John Rensenbrink, whose thinking and vision and activism helped birth and steward the Green Party in the U.S., became an ancestor on July 30, 2022, one month before his 94th birthday. His invaluable account of the early history of the party can be read here. Sadly, Elie Yarden, who passed away just five weeks later, …
Continue reading John Rensenbrink, 1928-2022. PresenteGreen Party
Rosa Clemente, the Green Party’s 2008 Vice Presidential candidate, declared during her campaign that “the Green Party is no longer the alternative, the Green Party is the imperative.” Events since then have not really borne her out. Was she wrong? Was she just using hyperbolic rhetoric? Or was she simply ahead of her time? In …
Continue reading Writing Challenge: Is the Green Party the imperative?[John Rensenbrink Speech to MA Green-Rainbow Party Convention in Worcester, Massachusetts, November 15, 2014]
Thank you Roni.
Greetings, very excited to be here with you. One piece of excitement: last Sunday the Maine Green Independent Party’s Steering Committee unanimously endorsed the Green Alliance to Stop the Pipeline. GASP! Indeed! That’s good news: “As Maine Goes ….!”
When Roni asked me to give the keynote, I was delighted to be invited and asked her what she and the Planning Committee had in mind for my speech. She said the Committee suggested the theme of “The Big Tent.”
My speech, accordingly, centers on the rainbow as a Big Tent model for the vision and accompanying strategy of the Green Party.
For contrast and critical comparison to the rainbow model, I begin by commenting on a Big Tent strategy promoted by Ralph Nader and others.
I will then go on to describe how and why the rainbow is the model of choice. Thereafter, I will finish by outlining two strategies that fit in with the rainbow model: a versatile strategy and a jolt strategy.
Continue reading The Big Tent: Rainbow as ModelNice write up of yesterday’s Green-Rainbow Party state convention in the Worcester Telegram & Gazette:
WORCESTER – At their state convention at the First Unitarian Church Saturday, Green-Rainbow Party leaders expressed hope that national discontent with the major parties could lead to their long-sought breakthrough.
“The Democrats and Republicans really have a circling firing squad here, and are continuing to take each other down,” said Dr. Jill E. Stein, party co-chairman and 2012 presidential candidate. “It’s really created the opening we have known about for quite some time.”
The Green-Rainbow Party of Massachusetts is part of the larger national Green Party, and Saturday’s event drew party members from all over New England.
“I think the Green Party is on the way,” said Linda Thompson, co-chairwoman of the Connecticut Green Party. “We have to think big.”
Read the whole thing here.
Continue reading Green-Rainbow Party optimistic about futureNationally, the Green Party won some important victories and took some small steps forward. Most importantly, the Green mayor of Richmond, CA, Gayle McLaughlin, won her bid for City Council despite Chevron’s massive campaign against her. And New York gubernatorial candidate Howie Hawkins received nearly 5% of the statewide vote, making the Green Party THE third party in New York. Other highlights across the country have been posted by Green Party Watch.
In Massachusetts, the Green-Rainbow Party regained major party status on November 4th when each of its three statewide candidates surpassed the 3% threshold, each gaining more votes and higher percentages than the well- and self-financed Evan Falchuk campaign, which also received more media coverage. Since Falchuk’s campaign also surpassed the 3% threshold, his United Independent Party will join the official party ranks along with the Green-Rainbow Party.
Discrepancies between federal and state recognition of political parties along with Secretary of the Commonwealth Bill Galvin’s apparent contempt for the Green-Rainbow Party have made it difficult to consistently organize a progressive political alternative to the Democrat/Republican national duopoly, or one-party rule in Massachusetts. The latest example was Galvin’s dismissal of Green-Rainbow Party candidate Jason Lowenthal’s nomination papers to challenge incumbent Democratic Congressman Michael Capuano, who went on to run unopposed on the November ballot. Galvin, with a proud history of ducking debates despite being the state’s elected overseer of elections, took a cheap shot at the Green-Rainbow Party for the party’s stubborn refusal to continue on in electoral politics:
From The Republican (Springfield):
Secretary of State William Galvin said the state will be required to print primary ballots for all the parties, even if there are no competitive races. In the past, the state has used paper, rather than the more expensive cardstock, to print ballots for the Green-Rainbow Party or other third parties. “We’ll have to kill many trees,” Galvin told reporters on Monday. “We do this all the time with the Greens, which is ironic.”
