retry - first attempt seems to have been sent as attachment for some
reason, sorry...   mh

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 08/08/04 5:03 PM >>>
Date: Sun, 08 Aug 2004 03:04:28 -0400
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Greens For Nader Update: Rigged Convention Divides Green Party
The nomination of David Cobb as the Green Party presidential candidate
in Milwaukee was due to a well organized campaign to turn a minority
view in the Green Party into what appeared as a "majority" decision at
the convention.
1. A grossly undemocratic process was used at the national convention of
the US Green Party, as described in the article, "Rigged Convention
Divides Green Party," by Carol Miller and Forrest Hill (see
www.greensfornader.net);
2 Each state Green Party should have the right to nominate candidates
supported by a majority of its members because the results of the
national Green Party Convention do not represent the views of a majority
of Greens in California, indeed, they represent the views of a small
minority;
4. The Democratic Party has devoted huge resources to harass canvassers,
to keep Nader/Camejo off the ballot in California
6. Nader and Camejo are the only candidates supporting Green values that
have a chance of getting in the national televised debates. ;
<<<<<>>>>>

i've indicated in previous posts that i'm not big green party person
while also thinking that greens need to wean themselves from nader, what
follows are pulp musings...

above is smarmy, smelly stuff that has long left rotting carcasses of
'minor' parties across u.s. political landscape, not to mention
turning-off folks outside of organization (assuming anyone notices) and
making contribution to turnout decline/civic disengagement/withdrawal
from public realm/whatever else likes of robert putnam and social
capital types call non-participation (how about alienation and
cynicism)...

circumstance reminds of buchanan-hagelin/2000 reform party implosion
which left rp with ballot status in about 1/3rd of states where it had
previously qualified... re. reform party (at least one of them anyway),
nader received 'endorsement' (not nomination) back in may by way of
telephone conference call, 4-5 people had 'qualified' to have their
'candidacies' debated by national/state committee people - wonder how
democratic process of choosing members of such committees is - for a
couple of hours one evening, nader was 'overwhelming' choice although i
don't recall any actual vote totals being released, other names were
complete unknowns, reform party people chose nader because he offers
opportunity for party to get attention that it otherwise would not get
(of course, kind of pub that buchanan debacle produced i suppose they'd
rather do without)...

reform party line is absolutely irrevelevant in states where party has
ballot status save two - florida and michigan (drum roll please -
so-called 'battlegrounds'), media likely to pay attention to nader in
fla and mich - 'spoiler', 'darth' nader, blah, blah, blah, this is pure
instrumentalist politics of mainstream sort (that's less criticism than
it is observation, btw) on nader's part and explains why his campaign
was so concerned about flap *between* michigan reform parties that
appeared as if it might result in his name being kept off reform line
(don't know if matter has been resolved)...

re. dems trying to keep nader off ballots, obviously disgusting (didn't
someone long ago say something to effect that all political issues in
u.s. wind up in court)...

nader people might be of greater help to polity in general (of course,
this is electoral campaign which, by definition, has narrow focus) by
highlighting unequal/unjust ballot access procedures, state by state
rules are clear violation of 14th admendment equal protection...

re. miller and hill article cited above, they characterize primaries as
'will of voters', u.s. is only political democracy in which party
nominees are chosen this way (and in this instance, winners were
placeholding), primaries are one legacy of not-so progressive era,
example of peudo-democratization, early 20th century 'reformers' who
pushed primaries claimed they were giving ' power to the people' as new
procedure would empower 'ordinary citizens' at expense of party bosses,
what happened was that such bosses were largely supplanted by activists
(who, of course, have always exercised more influence than 'ordinary'
people because they participate and their views are more intense)...

re. each state party nominating its own candidates, silliness of this
for prez election should be obvious...

re. nader/camejo ticket, how democratic is it for person at top of
ticket to choose vp candidate (i realize that nader's candidacy is
independent one but that actually serves to make my point), party
conventions chose vp candidates until fdr in 1940s, today, prez nominees
announce their choices and conventions accept them (btw: reform party
endorsed nader, not nader/camaejo, as far i know)...

re. prez debates, it is disingenuous to suggest that nader will be
included, unfair prez debate commission rules requiring that candidate
poll at last 15% in 4 of 5 nationa polls insures his exclusion...
michael hoover



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