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- Newsgroups: talk.environment
- Path: sparky!uunet!destroyer!ncar!vexcel!dean
- From: dean@vexcel.com (Dean Alaska)
- Subject: More Green Election Results
- Message-ID: <1992Nov11.204911.25253@vexcel.com>
- Organization: VEXCEL Corporation, Boulder CO
- Date: Wed, 11 Nov 1992 20:49:11 GMT
- Lines: 159
-
- [Here is a more thorough update on Green election results]
-
- /* Written 10:30 am Nov 9, 1992 by gpusa@igc.apc.org in igc:green.general */
- /* ---------- "U.S. Green Election Results" ---------- */
-
-
- Green Party USA Press Release Third update; discard previous
- copies. PO Box 30208, Kansas City, MO 64112
- 1-800-257-7336
-
- For immediate release
-
- ***********************************************
- Greens win 560,000 votes in 1992, seat 11 candidates
- ***********************************************
-
- One year after official founding of the Green Party USA, Green
- Party members across the U.S. won 11 seats in local partisan and
- nonpartisan elections. Eighty Green candidates ran for national,
- state and local offices in 13 states: 15 for U.S. Congress and
- Senate; 28 for state houses; 22 for county and city offices; and
- 16 for other elected municipal and community positions. Green
- candidates polled over 560,000 votes for an average showing of 16%
- nationwide.
-
- Prior to the elections, Greens already held 50 seats in local
- offices ranging from town councils and mayors to county
- commissions and boards of education. The current nationwide total
- of Green officeholders is now 56 in fourteen states.
-
- The new officeholders include:
-
- Stephen Miller Fayetteville AR Fayetteville City Council
-
- Lois Humphreys Leucadia CA Leucadia Water
- Board
-
- Dona Spring Berkeley CA Berkeley City Council
-
- Carol Skiljan Encinitas CA Encinitas School Board
-
- Barbara Carr La Mesa CA La Mesa/Spring
- Valley School Board
-
- Nancy Bernardi CA Evergreen Resource
- Conservation District
-
- David Tarr CA Romona Water Board
-
- Dan Tarr El Cajon CA Valledeoro Planning Group
-
- John Beall CA Santa Clara County Evergreen
- Resource Conservation District
-
- Timothy Moore CA Ramona Community Planning
- Group
-
- Keiko Bonk-Abramson Volcano HI Hawaii Council
-
- In Hawaii, where the Green Party has mounted a serious challenge
- to the Democratic Party, Greens placed second (beating Republican
- candidates) in four partisan races. In the best Green Party
- showing for a national office--and (according to Richard Winger of
- Ballot Access News) the best showing by a third-party candidate
- for any Senate office--Linda Martin's candidacy for U.S. Senate
- polled 50,000 votes (over 13%) against powerful U.S. Senator
- Daniel Inouye. A total of eighteen Green Party candidates ran in
- Hawaii. Furthermore, Keiko Bonk-Abramson's successful Green Party
- bid for seat on the Hawaii Council was the first victory by any
- third party in Hawaii.
-
- By far the largest number of Green candidates ran in California.
- 15 partisan and 20 nonpartisan candidates polled a total of nearly
- 340,000 votes, for a statewide average of 13%. State Green Party
- leaders are confident of their ability to continue building a
- challenge to the major parties.
-
- Green Party candidates made good showings in other state
- elections. In a bid for the New Mexico State House, Abraham
- Guttman won 42% of the vote against an incumbent Democrat. Mark
- Dunlea won 41% in a New York State Assembly race against his
- Republican opponent's 58%. Kelly Weaverling, the current Green
- Party mayor of Cordova, Alaska, polled 23% in his bid for the
- Alaska State Assembly. Green Party candidates also ran in
- Missouri, Maine, North Carolina, Florida, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin,
- and Arizona.
-
- Greens polled an average of 16% in all the races they entered
- across the U.S.. In partisan races (those in which "Green Party"
- appears on the ballot with the candidate's name), Greens received
- over 340,000 votes, for an average of nearly 13% per candidate.
- (Similarity to the California figures above is purely
- coincidental.)
-
- Greens are represented in the parliaments of many European
- countries with proportional representation, which require just 5%
- support to give seats to third parties. With a truly
- representative system in the U.S., Green parties would have
- already won seats in state and national legislative bodies.
-
- Greens ran against other third party and independent candidates in
- 18 races, and outpolled or equaled them in 13 races. Where Greens
- ran against third parties and independent candidates, Green Party
- candidates averaged over twice as many votes as candidates for the
- Libertarian Party, and 68% more votes than all other third parties
- and independent challengers combined.
-
- The grassroots political movement known as the Greens was founded
- in the U.S. in 1984, and became a national political party in
- 1991. By mid-1992, the Green Party had achieved state-wide ballot
- status in New Mexico, Arizona, California, Hawaii, and Alaska.
- Nearly 500 local Green chapters engage in grassroots campaigns to
- reform local government, protect their region's environment,
- overcome racial divisions, improve education and health care,
- eliminate homelessness, and more. This year's political campaigns
- focused on issues of ecology, sustainable development, community
- empowerment, governmental and political reform, racial and gender
- justice, community-based economics, worker's rights, and
- affordable housing and health care.
-
- Greens have frequently been attacked as a "spoiler" effort, likely
- to help elect Republicans by taking Democratic votes. However, in
- only one race out of 80 (Maine Green Party candidate Jonathan
- Carter's U.S. Congressional bid), was the margin of Republican
- victory slim enough for this to be considered. But according to
- Nancy Allen of the Hancock County Green Party, Carter took more
- votes from the Republican candidate, especially in rural areas.
-
- Greens chose not to run a presidential candidate, nor did they
- endorse a candidate. The Green Party employs a conscious strategy
- of building "from the bottom up," meaning that policies and
- campaigns initiated in local communities determine the direction
- of the national organization. This decentralist strategy mirrors
- the Party's vision for a society based on participatory democracy.
- However, many Greens supported Ron Daniels' independent candidacy
- (a campaign focusing on racial and gender justice, worker's
- rights, ecology and community empowerment).
-
- On the election of Bill Clinton, many Greens are pleased at the
- success of the candidate whom they deem the least of the three
- evils. Having seen Clinton's poor environmental record in
- Arkansas, however, they plan to keep close watch on his
- administration."I don't see any reason to be optimistic about
- Clinton on foreign policy or environmental issues, but he could
- surprise us," said Joan Roelofs of the Greens national
- Coordinating Committee. "His answer to economic problems in
- Arkansas was to bring polluting industries into the state, rather
- than supporting safe, community-based businesses. People may relax
- prematurely believing Gore to be an environmentalist . . . but I'm
- not sure I would predict any substantive effect on national
- policy."
-
- To find out more about the Greens, or for a full listing of Green
- candidates & officeholders, write Greens/Green Party USA, PO Box
- 30208, Kansas City, MO 64112, or call 1-800-257-7336.
-
- --
-
- dingo in boulder (dean@vexcel.com)
-