state that has primary screen-out. It’s been
ruled unconstitutional in several places, but it
basically is that if you vote in the primary you
can’t petition your government to get another
party on the ballot, or an independent candidate.
So in years like this, when people actually vote,
which is not common, it makes it even more
difficult because you have 75 days to get 45,000
signatures from people who registered but didn’t
vote [in the primaries]. And finding those people
has been next to impossible.


[Q] How vital is it for the Green Party or any
other third party to get established in the
system?

[A] When your only choice is a
corporate-dominated party, I mean you’ve got a
left wing and a right wing of the same corporate
party that’s leading us to a totalitarian-fascist
government, then it’s absolutely essential in
order to keep democracy, in order to have
choices. The people in power want to keep it.
They don’t want people to have a choice. They
don’t even follow the Constitution, which says
you’re supposed to proportionally represent
delegates … In that case, you disenfranchise
entire demographics in the South.

I think if we’re going to have political parties,
we need to have a multi-party system or we should
just do away with political parties.


[Q] Tell me that the Green Party does not operate
in this way like the Democratic Party, where we
see these proportional splits in delegates and
then you see the super delegates and then you
have the super-duper delegates.

[A] [Laughter.] No, we have, like, normal
delegates. Every state is different. The way they
choose their delegates is different, but what
happens is they do proportionally distribute
their delegates. If you get 33 percent of the
votes, you get 33 percent of the delegates to the
national [convention].


[Q] And they’re still not bound, or are they?

[A] Almost every state binds the first round,
because we do instant run-off voting. Whoever has
the lowest votes after the first round will get
dropped. Some states bind every round, but most
don’t. Most just bind the first round and then
delegates are free to do what they want … But
there are no super delegates and all that
craziness.


[Q] When you’re out on the street, do people ever
bring up, say, “Oh, Ralph Nader, he was a
spoiler. A third party or Green Party is just a
spoiler for Democratic Party chances?”

[A] It didn’t help that the media made it seem
like it was Nader’s fault or the Green Party’s
fault. The only people who still really say that
are people who are still really angry, but who
also don’t know the facts. It’s hard to deal with
it. A lot of times, it’s best to just walk away
and let them be ignorant. But the facts are there
were more people on the ballot in Florida than
Ralph Nader. There were more Democrats that voted
for Bush than voted for Nader. The Democratic
Party itself did not stand up for voter fraud. In
2004 in Ohio there were numerous egregious
violations of people’s rights and the Democratic
Party. The Green Party and Libertarian Party did
but it was thrown out because there was no way we
could have won with a recount and so it was
considered frivolous.

As long as the wealthy have the power, they’re
going to do whatever it takes to limit your
choices and limit your vote.


[Q] And maintain their own.

[A] Right. As soon as people go, “Oh, wait a
minute. I don’t have to vote for the lesser of
two evils because I’m afraid of the alternative.
What if we all went and voted third party?”

It’s not some foregone conclusion that these are
the only people who can win.


[Q] But do you think the ideals of the Green
Party represent enough Americans to bring that
about, to even get established?

[A] Well, whenever you talk to people on the
street who aren’t involved in politics and they
find out what you’re talking about and what we
stand for, they agree every time. The only
disagreements I find are for people who are very
key-issue orientated. Because they’re
anti-abortion. They don’t want to talk about why
abortions are so high. Or why unwanted
pregnancies are so high, which is what we talk
about, on addressing the cause of it instead of
just making it illegal. When you’re dealing with
people like that it doesn’t matter what you say.


[Q] What is your campaign strategy and where does
the Wonder Woman suit fit into that?

[A] [Laughter.] My Wonder Woman suit, [she] was
one of my heroes. I was rewatching the series
actually recently and was like, “Wow. I got a lot
of my beliefs from that.” Female empowerment. Not
fighting with guns. Stopping the bad guys, stuff
like that.


[Q] And the truth lasso?

