Global
Greens History
2003 - U.S. Green Year in Review March-May
2003
By Mike Feinstein, Santa Monica, California
March 15: Green Home Alabama
Thirty Green
activists from across Alabama gathered in Birmingham
- the biggest meeting ever
of Alabama Greens - to formally organize the Alabama
Green Party. Attendees adoped
by-laws and picked a statewide coordinating committee, in
effect organizationally formalizing
a party that had first
formed
in 2000 during
the Nader/LaDuke
campaign.
With the growth
of
the Alabama Greens in 2003, combined
with two new Green city councilmembers in Florida and the
Mississippi Green gubernatorial campaign
of Sherman Lee Dillion,
Greens
are taking root in many places across the South. This
continues a trend of Greens'
growth to
all parts
of
the
country, from the party's early roots in the
Northeast, Midwest and California during the mid-to-late
1980s.
By the end of 2003, five local Alabama Green Party chapters
would be established across the state, and on July 3rd,
the Green
Party of the United States would
accredit the Alabama Greens Party as a full member on the
national level.
In 2000, the Alabama Green Party gathered over 50,00 valid
signatures of Alabama voters to put Ralph Nader and Winona
LaDuke
on the ballot for president and vice-president. Over 18,000
Alabamans cast their votes for Nader/LaDuke in 2000.
March 25: Rural New Mexico Green Town
Councilmember Advocates Local Economic Self-Reliance
Voters in the southwestern New Mexico town of
Silver City returned Gary Clauss to the
Town Council for a fourth
two-year term, resoundingly with 79.2% of the vote.
For Clauss, a primary issue facing his community is the
relationship between water and growth. Since the mid-1980s,
Silver City
has supplied water to outlying areas beyond its incorporated
boundaries, in effect – according to Claus - subsidizing
urban sprawl there.
Despite the fact that these unincorporated areas had
no sewer service, paved roads or street lighting, by
the 1990s
they
were growing rapidly. Meanwhile, the Town of Silver City
lost population. To reverse this trend, Clauss has challenged
water
subsidies and is also promoting a plan for local economic
self-reliance to renew Silver City’s town core.
Clauss brought economic advisor Ernesto Sirolli to town,
who promotes a people-centered, local entrepeneurship
vision for
economically distressed communities. Sirolli’s
well-received presentations placed emphasis on using
local resources
for economc renewal, rather than relying on outside capital,
technology and traditional economic growth.
April 1: Wisconsin
Greens Win Four City Council Seats
Wisconsin
Greens continued their strong tradition of success
in municipal races, winning
three city council seats in Madison and one in Racine
on April 1st. Incumbent Brenda
Konkel was joined in Madison by Austin
King and Brian
Benford on
the city’s Common Council.
Since
1998 - when the first Green was elected in Dane County, TheFour
Lakes Greens have
now won seven city council races, twelve county supervisor
races
and two races for school
board in Madison through April 2004.
Konkel - an affordable housing advocate - was re-elected
with 71% of the vote despite a well-funded, negative direct
mail
campaign against her by her developer opponent. King, a University of Wisconsin
student at the time he was elected, became the fourth
youngest U.S. Green ever to take elected office, at 21 years old.
He replaced fellow student (and Green) Todd Jarrell, who
was 22 when he was elected in 2002.
King campaigned on establishing a local minimum wage
and this came to fruition in March of 2004, when the
Common Council
established a municipal minimum wage
to reach $7.75 an hour by 2008. Prior to
his election in April 2003, Austin was a leader in the
campus anti-sexual assault movement and participated in
many campaigns
for social and economic justice."
Benford, a neighborhood and education activist, became
the fourth African-American Green City Councilmember in
the U.S.,
after Elizabeth
Horton Sheff (Hartford, CT),Natalie
Johnson Lee (Minneapolis, MN) and Chuck
Turner (Boston, MA).
In
Racine, 33 miles south of Milwaukee, Greens elected
their first Alderman, solar power advocate Pete Karas,
who quickly
gained a regional profile after taking strong
stands against plans for coal-fired power plants in the
area, advocating conservation and renewable energy in
their place.
April 4: Medea Benjamin,
Michelle Shocked and the U.S. Peace Movement go
on trial on Dr. Phil
Former
California Green U.S. Senate candidate Medea Benjamin appeared
with singer/songwriter Michelle
Shocked on
the Dr. Phil Show, with the topic being Iraq - not the
problems with
the invasion and occupation of Iraq, but the validity
of the anti-war movement and the manner of its protest.
According to many observers, Dr.
Phil cleverly baited Benjamin and Shocked with 'feel good 'therapeutic
language about good and evil, as he attempted to paint
U.S. motives and tactics above reproach, and to cast
the U.S. peace movement as well-intentioned, but unwitting
collaborators with the Enemy.
