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| Thursday July 24, 2008 | Archives | Contact Us | Editorial Policy | Masthead | Our Mission | Photos | Submissions | ||||
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Groundbreaking presidential campaign goes into overtime! As we write this, it’s two weeks after Election Day and the 2004 Green Party presidential campaign is still going strong. On November 5, just three days after John Kerry quickly conceded defeat in an election which was once again marred by numerous voting irregularities, Green Party presidential candidate David Cobb called for an investigation of reports of voting fraud and voter suppression in Ohio. The response to this call was overwhelming. Cobb-LaMarche campaign staff were inundated with information from people in Ohio and elsewhere about voting rights violations and requests that we demand a recount of the vote in Ohio. On November 11, our campaign announced that we would seek a recount in Ohio if we could raise the required filing fee of $113,600. Donations began flooding the www.votecobb.org website. Within four days, we had raised the filing fee—mostly in donations ranging from $10 to $50—and begun examining the daunting logistics of filing for a recount in each of Ohio’s 88 counties. We also started a new fundraising and organizing effort, this one to amass a small army of volunteers to monitor and oversee the actual recount process. Ironically, after laboring in the shadows of the presidential campaign, this effort put the Green Party center stage in the post-election period and demonstrated our unique and consistent commitment to voting rights, electoral reforms and the democratic process. Of course, it was the general election presidential campaign that put Cobb-LaMarche and the Green Party in this position. And despite a very positive and groundbreaking campaign, it was, as the mainstream press reminded us on a number of occasions, not an easy year to be Green. Many Greens felt it was more important to vote against Bush than to support the Green Party presidential ticket. Other Greens supported our former presidential candidate, Ralph Nader, who ran this year under a patchwork banner of ballot lines and as the nominee of the Reform Party. Despite these formidable obstacles, we conducted a serious and wide-ranging campaign, preserved the identity of the party, articulated its message on critical issues, and positioned the Green Party to build towards greater strength for future presidential campaigns.
What we actually accomplished in the 2004 presidential/vice-presidential campaign looks quite different from what appears if you just look at the vote total. Our campaign showed that a true party-building campaign is about building the grassroots. Furthermore, if you consider the difference between running a campaign or staying out of the race altogether (as some suggested we do), you realize in a spectacular way the achievements of our 2004 campaign. The Green Party, in spite of all odds, not only preserved itself and positioned itself for future effective presidential campaigns, but also broke new ground for growth at all levels in the years to come. And now, with the Ohio recount still looming, the Green Party stands on center stage. The last chapter of this 2004 adventure has yet to be written. Longtime Greens Blair Bobier and John Rensenbrink, are, respectively, Media
Director and Senior Policy Advisor for the Cobb-LaMarche campaign. |
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