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Green hopefuls build party
Campaigns based on variety of objectives
By Eric Prindle
Green Party of New York State
As the close presidential election draws most of the media attention this year,
Greens are fighting the electoral front on a variety of fronts, running 323
candidates in the Nov. 2 elections as of press time.
Greens work to hold on to key seats
As a result of past victories and conversions, Greens have a number of
high-profile positions to defend this year.
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John Eder |
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First on the list is John Eder's seat in the Maine state legislature, the
first won by a Green in a general election (in 2002). Maine Democrats have
targeted Eder and last year ensured that new electoral districts would force him
to run against another incumbent. But having won approximately two-thirds of the
vote in his first election, Eder is still given a good chance to return to
office.
In San Francisco, the retirement of supervisor and 2003 mayoral candidate Matt
Gonzalez has made retaining his District 5 seat a top priority for the local
Green Party. This year's elections will be the first using the city's new
instant-runoff voting (IRV) system, in which voters can rank up to three choices
for each office, and that's exactly the number of Green candidates running.
The San Francisco Green Party has endorsed Ross Mirkarimi, Lisa Feldstein and
Susan King -- in that order -- in the hopes of turning out a bloc of votes that
will definitely go to a Green candidate and, with the help of voters who split
their tickets, holding on to Gonzalez's seat.
IRV "is changing the way that people run for office," according to
Green Party of the United States (GP-US) political director Brent McMillan. Many
candidates are campaigning together in the hope of winning the preferences of
each other's supporters.
Also in San Francisco, incumbent school board member Mark Sanchez, who like
Gonzalez joined the Green Party soon after being first elected in 2000, is
running for re-election, and with four seats in play, the local party has
endorsed fellow Green Jane Kim as well as Sanchez.
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Mark Sanchez. |
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In Sebastopol, Calif., the only current Green majority on a municipal council
has the potential to continue for another term. Craig Litwin, running for
re-election, hopes to be joined by Sam Pierce, who is running to replace
incumbent Sam Spooner. "if [Litwin and I] are successful, then we should be
the first Green majority city council to maintain that status into a third
election cycle," Pierce said. (Larry Robinson, who has another two years
left on his current term, holds the third Green seat on the five-member
council.)
In Hawaii County, Hawaii, District 6 councilmember Bob Jacobson is running for
reelection in a seat three different Greens have held for 10 of the last 12
years. Jacobson, first elected in 2002 to replace his wife, Julie, said the
Greens have been "getting elected in a conservative area because of the
quality of work and the ability to build coalitions."
In Santa Monica, Calif., eight-year councilmember Mike Feinstein faces a
challenge as he runs for re-election for the first time without the endorsement
of the powerful Santa Monicans for Renters' Rights (SMRR), some of whose leaders
were angry when Feinstein endorsed a fellow Green candidate over a Democratic
member of their slate in 2002. Feinstein got more votes than any other candidate
in his last election in 2000.
With at least 12 other Greens running for re-election this fall, the stakes are
high for local parties seeking to prove that they're building a lasting movement
behind their elected officials.
CCC identifies 12 for matching funds
Faced with their largest pool of applicants ever, the Coordinated Campaign
Committee (CCC) of the GPUS has selected 12 candidates to receive matching funds
in addition to the donor lists and organizational support the committee is
providing to a larger pool of 39 candidates.
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"I am mad as hell about the dismantling of 60 years of social
progress that's been done during this administration."
Maria Allwine, U.S. Senate candidate, Maryland
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Among the 12 targeted for matching funds are three Congressional candidates.
In California, Pat Driscoll is running against incumbent Democrat Robert Matsui
in District 5. According to Driscoll, Matsui "has swung to the right and
voted for the Iraq war, the Patriot Act, NAFTA, media consolidation, and
corporate special interests." McMillan said Driscoll has gotten about 29
percent support in the polls.
In Colorado, District 4 candidate Robert Kinsey is drawing attention to
incumbent Republican Marilyn Musgrave's sponsorship of the federal Marriage
Amendment and has gotten the endorsement of popular filmmaker Michael Moore.
According to McMillan, "The [Democratic Leadership Council] entered a
Democrat opponent at the filing deadline in order to spoil the Greens' chances
and then claimed disingenuously that it was the Green spoiling the Democrats'
chances." McMillan said Kinsey has polled as high as 34 percent.
In the District of Columbia, Adam Eidinger is running one-on-one against
incumbent Ray Browne for the district's "shadow" Congressional seat.
Different from the district's non-voting seat in the House of Representatives,
this position was created to advocate for statehood for the district.
In state legislative races, four candidates have drawn matching funds from
the CCC. In Rhode Island, Jeffrey Toste is making a second run for state senator
in District 5. In Connecticut, New Haven alderperson Joyce Chen, fresh from a
re-election victory, hopes to trade up to state representative in District 93.
Wisconsin's Tony Palmeri, running for state assembly member in District 54, said
he is running because "the Wisconsin legislature in the past decade has
been taken over by wealthy, corporate special interests with an interest in
rolling back the state's progressive tradition." Palmeri has been endorsed
by three former mayors and two current councilmember in the city of Oshkosh.
In Massachusetts, Carolina Johnson is running for state representative in the
25th Middlesex District with a focus on housing, alternative transit, women's
safety and democratic reform, according to campaign manager Steve Milder.
Toste, Chen and Johnson are all running one-on-one against Democratic
incumbents.
On the county level, the CCC is funding three supervisorial candidates. In
Illinois' Champaign County, Susan Rodgers and Zach Miller are running in
Districts 8 and 9, respectively, on a slate with District 7 candidate Ken Urban.
Rodgers and Miller, both college students, successfully fought off a Democratic
challenge to their ballot access petitions that questioned their residency,
winning a victory for student candidates.