One example of that kind of protest was CODEPINK,
the new women’s’ peace
organization Benjamin helped
start together with Starhawk, Jodie Evans, Diane
Wilson and
approximately 100 other
women. They marched through the streets of
Washington, DC and set up for a four month vigil in front
of the White House.
There
are over 80 active CODEPINK communities around
the globe, forming
a worldwide network
of women and men committed to working for
peace and social justice. The
name CODEPINK plays on the Bush Administration’s
color-coded homeland security advisory system
that signals terrorist threats. While the Bush’s
color coded alerts are based on fear,
the CODEPINK
alert is based on compassion, and is a feisty
call for women and men to “wage peace.”
Unfurling
a banner right behind Rumsfeld, Benjamin
demonstrated
because members of the House committee
would not ask
Rumsfeld tough questions."
How many civilians would be killed? How
would they protect us against the backlash
of anti-Americanism? Why is this all about
oil? Why
is it coming up now? Can't we wait till after the elections? Why is the Bush
administration
stopping this inspection process? Why don't we put it back into
the hands
of
the U.N.
Security Council?"
May 1: Massachusetts
Greens Join in 400-year New England Tradition,
Win Town Meeting
Seats
In
Amherst, Massachusetts, incumbents Miriam Dayton, Frank
Gatti and Emily
Lewis were re-elected to Town
Meeting seats, and were joined
by Tom Flittie to
bring to 11 the number of Green-Rainbow
members
currently serving on the 255-member
body.
Amherst is one of 303 communities
in Massacusetts that maintain
still some
form of town meeting,
carrying on New England’s
nearly 400 year-old tradition.
The Town
Meeting body acts in an advisory capacity to
Amherst’s
Selectboard and in some cases has its own jurisdiction. Amherst’s
first Green elected to the
Town Meeting was Kate Harris in
2001. Twelve Greens were elected
in 2002, followed by four victories
in
2003.
May 7: Green and Youth revolution in
New Paltz
Greens swept to a historic
victory in the Hudson Valley
village of New Paltz, New York, winning
the
Mayoralty and two seats on the five
member Village
Board -- taking
progressive control of the Village
government.
Green Party member and housepainter Jason
West, 26,
was elected Mayor of the Village
of New Paltz, while Green Party
member, community organizer and single
mother Rebecca
Rotzler,
39, was elected to the Village Board of Trustees.
In addition,
independent Julia
Walsh, awas
also elected. A student at State University of New York
at New Paltz and prominent youth and student organizer,
Walsh
joined the Green Party that September, giving New York
their first ever Green Party majority and creating only
the third Green City Council majority in American history.
The three ran for office in May as candidates of both the Green
Party and the local Innovation Party. Mirroring the success
of Greens around the country, the three ran on an agenda tenants'
rights, affordable housing, environmental protection and open
government.
In 2004, West
made national headlines by presiding over more
than twenty gay marriages before a court injunction to prevent
him from continuing was ordered.
A Yupik Eskimo, Rotzler is the third elected Green who is Native
American. The other two are Cass Lake, Minnesota Mayor Elaine
Fleming (2002-present) and Della Coburn of the Kasaan Tribal
Council in Alaska (2001-2003)
Walsh joins UW Madison’s Austin King (22)
and Providence University’s David Segal (23) as the three young Green
students currently holding elected office. All three sit
on city councils.
May 27: Idaho Greens elected to School Boards
Demonstrating that Greens can win in the rural West, two
Idaho Greens won school board races within a span of six
days. On
May 27th Larry Baggett was
elected to the Lake Pend Oreille School District in
north Idaho’s Bonner County. On
June 2nd, Selene Hall swept to victory on the Plummer/Worley
School
Board in Benewah County.
Baggett campaigned for a more
open, accountable School Board, particularly regarding
District budgeting and finances.
Hall
vowed to stem her District’s high faculty turnover
rate by better engaging the community and faculty on
how to improve
school climate.
She also made bringing the community
into the process an overall theme of her campaign
The two victories are the third and fourth in Idaho Green history.
Previously in 1991 and 1995, David
Sawyer was elected Mayor
of Sandpoint, also in Bonner County.
May
27: Maine Green State Legislator passes first bill
Maine State House member John
Eder saw his first bill become law. Entitled “An
act to protect children from cancer causing chemicals”, it was passed as an “Emergency
Measure” with two-thirds approval of both the State
House and Senate, and then signed into law by the Governor.
Eder’s bill gave teeth to the State Department of Agriculture’s “Integrated
Pest Management Rules” for schools, by compelling the
Department to adopt a list of pesticides and chemicals that
would be prohibited for use on school grounds, and to work
with the State’s Department of Education to implement
it.
Eder became only
the second U.S.Green ever to be elected to a state legislature,
when in November 2002 he received 66 percent
of the vote in a head-to-head race with a Democratic
opponent in Portland's liberal West End