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Hot off the press
Greens say Bush should be removed from Fla. Ballot
by Green Pages Staff
Green Party members across the U.S. are supporting the demand from Florida
Greens that President George W. Bush be removed from the Florida ballot in
accord with state election law.
Florida Republicans missed the Sept. 1 filing deadline to place Mr. Bush on the
state ballot, but the Democrats are refusing to hold them to state election
rules.
Meanwhile, Democrats have used technicalities to attempt to deny Ralph Nader his
Reform Party line on the Florida ballot.
The Green Party of the United States nominated David Cobb and Pat LaMarche at
the party's 2004 convention in Milwaukee in June, but Greens have also defended
the right of Nader and running mate Peter Camejo, running as independents (with
Reform Party ballot lines in several states), to have their names on state
ballots, especially in the face of efforts by Democratic Party operatives in
many states to obstruct them.
"Florida Democrats are giving Mr. Bush a free pass, while working to block
Ralph Nader's access to the ballot," said Sarah Steiner, chair of the Green
Party of Florida. "Democrats and Republicans have a 'gentlemen's agreement'
to exempt each other from election rules while holding the rest of us to the
letter of the law. Either we hold Democrats and Republicans to the same rules as
everyone else, or democracy and fair elections are a sham."
"Democratic and Republican election supervisors frequently use
technicalities to keep Green Party candidates off the ballot," said Susan
Metz, Green candidate for State Assembly from the 57th District in Brooklyn, New
York.
Metz was denied her ballot line despite having enough petition signatures
because she filed the required certificate of acceptance one business day late.
She is challenging the decision.
Florida Democratic Party chair Scott Maddox defended his party's refusal to make
an issue of Republicans' failure to meet the deadline for presidential
candidates: "To keep an incumbent president off the ballot in a swing state
the size of Florida because of a technicality, I just don't think would be
right." (St. Petersburg Times, Sept. 11, 2004)
"Democrats have much more to fear from a 2004 Bush victory than from third
party candidates," said Florida Green Party spokesperson Julia Aires.
"Apparently, Democratic politicians and officials would rather see Bush
reelected than tolerate a ballot with candidates outside the two major
parties."
Cobb, LaMarche call for universal health care
Reacting to news that the cost of employer-provided health insurance rose by a
double- digit percentage for the fourth year in a row, Green presidential and
vice presidential candidates David Cobb and Pat LaMarche, said a national
single-payer health insurance plan would control costs and save taxpayers money.
"We have a health care crisis in this country," Cobb said. "Over
25 percent of the adults in this country have no health insurance, and for the
rest of the people who do, health insurance costs are rising five times faster
than their wages. A single-payer health insurance plan would control costs, save
taxpayers money and, most importantly, provide health insurance for
everyone."
"The whole system needs to be rebuilt. Our present health insurance schemes
are ineffectual and corrupt," LaMarche said.
"The poverty rate is rising steadily and health insurance costs are going
up. The only thing not going up is wages. And what little job creation we've
seen is in temporary employment and minimum wage jobs; the kind of employment
which either doesn't offer health insurance or pays so little that people
employed in these fields can't afford it on their own.
"Meanwhile, insurance companies post record profits and make their
executives the highest paid people in America. It's time to cut the fat from the
budget and provide health care coverage for everyone."
A recent study of health care costs found that 31 cents of every dollar spent on
health care in the United States pays administrative costs, nearly double the
rate in Canada, which has a national singlepayer insurance plan.
Back to Fall 2004
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