http://www.democracynow.org/2012/7/13/green_party_nominee_jill_stein_running

Green Party Nominee Jill Stein & Running Mate, Activist Cheri Honkala: "We
Represent the 99 Percent"

 
<http://www.democracynow.org/images/story/34/21734/original/Jill_Stein_Cheri
_Honkala.png> 
 
 
Democracy Now Interview
July 13, 2012
 
Guests:

Cheri  <http://www.democracynow.org/appearances/cheri_honkala> Honkala,
Green Party's presumptive vice-presidential nominee in the 2012 election.
She's the founder of the Kensington Welfare Rights Union and national
coordinator of the Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign, one of the
country's largest movements led by the poor and homeless.

AMY GOODMAN: We're broadcasting from Baltimore, Maryland, where the Green
Party's national convention is underway. I'm joined by Dr. Jill Stein, Green
Party 2012 presumptive presidential nominee, and by Cheri Honkala, Green
Party's vice-presidential nominee, national coordinator of the Poor People's
Economic Human Rights Campaign.

Dr. Jill Stein, talk about the decision you made in choosing Cheri Honkala.
Who was on your short list?

DR. JILL STEIN: We had a wonderful short list. I'm not sure that I'm at
liberty to disclose who exactly was on it.

AMY GOODMAN: Why did you choose Cheri Honkala?

DR. JILL STEIN: Well, Cheri stands out as the leading advocate for poor
people, for justice, for the fight against predatory banks, for the fight
against mortgage foreclosures, fighting on behalf of children most at risk,
fighting for justice and for a fair economy. And Cheri is an incredibly
inspired human being and mother, who was a homeless single mother and who
began to take over empty buildings, saying, "There are buildings that
are-there are homes that are empty there, and there are people like me who
are sleeping out on the street. What's wrong with this picture? I'm going to
go sleep in that empty home." And, you know, Cheri's-Cheri is unstoppable
and, I think, exemplifies the fighting spirit that is alive and well across
America that we hope to give voice to in this campaign, that is what this is
about.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, the P word is certainly one that's not really very much
talked about-

DR. JILL STEIN: Exactly.

AMY GOODMAN: -by the presidential candidates: "poverty." Cheri Honkala,
we're used to seeing you ahead of marching at the presidential conventions,
marching for poor people's rights in this country, now being chosen as a
vice-presidential candidate. Your feelings today?

CHERI HONKALA: It's very exciting. I think I'm prepared to take on this
challenge. I was absolutely shocked when I was chosen, but I think it's a
real statement of the Stein campaign. And it meant so much to people across
the entire country. Once the announcement was made, I literally received
hundreds of letters, not just from people in this country but from folks
around the entire world.

AMY GOODMAN: Was it a hard decision to decide to do this?

CHERI HONKALA: It was definitely the hardest decision I've ever made in my
life, because I have a family out there. And I-you know, I have two sons,
and they're used to their mother bringing attention to them in the various
different choices that I make. And I asked my 10-year-old, Guillermo, and he
immediately did the happy dance in the living room, so I knew it was a go.

AMY GOODMAN: So, what do you plan to represent? You ran for sheriff of
Philadelphia on a platform of no evictions, no foreclosures. I want to ask
you about an announcement President Obama made in February. Bank of America
and four other large banks had signed on to a $25 billion mortgage
settlement to resolve claims over faulty foreclosures and the mishandling of
requests for loan modifications. President Obama described it as a landmark
settlement.

PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: Under the terms of this settlement, America's
biggest banks, banks that were rescued by taxpayer dollars, will be required
to right these wrongs. That means more than just paying a fee. These banks
will put billions of dollars towards relief for families across the nation.
They'll provide refinancing for borrowers that are stuck in high-interest
rate mortgages. They'll reduce loans for families who owe more on their
homes than they're worth. And they will deliver some measure of justice for
families that have already been victims of abusive practices.

AMY GOODMAN: That was President Obama. Our headline today, Wells Fargo Bank
has agreed to pay a settlement of at least $175 million for discriminating
against black and Latino borrowers. Talk about what Obama said.

CHERI HONKALA: It sounds good, but in reality it never happened. The
families in America, the six million families that have lost their homes to
foreclosure, none of them received any kind of bailout. My sister, herself,
was a victim of Wells Fargo. She has African-American children, and they are
now homeless in my mother's living room. They had a home for 20 years. Both
her and her husband, full-time workers, worked around the clock, were
victims of predatory lending. And the money that was supposed to bail out
the American people, a great deal of that was written off, and there was no
regulations around what they should do with that money.

