The Association of State Green Parties

Media Advisory:
MORE GREEN CANDIDACIES AND VICTORIES, AS GREENS PREPARE TO BECOME A NATIONAL PARTY.

Wednesday, July 24, 2001


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Contacts:
Nancy Allen, Media Coordinator 207-326-4576, nallen@acadia.net 
Scott McLarty, Media Coordinator 202-518-5624, scottmclarty@yahoo.com

More Green Candidacies and Victories as Greens Prepare to Become a National Party.  

Green candidates and activists offer the only alternative, as Democrats refuse to challenge the Bush White House on important issues.

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- On the eve of a national meeting in which state Green Parties from all over the U.S. are expected to approve the filing of Federal Election Commission papers for national committee status, at least one hundred Greens have already announced their candidacies for public office in 2001 elections.

"Green candidates are winning because voters know we stand for the health of the environment, quality universal health care, global and local democracy, living wages, challenging corporate privileges and hand-outs -- and that we don't accept corporate contributions," said Nancy Allen, media coordinator for the Association of State Green Parties (ASGP). 

"Why have Democrats grown silent on the disenfranchisement of so many voters, especially people of color, in 2000?," asked Steve Schmidt, who chairs the Green Platform Committee. "Why did no Democratic Senator -- not one progressive Democratic senator -- stand up in support of the Black Caucus's challenge to Bush's victory? Why don't they put up a fight against many of Bush's most damaging actions without compromising in the interests of so-called bi-partisanship?"

The previous record for Green candidates in an odd-numbered year was 95 in 1999. The previous high for candidates in any year was 2000, with 277 Green candidates. Most state and federal offices are contested in even-numbered years, hence the higher totals for those years. Greens have already won 16 races (more than half the races in which Greens participated) in calendar year 2001. Recent wins include John Halle, newly
elected Alderman in New Haven, Connecticut, and Nancy Pearlman, elected to the Los Angeles Community College Board District.

Democrats, say Greens, offered little resistance to President Bush's tax cut gift to the wealthy, working out a $1.35 billion cut instead of Bush's proposed $1.6 billion cut. 'Liberals' like Hillary Clinton voted for the Bankruptcy Bill favoring credit card firms over Americans whose budgets are destroyed by job loss or medical bills. At a Democratic Leadership Council summit on July 17, leading Democrats agreed not to
challenge President Bush on many policies.
Greens note that many of Bush's worst policies had precedents during the Clinton-Gore years. The Clinton White House sabotaged global warming negotiations at the Hague conference in November, 2000; ordered a ban on U.S. funds for overseas abortions; sought no auto fuel efficiency standards; favored national missile defense; enacted Plan Columbia; and delayed action for eight years before signing an order on arsenic in
drinking water just before Bush took office.

ASGP - 2
Clinton and most Democrats also promoted NAFTA, WTO, and other corporate globalization pacts,
which Greens have protested because of their unelected power to overrule environmental, labor, and human rights protections and devastate local economies. More recently, Greens spoke out against the G8 summit and ensuing police violence in Genoa and called for "global democracy," while most Democrats remained silent. 

"The Democrats and Republicans aren't identical. But as the Democrats have retreated further and
further from populist principles, they've given Republicans the license to move to even greater extremes," added Ms. Allen. 

"That's why more Greens are winning more elections now. We're not beholden to corporate interests. We want to do better than represent voters -- we want Americans to have the democratic power to speak for themselves, to strengthen civic participation. You won't hear that kind of subversive talk from Democrats or
Republicans!"

The annual meeting of the ASGP will take place at La Case de Maria in Santa Barbara, California, from July 27 to 29. ASGP will vote on filing papers with the FEC, establishing the national "Green Party of the United States." ASGP, which organized last year's national convention in Denver at which Ralph Nader and Winona LaDuke were nominated for President and Vice President, currently functions as a state-based confederation.

"The two major parties, with their stranglehold on American democracy, should see this development [filing for national party status with the FEC] as a threat," added Mr. Schmidt. "For those who support the ideals and political goals of the Greens, it's cause for celebration."


MORE INFORMATION:

Current list of Green candidates 
http://www.gp.org/patience.html 

Green victories so far in 2001 
http://www.feinstein.org/greenparty/electionreport2001.html 

Information on ASGP filing with FEC 
http://www.greenparties.org/fec/fec.html

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