Green Party candidates share their thoughts
compiled by David McCorquodale, Green Party of Delaware
Why do you belong to the Green Party?
The overwhelming response of the candidates was tied to the Ten Key Values of the Green Party as being the reason these candidates belong to it. G. Scott Deshefy, candidate for Congress in Connecticut, summarizes, ìI belong to the Green Party because its progressive key values and national platform are in line with my philosophies and ecological instincts and training. Moreover, the positions are there for the electorate to see. No one really knows the Democratic or Republican agendas, other than making election and reelection their priority at the expense of solving our problems and at the expense of the American people.î
Duane Roberts, candidate for the U.S. Senate in California, mentions another important point is that the Green party is a ballot-qualified party. ìUnlike other left-leaning political parties, the Greens have succeeded in exporting their model to a number of different states and have maintained a visible nationwide presence.î
Why havenít you joined the Democratic or Republican Party?
What is wrong with the political system as it is currently set up?
The overwhelming sentiment of the candidates polled for this survey is that the Democratic and Republican Parties are no longer serving the interests of people, but rather are bought off by corporate interests. Both parties ìare owned by big business, and no longer represent the interests of ordinary Americans. Legislation appears to be written in favor of mega-profit rather than the well-being of the people. The two majors have sold the myth of ëbi-partisanshipí as being the only way to address the problems we face in our country, when in actuality that is one of the biggest problems facing the country. Diversity, fresh ideas, and non-allegiance to corporations and political machinery is the ONLY thing that is going to bring this nation back from the edge of ruinî, says Ken Adler, candidate for U.S. Congress from Arkansas.
The two “Titanic” parties will say what they need to say to get votes, and when elected they will do a little for regular people, but the Titanic parties will not alienate their corporate sponsors, said Laura Wells, gubernatorial candidate in California.
Bill Balderston, running for Insurance Commissioner of California, takes a more caustic view of the situation: ìI belong to neither the elephants or the jackasses because both represent a view of the world, reinforced to an extreme in recent years, that places the interests of the corporate community above any crumbs that they provide for the vast percentages of working people and small business owners. While the GOP depends on a populist right, which now extends beyond the evangelical agenda and is quasi-fascistic, the Dems continue to mesmerize progressive forces, even while they prioritize bailing out banks and other financial/real estate interests, and put forward a neo-liberal approach to public education (I am a long-time teacher) and health care and no strong stand of environmental degradation. As a union leader and activist, I am especially incensed by the subservient role that most of the labor bureaucracy plays as regards the Democrats, even while maintaining they are still fighting for progressive goals.î
Some candidates noted the disillusionment of having been former Democrats. Dave Bosserman, running for a non-partisan seat on a Washington, D.C. advisory council, said, ìI was a member of the Democratic Party when I lived in Virginia, just across the Potomac River from DC. I moved to DC in 1985 and found the Democratic Party in control of a dysfunctional city. So I looked about for a better party. I found it in the DC Statehood Party which emerged from the civil rights movement in 1969/70. DC is still dysfunctional with elected officials working for outside moneyed interests instead of DC residents.î
Adds Deshefy, ìAfter years as a municipally elected democrat and a short stint in the Connecticut Party to support Lowell Weicker, I have been a registered Green for over 20 years (the first in Lebanon, CT). It is the only party banner I would carry in a campaign for office.î
Why are you running for office as a Green?