And, actually, the week before, you know, finding out that I was chosen as
the vice-presidential candidate, I spent last week facing the sheriff's
department with Rhonda Lancaster and Fran Scarborough. Fran Scarborough had
owned her home for 25 years and then was illegally thrown out by Chase Bank.
And then, Rhonda Lancaster now has had her home taken from her by Fannie
Mae, and we were able to stop that foreclosure.

AMY GOODMAN: What other issues are you going to take on as vice-presidential
candidate traveling across this country?

CHERI HONKALA: I think the issues that I'm going to focus on are the section
of the population that has totally been forgotten about. Neither Obama or
Mitt Romney have raised any of these issues. When you talk about the P word,
poverty, they haven't talked about the mortgage foreclosure crisis, they
haven't talked about the school-to-prison pipeline, they haven't talked
about the disabled. In Philadelphia, there was 125 disabled individuals that
lost their jobs, and this is at a time when people are losing their jobs all
across the entire country. Well, there's a high chance that they're never
going to see employment ever again-that is, until Jill and I are elected,
and we take the unemployment centers and turn them into employment centers.

AMY GOODMAN: Earlier this year, Michael Shure, co-host of The Young Turks
talk show, interviewed Roseanne Barr and asked her why she's making a bid to
be the Green Party's presidential nominee.

ROSEANNE BARR: Anyway, the party that I founded myself that I was running
was the Green Tea Party, because, you know, as I spoke today about a
synthesis between capital and social, which I think is the future in what
needs to happen - I call it "peoplism" - I feel that that represents fully
all the American people, the true 99 percent who knows that-who know that
this is just a scam from top to bottom. But I chose the Green Party because
of ballot access, because I like the 10 key values of the Green Party.
They're very good, they're very basic. I think everyone would agree-if
they'd read them, everyone agrees with them.

AMY GOODMAN: That was Roseanne Barr. And we spent a good deal of time
talking to Roseanne Barr, as well. Dr. Jill Stein, the actual vote-you were
running against her for the nomination-is tomorrow here in Baltimore at the
Green Party convention. Your main differences?

DR. JILL STEIN: With Roseanne? You know, we have a lot of similar policies
and positions. We had a debate in San Francisco a couple months back, where,
you know, it was hard for people to find the differences. I think the
differences between us really are historic, in what we do. I've been an
organizer and sort of a grassroots, you know, advocate on a whole spectrum
of issues. And Roseanne has been a spokesperson in her own right, not
actually building the networks and doing the on-the-ground advocacy, but
from her own position as an artist and an actress. And would that more
celebrities followed in her footsteps, this would be a wonderful thing.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, let's talk about third-party politics for a minute. In
2004, as George W. Bush and John Kerry wrapped up their campaigns, Democracy
Now! spoke to the late legendary history Howard
<http://www.democracynow.org/2004/10/14/howard_zinn_on_the_election_candidat
es> Zinn. He explained why he, along with Noam Chomsky and others, signed a
petition calling for people to vote for Kerry in swing states.

HOWARD ZINN: People should vote for Kerry in the swing states, and I think
the reason is this. And I don't know if I'm speaking for all the other
signers of the petition, but probably, I would guess that this is their
thinking. Certainly it's my thinking. And that is, you know, that-admire
Nader enormously. I mean, Nader stands, you know, miles high above these
other candidates in terms of his morality, in terms of his contribution to
the country. But this election is the wrong place for him to put his great
energy and talent. And it's a waste of his stature to put his-all of his
work that he has done into counting the votes in an election which you can't
win anyway. And the Bush administration is so dangerous.

AMY GOODMAN: That was Howard Zinn talking about why people should vote for
Kerry over Nader in 2004. Dr. Jill Stein?

DR. JILL STEIN: That was then, and this is now. And let me say I think the
last four years have been quite instructive to people-really the last 10
years. There has been this campaign of fear that we need to silence
ourselves politically, that we dare not stand up for what we believe and for
the solutions that we desperately need. And a lot of progressives bought
into that over the past decade, and we saw third-party politics really
shrink, quite significantly.