[A] Yeah. The truth lasso. Making people tell the
truth and stopping people from killing people,
you know? That kind of belief system. So I
thought it would be fun to go outside the box and
not be the politicians, be the dressed up-super
hero — especially for King William … I’ll
probably start carrying it with me just in case
the opportunity arises.

Sunday, May 04, 2008

Cynthia McKinney Economic Plan


Cynthia McKinney has sent us a flier on her Economic Plan, this is perfect for printing and handing out or posting.

There is also a Black & White version that is better for some printers.

Kat Swift Radio Interview

Green presidential candidate, Kat Swift and SKCM Curry with a Texas Green Party candidate Art Browning on the radio program: Self Determination

http://archive.kpft.org/

click on play next to Self Determination on April, 27th, 2:00pm

Green national candidates salute Global Greens meeting in Brazil

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

2008 Green national candidates salute, congratulate Green Parties worldwide on the Second Global Greens Congress, São Paulo, Brazil, May 1-4, 2008

The four candidates seeking the Green Party's presidential nomination and one candidate for the vice presidential nomination issued a joint statement of salutation, congratulation, and support for Greens from all over the world gathering in São Paulo, Brazil, for the Second Global Greens Congress, May 1-4, 2008.

Jesse Johnson, Cynthia McKinney, Kent Mesplay, Kat Swift and vice presidential hopeful Sedinam Kinamo Christin Moyowasifza-Curry are currently touring the US seeking support for the nomination, helping several state Green Parties in their efforts to achieve ballot status, and winning new registrations in the party. The candidates took some time out for a joint teleconference, at which they decided on the message to the Global Greens Congress.

The Green Party of the United States will hold its 2008 National Nominating Convention in Chicago, Illinois, July 10-13
(http://www.greenparty2008.org).


Joint statement from Green presidential and vice presidential candidates on the Second Global Greens Congress, São Paulo, Brazil, May 1-4, 2008

We five national candidates, in line with the Green Party of the United States

1. Commend the Global Greens for helping and supporting the Green Party of the United States, and for helping community leaders run for public office worldwide.

2. Have strongly opposed President Bush's invasion of Iraq and oppose the continued
occupation; and have agreed that, if elected, will conduct an immediate orderly withdrawal from Iraq.

3. Demand an end to US dependence on oil, coal, and nuclear power.

4. Will continue to speak out against proposed anti-immigration bills, through participation in rallies and other actions to protest punitive legislation, such as House Bill 4437, directed at undocumented immigrants and those who assist them: Green national candidates emphasize that immigrants aren’t the enemy, and that people continue to come to US for the same reason people came throughout history -- for a better life.

5. Call for important steps to restore the power of the people:
• Proportional Representation, to ensure that minority populations as well as majorities get fair representation; more information at http://www.fairvote.org
• Legislation guaranteeing the people's right to vote in national elections
• Paper ballot trails to verify all votes and open-source software in all computer voting machines
• Instant Runoff Voting, to ensure that election results reflect the will of the majority of the majority of voters; more information at http://www.fairvote.org

6. Invite members of the Global Greens to attend the US Green Party's upcoming National Nominating Convention in Chicago, July 10-13, and also to make plans to help monitor national elections in the US: while Democrats remained silent, Greens challenged alleged vote manipulation by Republicans in Ohio and New Mexico on Election Day, 2004.

7. Share with the Global Greens Congress that "it's cool to be Green" and that the American public's interest in green living, from compact fluorescent light bulbs to local markets, has boosted interest in our party. We support you and encourage you to remain on the Green cutting edge in your respective nations and local communities


MORE INFORMATION

Green presidential candidates:
• Jesse Johnson http://www.jesse08.org
• Cynthia McKinney http://www.runcynthiarun.org
• Kent Mesplay http://www.mesplay.org
• Kat Swift http://www.voteswift.org

Green vice presidential candidate:
SKCM Curry http://curry08.wetpaint.com/

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

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

Thursday, May 01, 2008

Green Party election advances in Ariz., Conn., Maine, Mich.

