| Green Party Committees:
Presidential Campaign Support (PCSC) |
Reply by Kent Mesplay, to the GPUS Outreach and
exploratory questionnaire for the 2012 GPUS presidential nomination
received February 7, 2011
1. Are you interested in seeking the Green Party 2012 presidential
nomination? Are you considering seeking the nomination, but have
not yet made up your mind? What factors are you taking into consideration?
Yes, I am interested in obtaining the Green Party 2012 presidential
nomination.
2. What do you believe the goals should be of the 2012 GPUS presidential
campaign? If you were the GPUS presidential nominees, how would
your campaign work to achieve them? (Will your campaign succeed?)
In the 2004 presidential campaign I earned respect for my rather
unusual assertion that we need to run to win, without apology
to other political parties. I still believe this is the proper
approach
for a presidential campaign, although I acknowledge realistic
challenges such as ballot access constraints, denied access to
debates, difficulties
with funding and media access, to name a few. In the 2008 campaign
I drove to Arizona and helped collect signatures and inspire
locals who then worked hard to get that state back on the ballot.
In general,
independent party presidential candidates must inspire party
members and would-be voters while doing the less glamorous work
such as
supporting local candidates and building the party. With the
support and cooperation of active Greens at the local, state
and national
levels, I promise to inspire through engagement in presidential
debates, to perspire by being as active on the campaign
trail as funding will allow, and to help organize the run into
actual party-building activities. Our campaigns succeed by encouraging
people to live
lives of less consumption and of greater local community connection.
3. Please list five issue areas that you feel are most important
and what would you do about them. (Who are you?)
We seek good governance. Basic physical security is important.
As an emergency shelter manager for the county of San Diego,
California, I see a need for people to be better prepared for
emergencies.
I think in terms of shorter and longer-term emergencies. Everyone
needs to have five gallons of potable water on hand. We also
need to grow food everywhere we can and to teach citizens that
community
gardens are patriotic (in contrast to Senate Bill 510). Health
care, including dental care, needs to be taken out of the for-profit
sector. Single Payer Healthcare is urgently needed, especially
in light of anticipated medical stressors attributed to rapid
climate change (sudden vector infestations, opportunistic diseases,
etc).
I am also a self-taught expert in energy issues. I know that
by adjusting our lifestyles and improving energy efficiency we
can
become an energy-independent nation without resorting to nuclear
energy. Another issue that I believe strongly about is fair treatment
of indigenous people. World-wide, native peoples are besieged
by an onslaught of injustice and
disenfranchisement that does not represent progress. I
intend to work closely with Native American tribes, helping give
them voice to
grievances against Uncle Sam, with the goal being the restoration
of self-reliance and dignity. As Ralph Nader said, Democracy
is a powerful problem-solving tool. We must use current
communication tools and methods to work around our government
for the good of
the people and the environment. The Internet must remain free
to evolve as a vital communication method. Until we can dissolve
the
legal fiction that a corporation is a person, and until we can
end lobbying-as-bribery, we are unlikely to find worthwhile solutions
to our water, food, energy and social justice concerns coming
out of Washington-and-Company.
4. What parts of the GPUS platform* do you feel most closely
aligned with? What parts do you disagree with, if any? Are there
parts
you would improve upon and how? (Who are we?)
Decentralization and re-localization are important, as this strengthens
local community and quality of life. As a California Delegate
to the National Committee of the Green Party of the United States
for the past six years, I have participated as a member voting
on Green matters. I very much recognize and believe that the
Green
Party represents the best hope for our planet to enact good governance,
at home and abroad.
5. What in your background qualifies you to be a credible presidential
candidate? What assets would you bring to your campaign in addition
to those already existing within the Green Party? (What do you
have to offer?)
I have participated in well over a dozen presidential debates
and panel discussions, which is more than most candidates in
any party.
David Cobb, our 2004 nominee, said to me, If I may, I have
to compliment you on how you have grown as a candidate twice
during that campaign trail. After the final presidential debate
at the convention in Milwaukee, I was approached on the street
by Ross Mirkarimi, our media liaison, who said the press wanted
to know who won the debate. He told them I did. This was at the
time of the Nader/Cobb clash. People found my approach agreeable
and believed in my message. Afterward, many people shook my hand,
saying they would have voted for me, but they knew it was going
to come down to a choice between Nader and Cobb. Greg Gerritt,
former GPUS secretary, noted that I actually gained delegates
after the first round of voting, ascribing the feat to how I
conducted
myself during the campaign. After the San Francisco presidential
debate in 2008, the California organizer for one of the other
candidates thanked me for being brilliant and committed. I
am familiar with Green issues and political processes, and I
have gained the respect and trust of many key Greens,
even though I am not famous and have not held political office.
I think
its fair to say that I have a healing, unifying, non-confrontational
approach.
6. Presidential campaigns are legally independent entities from
the political party whose nomination they received. Yet most
successful political campaigns meld candidate and party synergistically.
If
you were the GPUS nominee, how would you envision that working
relationship? (How can we work together?)