But now we have 10 years of experience. And looking back, I think people are
quite clear now-or, shall we say, this is a big wake-up moment, that
silence, political silence, has not been an effective strategy. We haven't
moved forward. In fact, the politics of fear has actually delivered all
those things we were afraid of: the expanding war, the attack on our civil
liberties, the expanding so-called "free trade" agreements that offshore our
jobs and undermine wages here at home, the meltdown of the climate, the
massive Wall Street bailouts. All these things we were supposed to be quiet
in order to avoid, we've gotten in spades, all the more so because we have
silenced ourselves. We're saying it's time to replace the politics of fear
with the politics of courage. This is how we move ahead.

AMY GOODMAN: You already debated Romney in 2002-

DR. JILL STEIN: That's right.

AMY GOODMAN: -for governor in Massachusetts? You were Green Party-Rainbow
candidate?

DR. JILL STEIN: That is right, a Green-Rainbow candidate.

AMY GOODMAN: So how did you end up debating a major-party candidate?
Because, as we know, in the presidential race, rarely do you have
third-party candidates included.

DR. JILL STEIN: Exactly. We managed to get into the debates by insisting on
it, you know. And to some extent, that's a model for our campaign. We need
real changes here. Our lives are at risk-our jobs, our economy, our climate.
We really need to take our future into our own hands and insist that we move
forward in this election. And in previous races, we've entered into them
with that-that sense of empowerment. As Alice Walker says, the biggest way
people give up power is by not knowing they have it, to start with. Well, we
know it, and there are a lot of people out there who know it. And we're not
going to sit back and watch our future continue to unravel the way that it
has been over the past decade-actually, over the past many decades-under
both Democrats and Republicans. We are standing up to say that we need a
politics of, by and for the people. There are good solutions. We're going to
drive them forward.

AMY GOODMAN: Cheri Honkala, can you talk about the growth of the Green
Party? Also, qualifying for matching funds, the significance of this for
both of you?

CHERI HONKALA: I think it's incredibly exciting that people across this
entire country have been holding house parties and doing whatever they
possibly can to raise the money for the matching funds. And I definitely
think that this is historic. I think that, you know, we're just really
excited to be able to involve the majority of the people that are in this
country. And in Kensington, where I live, people didn't know anything
about-what is the Greens? What is the Green Party? And now all it takes is a
major voter education registration drive, which people are doing across this
country. It takes about two seconds to switch people from Republican or
Democrat to a Green.

DR. JILL STEIN: And I would just add to that, you know, that what happened
with matching funds is unprecedented. In our minds, that's another sign that
we are at this historic moment where the American people have hit the
breaking point. And our campaign is how we turn that breaking point into a
tipping point to start taking back our democracy and the peaceful, just,
green future we deserve, and pushing these solutions forward. The fact that
we got to matching funds happened, you know, because of a grassroots
engagement and a sense of-you know, Rosa Clemente in the last election said
the Green Party is no longer the alternative, it's the imperative. And I
think, increasingly, people are realizing that, yes, we do need to do this,
and we can do it ourselves.

AMY GOODMAN: So let's talk about money in politics. I want to ask you about
the 2010 Citizens United ruling that allows corporations to spend unlimited
amounts of money in federal elections. Let's turn to a clip of Harvard Law
Professor Lawrence
<http://www.democracynow.org/2012/1/4/as_states_take_on_citizens_united>
Lessig commenting on Citizens United.

LAWRENCE LESSIG: It's not as if on January 20th, 2010, the day before
Citizens United was decided, democracy in America was humming along
perfectly well and then was broken by the Supreme Court. Democracy was
already broken in the United States in 2010. And it's broken because the
tiniest slice of Americans, 0.26 percent, fund-give more than $200 in a
congressional campaign. 0.05 percent max out in a congressional campaign.
The tiniest slice of the top 1 percent of America funds elections in
America. And that reality will always, whether corporations are persons or
not, corrupt the system in Washington. And the only solution to that problem
is not just limiting the ability of corporations or private individuals to
spend unlimited amounts in political expenditures, it's also to begin to
talk openly and honestly about the need to fund publicly public elections.

AMY GOODMAN: That was Harvard Professor Lawrence Lessig. On Citizens United,
Dr. Jill Stein, what are you going to do about it? It's a Supreme Court
decision.

DR. JILL STEIN: Yeah. I mean, absolutely I agree with the professor that
it's not that Citizens United made all the difference. We had big problems
with money in politics going back for decades-really, forever-but the
problem became really serious beginning in the 1970s when the Democrats made
a decision to adopt the fundraising strategies of the Republicans. And at
that point, you began to see both parties under similar pressure to adopt
similar policies.