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

For Immediate Release:
Thursday, May 1, 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 election update: ballot status in Arizona; record number of legislative candidates in Maine; statewide meetings in Connecticut and Michigan apportion delegates for Chicago convention


WASHINGTON, DC -- Green Parties in states throughout the US are preparing for the party's National Nomination Convention ("Live Green, Vote Green"), to take place in Chicago, Illinois, July 10-13.

836 delegates will attend the convention to choose the Green Party's 2008 national nominees (http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/Delegation-Size.php). Green Party members are working hard to get 51 ballot lines (50 states and the District of Columbia) for the Green nominees on Election Day.

For 2008 Green Party campaign news, visit:
http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/index.shtml

Here are some updates:

• ARIZONA (http://www.azgp.org) The Arizona Green Party achieved ballot status in April after an aggressive effort. This is the third time that Arizona Greens won a place on the state's ballot, after 1992 and 2000.

Greens hope to receive at least 5% of the Arizona vote in the 2008 general election, which would give the party official recognition for the next election cycle. Arizona Greens can also maintain ballot status if at least 0.66 percent of voters register Green as of November 1, 2009.

"Arizona Greens have much to celebrate. This month [April 2008], we achieved ballot status for the third time in our history. And we will soon celebrate the 18 year anniversary of the Arizona Green Party -- the party was founded in May, 1990. We are in the process of recruiting candidates for state legislature and Congress. This is the moment that we have been waiting for!" said Angel Torres, co-chair of the Arizona Green Party.

More details: Arizona Republic article:
http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/2008/04/20/20080420greens0420.html


• CONNECTICUT
(http://www.ctgreens.org/index.shtml) Party members attending the Annual Convention of the Green Party of Connecticut on April 26 voted for presidential candidates and delegates to the Green National Convention. The statewide meeting was held at the Greater New Haven Central Labor Council in New Haven.

Cynthia McKinney received 33 votes, Kat Swift three votes, Jesse Johnson two votes, and Kent Mesplay two votes. Those vote will be divided among the delegates to the convention. Write-in votes included six for independent candidate and native son Ralph Nader, and one each for two others. Connecticut Greens will send 20 delegates to the national convention, to be apportionate according to the April 26 vote.

Speaking at the event were first-time congressional candidates Stephen Fournier, 1st
Congressional District (http://www.fournierforcongress.org), Scott Deshefy, 2nd District (http://www.newmenu.org/deshefy4congress_ct); and Richard Duffee, 4th District (http://richardduffee.com). Harold Burbank, 5th District (http://www.newmenu.org/haroldburbank) did not attend the meeting.


• MAINE (http://www.mainegreens.org) The Maine Green Independent Party is running a record number of candidates for state legislature, with three candidates for State Senate (which has 35 seats) and ten candidates for State House of Representatives (151 seats).

In 2006 the party ran two State Senate candidates, and eight State House candidates.
John Eder served as a member of the Maine House from 2002 to 2006, the Green Party's most recent state legislator.

The Maine Green Independent Party is the largest Green Party in the US in terms of percentage of the electorate, with 3% of Maine voters registered Green.

Maine Greens will hold their 2008 annual state convention in Yarmouth on May 18, at which they will select 44 delegates to the national convention. In the caucuses held earlier this year Cynthia McKinney took about 80% of the votes. Greens who did not have the opportunity to attend the caucuses will have another opportunity to vote at the Convention.

For more information, visit the party's web site (http://www.mainegreens.org). Inquiries can be sent to info@mainegreens.org .


• MICHIGAN (http://www.migreens.org) The Green
Party of Michigan, at its statewide meeting on April 19 in Romulus, unanimously agreed on ten men and nine women to serve as delegates to the Green Party's 2008 presidential nominating convention in Chicago, July 10-13.