This question evoked a mix of responses from the earnest to the humorous and philosophical. Ben Emeryís seem to encapsulate the overall Green sentiment: ìI share the outrage that a vast majority of Americans have about our current situation. We need concerned everyday Americans who understand everyday issues representing us in Washington DC. Our government has failed us but not in the way we hear about in the mainstream media. It has failed us because ëWe the Peopleí have been sending representatives to Washington DC for decades who believe in getting out of the way and letting the free market correct and regulate itself. We have seen where that leads us. Why Iím running? I guess a quote by Mahatma Gandhi sums it up. ëYou must be the change you want to see in the worldí.î
Ross Frankel wants to pave a way for Greens: ìTo open the door for fellow serious Green professionals in government. To be a catalyst for an ethical Green political machine. I want to further the cause of serious, realistic, pragmatic, down-to-earth Green solutions to the existing impasse of the ëRed & Bluesí.î
Similarly, Lisa Green wants to set a larger example for others to follow: ìTo be a voice for changing our behavior, and as an example of what must be done. Too many of us have checked out of the bureacratic processes where a select few that do not represent our best interests are currently in control. Women especially have not wanted to assume much representation in the political spectrum but to get back in balance we must have more women in office. My candidacy sets an example, and engages other people to act in a variety of ways instead of just looking the other way or feel hopeless. I remind people that we must get active politically and replace those that do not represent our values, our beliefs, of equality and balance with each other on earth.î
Duane Roberts sees his candidacy as a direct challenge to the status quo: ìI’m running because I’m fed up with the Wall Street billionaires who are literally robbing the working people of this country blind. I’m using this campaign as a vehicle to raise the level of expectations; that people can get what they want if they are willing to fight for it. We can have a single-payer health care system. We can have tuition-free public university education for all students. We can end all overseas wars. Power concedes nothing without a demand and if millions of people organize with one another to stand up and fight the system, anything is possible.î
Similarly Bill Balderston is running for Insurance Commissioner because ìit is a key platform to challenge the general role of these parasitic insurance institutions, especially as regards health care, but also around auto insurance (which also should function as a single-payer system) home insurance, et al. The Anthems and AIGs of this world must be made to pay for the pain and suffering they have caused. It also allows me to use this campaign as a vehicle to help build mass movements, around health care, housing, immigrant rights and others.î
Gray Swing, candidate for Congress in Colorado humorously concludes that he is running for the same reason that Mick Jagger went down to the Chelsea Drugstore – ìto get my fair share of abuse.î
What are key issues and goals in your campaign?
The range of topics span from localized issues to global problems which these Green candidates have a clear plan to address. For all Greens a driving force behind their running for office is to get the Green message out.
Where do you think the party will be in ten years?
This question evoked answers ranging from confident in the partyís growth to doubtful that it would grow at all. All seem to believe that they must continue to work towards the development of the party.
On the tongue-in-cheek pessimistic end of the spectrum was again Gary Swing, who opined the Green Party could be found ìin FEMA detention camps.î Expressing a similar downbeat sentiment, Curtis added, ìSame place, small and struggling, but stubborn and fighting the good fight.î Ross Frankel chastises a certain tendency extant in the party: ìDead if we don’t act as a serious political party and political machine: engaging in and promoting pragmatic and realistic solutions that the everyday person can grasp and support! We’ve got to stop thinking of ourselves as primarily a rag-tag, motley gaggle of wing-nuts, radicals, and part-time volunteers.î
More representative of most candidatesí opinions was Jeremy Cloward, candidate for U.S. Congress from California, who said: ìThe party will either continue to grow, remain the same, or begin to fade over the next 10 years (this is true prima-facie). It will be up to us.î In the same vein, Scott Laugenour, candidate for state representative in Massachusetts adds, ìIf I and other candidates are elected or do well, the party will be stronger in ten years.î Dennis Spisak, candidate for Governor of Ohio, notes: ìI believe the Green Party will become the major opposition party to the Democrats and Republicans and become the true party of Progressive Liberals.î Wolman extends this expressed sentiment into a necessity: ìThe Greens must join forces with independents and all progressives in order to get people with our values into office.î
Jay Sweeney believes: ìThe Green Party has seen some ups and downs over the last ten years and I expect we will see more of the same over the next ten years. However, I predict the Green Party will be here. I do expect to see growth in the party in that time. While the 2008 presidential election year saw defection from the Green party, I think the failure of the Obama administration to promote a progressive agenda will move more people to the Green Party.î Bill Balderston expresses hope that ìGreen Party will, in ten years, have a much deeper root in many local governments and communities, including especially in communities of color.î
G. Scott Deshefy has an encompassing vision of the future, based on the success of a recent lawsuit in Connecticut: ìUnfortunately, we do not have the most critically thinking electorate in America, but the seething anger with Democrats and Republicans alike in 2010 suggests that the time has come for progressive and significant change to the systemic failures which plague America and the global ecology. In CT, the Green Party sued the state over campaign finance legislation which denied third party candidates freedom of speech under the Constitution. We have won that law suit, thanks to a landmark decision by Judge Underhill, who concluded in his decision that there are no major and minor parties under the constitution, only parties. In ten years, I expect the Green Party to have the same support as other parties without the blind allegiance, which enables the Dems and Reps to delude their supporters election cycle after election cycle, abusing them politically but getting their votes in November by promising a clean slate and cessation of abuse which never comes. The American people are demanding a divorce from the two-party system. They will get it in November with Green candidates, and they will seek the truth from Green visionaries and Green leadership through the distant future. The political landscape changes in 2010, and it is a Green vista ahead.î