| Greens |
While the races for the Democratic and Republican presidential nominations have drawn intense interest, the campaign for the Green Party nomination has attracted scant attention. The most prominent declared candidate is former Georgia Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney, who seemed to withdraw from consideration in September 2007 but then announced her candidacy on Dec. 16, 2007. Other candidates include Jesse Johnson, who was the 2004 gubernatorial nominee of the Mountain Party in West Virginia and has worked as an actor; Kent Mesplay, who ran in 2004 and works as an air quality inspector in San Diego County, California; and kat swift of Texas. Consumer advocate Ralph Nader, a candidate in 2000 and 2004, is subject of a draft effort launched in March 2007 (veteran New York Green Howie Hawkins is a leader in that endeavor). Nader, an Independent, was the Green Party's standardbearer in 2000, but failed to gain the party's nomination in 2004. Some Greens have had enough of Nader; another knock against him is that he has remained an Independent. Nader launched an exploratory committee at the end of January 2008. If the party chooses an obscure candidate, as they did in 2004 with David Cobb, it does not help much with party building.
There have been several candidate forums. The Presidential Campaign Support Committee organized a candidates forum at the party's National Committee meeting in Reading, Pennsylvania in July 2007 that drew a handful of candidates; both Ralph Nader and Cynthia McKinney also appeared at the National Committee meeting. The Northern California Green Presidential Debate held January 13, 2008 at the Herbst Theater/Veterans Memorial Building in San Francisco, California on January 13, 2008 drew Johnson, McKinney, Mesplay and Swift. Cindy Sheehan and former San Francisco Supervisor Matt Gonzalez co-moderated.
As with the major parties, state Green parties are choosing their delegates
to the national convention through a variety of methods including primaries,
caucuses, and state conventions. All told there are 836 delegate
positions. A temporary committee determined the formula for allocating
delegates based on four factors: membership numbers, campaign strength
(Green candidates/elected Greens), state voting strength (votes received
by Green candidates), and presidential voting strength (votes received
by the Green presidential nominee in 2004 or 2000).
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| www.jesse08.org | www.runcynthiarun.org | www.mesplay.org | votekat.org |
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| www.draftnader.org
See also www.naderexplore08.org |
kannforpresident.net
an administrative assistant from NYC; supports Nader. |
Presidential
Campaign Support Committee
Delegate
Apportionment Committee (temporary)
Article
by Greg Jan and Dana St. George (2004)
Note
1. In a January 12, 2007
e-mail, PCSC co-chair Phil Huckelberry wrote, "Discussions have only just
begun on things like the conduct of the nominating convention. I
can speak for many other people in saying that my hope is that all rules
discussions will be completed by mid-2007, instead of last time when we
were still voting on potential rules amendments at the convention itself."
Huckelberry elaborated on the committee's work, answering a couple of questions:
Question: In addition to the conduct of the nominating convention, what are other major things you will be addressing?
Strengthening the ability of individual state parties to conduct internal primary/preference processes; stepping up work on securing ballot access in states, especially those where we can petition in 2007; forging better lanes of communication between prospective candidates and state parties. We have found in the past that individual Greens have not had a good working knowledge of who the candidates for the nomination have been, and we increasingly see it as the role of the national party to help provide that knowledge.
Question: What is the most contentious or difficult issue facing the committee?
The most difficult issue
is trying to figure out where the line should be drawn between work of
the national party and work of the state parties. In general Greens
are highly disdainful of top-down systems and extremely defensive about
state party autonomy, but several state parties have expressed that they
were totally lost in 2004, and we can't let that happen again. The
real work of running a grassroots campaign happens at the local-state level;
national offices do not go out and place signs in people's yards.
Former
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| www.voxunion.com/jaredball | www.rotzler4prez.com |
-Alan Augustson, a political analyst, economist and management consultant from Chicago, started out as a candidate for President but decided instead to run for the U.S. House of Representatives in Illinois' 5th District.
-Jared Ball, a member of the DC Statehood/Green Party and an assistant professor of communications studies at Morgan State University in Baltimore, announced the end of his campaign and his support for Cynthia McKinney at a Green Party presidential debate in San Francisco on Jan. 13, 2008.
-Elaine Brown, who chaired the Black Panther Party from 1974-77 and in recent years has focused on "radical reform of the criminal justice system," withdrew from the Green Party presidential race and renounced her Green Party membership in a Dec, 28, 2007 statement.
-Nan Garrett, who was a candidate for Governor of Georgia in 2002, had also started a campaign but on Feb. 5, 2007 she posted this note on her website:
This past week, I was forced to choose between my job and running for President. At this time, my campaign's financial wherewithal is not able to "support" me, even if I was able to immediately transition to a full time campaign, so I am withdrawing from the race for the Green Party's nomination for President.-Rebecca Rotzler, Deputy Mayor of New Paltz and GP-US Co-Chair, was subject of a draft effort.I want to thank all the people who have supported me in entering this race and those who have listened, supported and counseled me in making this decision to withdraw. Although I still have dreams of running for President, it's not meant to be for now.
Work for Peace,
Nan Garrett
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| Kat for President in 2008
www.bexargreens.org/katforprez May 31, 2006 grab |
Draft Rebecca
Rotzler for President
www.rotzler4prez.com Sept. 6, 2006 |
|
Copyright © 2006, 2007, 2008 Eric M. Appleman/Democracy in Action |
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