Isn’t it ironic, don’t you think? Coming from the man who mailed all registered Green-Rainbow Party voters, twice now — at taxpayers’ expense — postcards that made it sound like the Green-Rainbow Party no longer existed (it did, both as a political designation and as the state affiliate of a federally recognized political party) and that if they wanted to vote in a primary they would have to change their registration? Or the man with so much contempt for the democratic process that he oversees that “scheduling difficulties” and various other phony excuses have prevented him from agreeing to debates against his opponents, other than last-minute sham debates. Spare us the sermonizing, Bill.
On a more positive note, GRP State Auditor candidate MK Merelice’s letter to the Brookline Tab, does a nice job of summarizing the highlights for the Green-Rainbow Party slate and the pockets of strong, local support they received, so I’ll leave you with that:
Continue reading Green-Rainbow Party and Green Party highlights from Election Day 2014Across the country, there were some strong showings and nice victories for Green Party candidates running for local office. Minneapolis City Councilor Cam Gordon, and Cleveland City Councilor Brian Cummins, were both re-elected. 16 California Greens won local office, which was a record for off-year elections. And in New England, Josh Plourde was elected to the Bangor City Council, Anna Trevorrow was elected to the Portland School Board, and Mirna Martinez was elected to the New London Board of Education.
In Massachusetts, Green-Rainbow Party candidates for local office included three first-time candidates. Joe Carvalho’s bid for Mayor of Fall River saw him place second in a field of six to advance to yesterday’s election, but fell short of ousting incumbent Mayor William Flanagan. Elie Yarden’s campaign for Cambridge City Council saw him place 20th out of 25 candidates for 9 seats. And Francisco White’s bid for Boston City Council At Large placed him 16th out of 19 candidates for 4 seats during September’s preliminary election. Rick Purcell came in 12th out 13 candidates for Holyoke’s eight At Large City Council seats. And Mark Miller, who came within 981 votes of Pittsfield’s State Representative seat in 2010, came in 6th in a field of 7 for 4 at large Pittsfield City Council seats.
While some of the most exciting progress for the Green Party has been with municipally elected Greens, the party does not seem to be gaining much traction overall, after nearly three decades of running for local office. I think it’s an important time to reflect on those three decades, and the experience we have developed engaging with this admittedly rigged process. The times are a-changing, but I’m not sure our tactics are changing with them. I’m also not convinced they should change dramatically, but I’d like to see them add up to dramatic change. Unfortunately, I don’t see it. I invite all Green and Green-Rainbow candidates and supporters, as well as all of our dear readers, to comment here with your reflections. And I am incredibly grateful, even though I haven’t made that particularly clear, for the work, sweat, vision and courage that the brave few throwing their hats into the ring have brought to the table.
Continue reading 2013 election results for Greens nationwide and locallyGovernment of, by, and for the people, IS perishing from this earth.
Continue reading #whyimgreenWill write more about my experience at the Green Party Nominating Convention in Baltimore, MD, but for now, you can watch it live:
You can also catch it on C-SPAN, and I’m very excited that Democracy NOW! has based their show out of Baltimore to cover the Green Party convention in depth.
Continue reading Green Party nominating convention live streamingThe Green Party’s presumptive nominee for President, Dr. Jill Stein, met a groundbreaking threshold over the weekend by securing enough financial support in 22 states to qualify for the Federal Election Commission’s primary matching funds.
With taxpayers (voluntarily) doling out funds to two third party candidates in this election (Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson ironically qualified in May), the issue of whether the bipartisan (Democrat-and-Republican-controlled) Commission on Presidential Debates can justify its exclusive, anti-democratic charade will itself become a topic for debate.
Watch Stein’s brief message about this breakthrough, and read her full statement below the jump:
Continue reading Stein campaign makes Green Party history, qualifies for federal matching funds3 days left to change the presidential health care debate
Posted by Jill Stein for President, June 27, 2012
Five leading advocates for Medicare for All today released a letter urging financial and other support for Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein. The letters writers were Dr. Andy Coates, Katie Robbins, Dr. Margaret Flowers, Mark Dunlea, and Gloria Mattera.
The advocates released their support letter as candidate Stein, a physician from Massachusetts who first became nationally known as an environmental health advocate, enters the final days of a push to qualify for federal matching funds. Stein has won 29 state primaries and has been declared the “presumptive nominee” of the Green Party by virtue of having won more than half the delegates to the Green Party convention. In the next few days she must reach fundraising goals in 7 additional states in order to qualify for federal matching funds.
Read the full text of the letter at jillstein.org.
Continue reading Five leading advocates for Medicare for All announce support for Jill Stein