Elections co-ordinator John Anthony La Pietra announced the results of a statewide membership poll taken to bind the delegates' votes on the first ballot in Chicago. Former Georgia Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney received 64%, earning 13 delegates. Consumer advocate Ralph Nader (who announced an independent campaign in February) finished second with 17% of the vote and three delegates. Kent Mesplay of California and Kat Swift of Texas earned one delegate each; one vote in the delegation will go to the convention uncommitted.

The poll also invited party members to list their preferences beyond first choice. Mr. La Pietra reported detailed alternative results (counted using instant-runoff voting and approval voting) which delegates may use to help determine their votes after the first ballot in Chicago.


• Statewide meetings were also held by the Mountain Party in West Virginia (http://www.mtparty.org) and the North Carolina Green Party (http://www.ncgreenparty.org). Reports from these meetings will be published soon.


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
• Links to Green Presidential Candidates' web
sites
http://www.gp.org/committees/pcsc/index.shtml
• 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
• Green Party ballot access page
http://www.gp.org/2008-elections
• 2008 Green National Convention: Live Green,
Vote Green
http://www.gp.org/2008-elections/index.shtml
• Media credentialing
http://www.gp.org/committees/media/kit.shtml

Candidates for the Green Party's 2008
presidential nomination:
• Jesse Johnson, http://www.jesse08.org
• Cynthia McKinney, http://www.runcynthiarun.org
• Kent Mesplay, http://www.mesplay.org
• Kat Swift, http://www.voteswift.org


~ END ~

Green Mayor Brings Open Government to Greenwich, NY

This comes to us from GP.org

David Doonan was considering a run for public office last year, but not necessarily for Mayor. But when then Mayor Chris McCormick, was quoted in the local paper as saying "things are easier to get done when the public doesn't show up" Doonan knew he had to run. "That was really the turning point for me". Doonan said, "People felt like they were shut out of the process, that decisions were being made without public input". Doonan made Open Government the central issue of his campaign. It turns out that was the right focus. Doonan won the election with more than 70 percent of the vote. The incumbent, running for a Trustee position, garnered only 8 percent.

Since taking office on April 7th, Mayor Doonan has already lived up to his promise to make Greenwich, NY's government more open and accountable. He has instituted video taping of all Village Council meetings which will then be available on-line. He's also added a Mayors report so that the public knows what he does and what he is responsible for. Doonan, a freelance web designer (Doonan is webmanager for the Green Party of the United States), maintains a list of his clients on his campaign website. "Many elected officials in NY who have second jobs do not disclose who their clients are, leaving the potential for graft. Publishing my client list is one way to ensure transparency when it comes to awarding village contracts. This is one way to counter the traditional power structure".

Doonan says that building community participation and public service were central to his campaign and to his job as Mayor. "If I had won the Mayor's race, but had not persuaded others to step up and run for office, I would have considered it a failure. But I got two people to run, and they are now serving with me as Village Trustees". He's also convinced community members to join the zoning board of appeals.

Besides winning the Mayor's race, Doonan's campaign had the added benefit of creating a new Green Party local which meets monthly.

When asked what advice he has for prospective Green Candidates, Doonan stresses the need to focus on local issues that effect the community you're running in. "Not that you should hide from the larger issues, I kept a 'Bring the Troops Home' sign in my yard during my entire campaign, but find out what the local issues are. You won't win if you don't address local concerns. "Also, let them know who you are. My race was officially non-partisan, but I campaigned with a Green Party button the whole time. I never shied away from the fact that I was a Green Party member, the webmanager for the Green Party, and also a member of the IWW".

Doonan included a union bug at the bottom of his website. He thinks it is particularly important for Greens to include union bugs on their campaign materials. "If we want to get labor union endorsements, we need to show that we support organized labor".

Doonan received financial support for his campaign from both the GPUS Coordinated Campaign Committee's campaign grant program and the Green Party of New York.