Denver Diary - It's Easy Being Green
by Tom Ethier
June, 2000
Over
the weekend of June 23-25 I was privileged to be part of the nine member
Connecticut delegation to the Association
of State Green Parties' (ASGP), first national convention that was
held in Denver, CO. The ASGP now consists of 29 state organizations that
comprise a national Green presence. The purpose of the convention was to
officially nominate a candidate for the 2000 presidential election and to
ratify the party's platform.
On Friday evening June 23 after a welcoming reception, Winona LaDuke, who
was to be officially endorsed as vice-presidential candidate later that
weekend, greeted an enthusiastic audience. LaDuke, a Native American
activist from the White Earth Reservation in northern Minnesota, has long
been active in Indian and environmental issues. At the age of 18 she spoke
before the United Nations on the rights of indigenous people and in the
1980s was named the most prominent Native American activist by several
magazines. She is a Harvard graduate and has written extensively on
environmental and native issues including at least two books. In 1995 Time
Magazine nominated LaDuke as one of "50 Leaders for the Future."
The convention started officially on Saturday morning with a presentation
from the credentials committee. This committee admits state Green parties
to the ASGP and on Saturday admitted the states of Florida, Delaware and
Texas. The new Texas Green Party is off to a sensational organizational
start. They collected 74,000 signatures in 75 days to secure ballot access
for the Green's in Texas this fall. Following the credentials committee
were three hours of debate and approval of the Green Party platform. Our
platform, which has evolved over the last four years, is a work in
progress. I encourage all to view the ratified document at www.gp.org.
For the rest of the day we were treated to series of speakers beginning
with African American Professor of History and Political Science at
Columbia University, Manning Marable. Professor Marable, who spoke in
Hartford last fall in support of Green Party Hartford City Council
candidate Elizabeth Horton-Sheff, spoke passionately about the crisis of
the working poor; reminding the audience that "poverty knows no
color." He left us with a rarely cited quote from Martin Luther King
Jr.; "the moral arch of the universe is long, but it bends toward
justice."
Other featured speakers on Saturday included lesbian activist and author
Ann Northrup, Dr. Sidney M. Wolfe Director of Public Citizen's Health
Research Group, Texas activist and author Jim Hightower and several Greens
from around the world. The Green Party has affiliates in most countries
and is part of the ruling coalition in Germany. Dr. Helen Caldicott,
author of many books on the medical hazards of nuclear power and founder
of Physicians for Social Responsibility closed the day.
On Sunday morning, Medea Benjamin, Green Party candidate for US Senate in
California and founder of Global Exchange, one of the important
contributors to last years World Trade Organization (WTO) protests, lead
off the day. She talked about the growing power of socially responsible
advocacy groups and their ability to effect change in the behavior of
multi-national corporations. She pointed out the particular success of
Students Against Sweatshops. Following Medea, several Green candidates and
current office holders talked about their ideas, dreams, hopes and
victories. The Connecticut delegation was particularly proud when
Elizabeth Horton-Sheff, who won election to the Hartford City Council last
fall, shared her experiences with citizen's councils as a way to advance
democratic participation.
Other keynote speakers that afternoon included John Anderson, 1980
Independent Presidential candidate and current President of the Center for
Voting and Democracy and labor leader Tony Mazzocchi who gave a ringing
endorsement for universal single-payer health care. Don Torgerson, press
secretary of the American Reform Party, announced their official
endorsement of the Green Party Presidential nominee and their intention to
campaign with Greens on behalf of Ralph Nader. The afternoon was capped
off by the official roll call vote of the state delegates in which Ralph
Nader won 290 to 10, and the acceptance speech by Mr. Nader.
There are three themes that emerge from the Green's convention. The first
is that the party is fully in support of the rising "Blue-Green"
coalition that is developing out of the WTO protests in Seattle last
November and the anti International Monetary Fund and World Bank protests
in Washington DC earlier this year. The alliance between labor and
environmental groups provides a powerful counterweight to unfettered
corporate control of all aspects of daily life including our government.
It is instructive to note that it is so-called "free trade" that
the coalition opposes, not "fair trade." These are not the
protectionist measures trumpeted by Reform Party candidate Patrick
Buchanan. Fair trade means we support international labor and
environmental standards.
A second theme is the idea that Green Party values and positions are
majoritarian; majorities around the country embrace them. An overwhelming
number of people support action to ensure clean air and water and a
healthy environment. They also support a single-payer universal health
plan that provides health care for all.
The last theme that was evident at the convention is that ordinary people
are seizing the day and demanding change. The Green Party is made up of
citizens from all age groups and various backgrounds. They all share a
common concern of taking the country back from its arrest by the special
interests that put the needs of the privileged few before ordinary working
Americans. With these themes outlining the green movement and Ralph
Nader's campaign for the presidency, it is indeed, "easy being
green."
Tom Ethier is Co-Chair of The Connecticut Green Party and an ASGP 2000
delegate.
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