One way for the nominee and party to work together is for the
candidate to share mailing lists. In the past, one high-ranking
candidate
was reluctant to do this. Although I am in agreement with the
sharing approach, in practice I have not yet formed any mailing
lists:
e-mail or otherwise. I intend to not be such a do-it-yourselfer
this time around. I would benefit greatly as a candidate by being
able to run not as an expensive hobby on weekends, but by being
supported in taking time off work to really get out there. Also,
I recognize that I need to put more energy into fund-raising,
whereas in the past I have focused on speech-writing, responding
to inquiries,
and making it to every debate that I could. The $11,000 of my
remaining campaign debt is money owed me. Namely, I loaned the
campaign funds
and reported this to the FEC. My plan, this time, is to focus
on California and the western states in the primaries as this
saves
on transportation costs and jet-fuel emissions. At the level
of GPUS nominee I would travel where the national committee saw
fit so
as to best represent and strengthen the Green party and to teach
the public our values.
7. Do you believe that an independent party
like the Greens can succeed in the US? How would you define such
success? How can it happen? (Will we succeed?)
Success is in transformation of society toward being more just
and sustainable. The Green Party is the electoral arm of the
environmental movement, with green solutions having positive
implications for
peace, security, diversity, justice and quality of life. At present
the political system is so rigged, fixed or broken
that a Green presidential victory seems improbable. We are by
design kept out of debates and the positive exposure our message
brings.
When Greens are in debates with other parties we do quite well,
gaining support in the polls. Our party success is rooted in
local races: candidates for water board or county commissioner
or dog
catcher, not in the high-hanging fruit. Unfortunately, ballot
access is tied to independent performance in specified (not by
us) state-wide
races. When there is no Green ballot line its pretty hard
for Greens to vote, so we are somewhat forced into running higher
ticket races just to maintain ballot access. Many registered
Greens only hear of and from Greens during election cycles when
they see their party on the ballot.
The red/blue political system is by design exclusionary and corrupt.
For example, the Commission on Presidential Debates is a corporation
that is run by major party operatives intent at stifling actual
trans-party debate. Lobbying is legalized bribery. Because of
the influence of money in politics even the greenest Democrat
would
commit political suicide to speak about actual solutions to our
societal problems: dont bail out banks, let them fail;
grow Grameen-style micro-lending organizations; cut military
spending,
thereby threatening the bloated military-industrial-congressional
complex; convince people to not buy so much crap that they dont
need; call out advertising for what it largely is: false; support
organic local agricultural and food-as-medicine over big-pharma;
reform prisons from being privatized money-makers based on head-counts,
to being actual places of healing and turning peoples lives
around. The list goes on. In general, we seek a higher baseline
standard of living rooted in community,
volunteerism, and insulated from economic exploitation. Legislation
that bolsters local say within local neighborhoods
is needed to counterbalance the independence-stripping predatory
behavior of large corporations. The success of the green transformation
depends on Greens and greens: people who are registered and politically
active (Greens) and people who organize locally to do good work
(greens) and who perhaps do not vote at all. Politically active
Greens also tend to be local green activists. There are over
200 elected Greens in the U.S. Many people are green without
knowing it or declaring it formally and politically.
8. There is some interest within the Green Party of having the
party's nominee run together with a Green Cabinet, that would
feature prospective cabinet members and federal agency heads
that would
serve in your government, should you be elected president. Such
an approach could demonstrate what a Green government might be
like and would do so during the election, promoting transparency.
It could expand the number of people campaigning, with Cabinet
members on the road and in the press in addition to the nominees.
What do you think of this approach? Who might hold positions
in a Green Cabinet? How would you see your candidacy interacting
with
those individuals during the campaign? (How might we connect
the dots?)
This would be useful, although Greens cannot rely upon there
being thoughtful people in the media. If the approach would be
to side-step
the expected, anticipated methods of delivery, then this could
work dramatically well (through You-tube, etc) and could be a
great way for people to organize to be, themselves and together,
that
government of, by and for the people that we currently lack.
The Internet, unfettered, is an important tool for Democracy.
I have been working for many years with an older woman who does
not vote and will never vote, but who spends twelve hours a day
at her computer linking experts outside politics in many fields
worldwide. I formed a business, a sole proprietorship for now,
so that we can advance, largely through volunteerism, solutions
in many key areas. In other words, imagine a world in which people
work together, especially for our common survival. Such people,
once networked and connected, will lead to genuinely solve our
problems such as energy production and use, waste treatment and
disposal, prison reform that is cost-effective and works, immigration
reform, economic reform, environmental security, the most appropriate
food production and essential plants for medicine. Solutions
to climate change are also solutions that strengthen local resilience,
independence and sustainability. Did you know that with current
and predicted advances in automation less than 30% of the world
labor force is necessary to support our current way of life?
What about the other 70% who are not necessary?
Who talks about them? How do corporatists who are addicted to
sell, sell and sell react to calls for demand reduction?
Yes, we need a Green Cabinet. One is already largely formed.
We cannot wait for our politicians to lead. I will provide details
later, once I clear it with the scientists and other cultural
creatives with whom I am linked.
9. Can we publish your reply on the GPUS web site in
a public section reserved for such responses?
Yes, please do. I can be reached at 760.230.6591
Kent P. Mesplay, Ph.D. Feb. 6th, 2011, Encinitas, CA
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