In San Francisco, though the District 5 race may get the most attention, a Green
also hopes to pick up a supervisory seat in District 9. Immigrants' rights
attorney Renee Saucedo is running with the backing of the local Green Party
against Tom Ammiano, a former progressive mayoral candidate who critics say has
drifted to the right.
In Pima County, Ariz., a county where Green candidates have traditionally gotten
high vote percentages, Claudia Ellquist has been running hard for County
Attorney since the spring and was one of the first candidates approved for CCC
funds.
Finally, in Washington, D.C., GP-US Black Caucus co-chair Michele Tingling-
Clemmons is running for councilmember in District 7 with the CCC's financial
support. In a district where the incumbent has already lost the Democratic
primary, Tingling-Clemmons now faces two other newcomers for the post.
Congress provides a battleground for anti-war candidates
Buoyed by public sentiment against the war in Iraq but focusing on a broad range
of issues, Greens are running aggressively for federal office in many states.
In New York, a state with a large anti-war movement, Senator Charles Schumer's
vote -- which he still stands behind -- authorizing President Bush to wage war
on Iraq was the main reason two-time Socialist Party presidential candidate
David McReynolds, a retired organizer of the War Resisters League, was recruited
to run against him. With a low-profile Republican candidate in the race, Greens
hope for a large vote for McReynolds to send a message.
Likewise, South Carolina U.S. Senate candidate Efia Nwangaza is running as a
"Peace Candidate" and has made high-profile national appearances
opposing the war. In Maryland, Maria Allwine is running on her history as an
"anti-war, peace and justice activist" and also because she said she
is "mad as hell about the dismantling of 60 years of social progress that's
been done during this administration."
With 45 candidates running for U.S. Representative, Greens "are running the
strongest congressional campaigns that we have ever run," according to
McMillan.
The Green parties of California, Maryland, Michigan, Nebraska and South Carolina
are running their largest-ever slates of Congressional candidates.
Particularly notable is California, which has had ballot status since 1992 and
has never before run more than eight candidates for the House of
Representatives. This year, the party has 11 on the ballot as well as Terry
Baum, who ran a write-in campaign in the primary to oppose Democratic Minority
Leader Nancy Pelosi in District 8 and is challenging her disqualification from
the general election ballot before the U.S. Supreme Court.
In District 12, which like District 8 is based in progressive San Francisco, Pat
Gray is running against moderate Tom Lantos, who, according to Gray "is a
supporter of the war and the Patriot Act, but the people of the district are
opposed to both of these, and they are concerned with the rate of job loss and
the cuts in our social programs." Gray has been endorsed by Michael Moore.
In other states, Greens named a variety of motivations for their campaigns.
Carol Ann Rittenhouse, running in Wisconsin's District 6, said, "I believe
that our children will be paying for our lack of attention to basic matters such
as our huge deficit, the billion dollars a week that is spent for pre-emptive
poorly considered war and the lack of concern for the environment, jobs and
health," while Van Presley, running in Minnesota's District 8, identified
"giving people something to identify with" and "reclaiming the
language from the right wing" as among his top priorities.
| Greens Running for Selected
Public Offices
U.S. Senator
Jim Sykes, Alaska
Daryl Northrop, Iowa
Maria Allwine, Md.
David E. McReynolds, N.Y.
Theresa Keane, Ore.
Efia Nwangaza, S.C.
Craig Hill, Vt.
Mark B. Wilson, Wash.
U.S. Representative
Timothy A. Feller, Alaska
Pamela Elizondo, Calif.-1
Pat Driscoll, Calif.-5
Pat Gray, Calif.-12
Ray Glock-Grueneich, Calif.-17
Larry R. Mullen, Calif.-19
Stuart A. Bechman, Calif.-24
Eric J. Carter, Calif.-27
Philip Koebel, Calif.-29
Tom Lash, Calif.-46
Gary M. Waayers, Calif-50
Lawrence P. Rockwood, Calif.-53
Robert A. Kinsey, Colo.-4
Adam Eidinger, D.C.
Keith Salkowski, Md.-2
Patsy Allen, Md.-3
Theresa Mitchell Dudley, Md.-4
Bob S. Auerbach, Md.-5
Gregory J. Hemingway, Md.-6
Virginia T. Rodino, Md.-7
David J. Newland, Mich.-1
Harley Mikkelson, Mich.-5
Randall MacPhee, Mich.-6
Jason Seagraves, Mich.-7
Thomas Lavigne, Mich.-13
Lisa Weltman, Mich.-14
Jay Pond, Minn.-5
Van Presley, Minn.-8
Steven R. Larrick, Neb.-1
Dante Salvetierra, Neb.-2
Roy Guisinger, Neb.-3
Jose David Alcantara, N.J.-2
Joseph A. Fortunato, N.J.-8
Toy-Ling Washington, N.J.-10
Daryl M. Brooks, N.J.-12
Dorothy Schieber, Pa.-6
Greta Browne, Pa.-15
William R. Hagen, Pa.-16
Charles J. Steel, Pa.-19
Jim Dunn, S.C.-1
C. Faye Walters, S.C.-4
Patrick S. Diehl, Utah-1
Robert F. Losey, Wash.-9
Carol Ann Rittenhouse, Wisc.-6
Mike Miles, Wisc.-7
State Row Officers
Bob Kelleher, Governor, Mont.
Colleen Little Thunder, Lieutenant Governor, Mont.
Bern Haggerty, Lieutenant Governor, Wash.
Marakay J. Rogers, Attorney General, Pa.
James Marc Leas, Attorney General, Vt.
Paul Richmond, Attorney General, Wash.
Ben C. Price, Auditor General, Pa.
Paul Teese, State Treasurer, Pa.
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