So, yes, you know, we do need a constitutional amendment, and I think
there's a lot that the president can do. The president needn't be simply the
commander-in-chief, the president can also be the organizer-in-chief, if she
so choose to do so. The president could be on prime-time TV and making
public service announcements and conducting email information campaigns,
like a move to amend-I'm sorry, like MoveOn.org, that moved on from the
Democratic Party and actually had a broader agenda. There are so many
strategies that a president could bring into play to help draw public
attention to not only the problem, but how we can solve it with a
constitutional amendment to make clear that corporations are not persons and
money is not speech.

AMY GOODMAN: So you're supporting a constitutional amendment.

DR. JILL STEIN: Absolutely, yes.

AMY GOODMAN: Let me turn to Fareed Zakaria of CNN for a minute, who
responded to a viewer who asked, quote, "Why there aren't more serious
third-party candidates in the United States?" This is part of what Fareed
Zakaria responded.

FAREED ZAKARIA: America just does not have a very broad ideological
spectrum. If you look at America's two parties, they're actually very close
together in terms of their ideological differences. Both American parties
would be-would fit comfortably as kind of center-right parties in Europe-the
Democrats and the Republicans. You have no real social democratic party. You
have no real hyper-nationalist parties. If you look at the kind of width of
the European political spectrum, the United States occupies a kind of narrow
position on it. So it makes sense that we don't have 10 parties.

AMY GOODMAN: That was Fareed Zakaria. Your response, Cheri Honkala? I mean,
Fareed Zakaria talking about how the American parties, Democrats and
Republicans, would fit comfortably into-well, as center-right parties in
Europe.

CHERI HONKALA: Well, I think that the American people are not happy with the
one-party system in this country, and I think that they've shown that by not
voting. You know, large sections of the population are just sitting out. And
I think that they're sitting out elections because it's like a protest vote.
It's not just because they're not interested in what's happening in this
country. They just don't see that their vote actually matters. But our
campaign gives an opportunity for people to see themselves, because we
represent the 99 percent. We don't represent corporate America, and our
campaign is not going to be directed by corporate America.

AMY GOODMAN: What are your plans? How are you going to run this presidential
race? And are you making a concerted effort to get into the debates? Who do
you appeal to? And also, where are you traveling?

CHERI HONKALA: I think the first thing is really all about participation.
And that's the exciting thing. When I talked about the hundreds-and it's
soon going to turn into the thousands-of people, you know, going door
knocking, you know, there's many ways that we can change things in this
country, and it doesn't just come from money. We can look all around the
world and be inspired. You know, history doesn't just go in a flat line.
There's leaps that take place. And I think we're going to see a leap with
this election.

AMY GOODMAN: What is your strategy, Dr. Jill Stein?

DR. JILL STEIN: You know, the name of the game, as Cheri is saying, is
really to engage the people who are currently locked out, large
constituencies who feel they don't have a voice in this election-students,
for example. There are about 36 million students and recent graduates who
are basically indentured servants. And there is no difference, essentially,
between the Obama and the Romney plans, which is essentially to stay the
course, you know, in this devastating student debt. So we're reaching out to
students. We're reaching out to the unemployed, the underemployed, people
who need real healthcare, the Medicare-for-all constituency, the climate
community-

AMY GOODMAN: Traveling around the country?

DR. JILL STEIN: Traveling and also doing outreach, because if you look at
what happened in Tunisia and in Tahrir Square, you know, this was-it
completely came out of left field. It did not have the backing of organized
media or the organized political parties.

AMY GOODMAN: Will you be outside protesting at the Republican and Democratic
conventions? I saw you there last time, Cheri Honkala?

CHERI HONKALA: Absolutely, wouldn't miss it for the world. And there's
actually a Romneyille that's already been set up in Tampa, Florida. I'm
hoping that you'll be safe this time, and you won't be arrested like you
were the last time. But absolutely. I mean, we have a responsibility to
raise all the horrible things that are happening. We talked to some
steelworkers yesterday. They're about ready to close down their plant here
in Baltimore with 2,500 workers. And if we have to, we'll support workers in
occupying their plants to hold onto their jobs.

AMY GOODMAN: And for a question you're often asked, Jill Stein, if you have
a toss-up race, if a swing state like Ohio, very close, the comment of
someone like Howard Zinn, how someone should vote for Green Party,
Democratic Party or Republican Party?

DR. JILL STEIN: Yeah, you know, I think we need the politics of courage in
this day and age. That's actually how we've always moved forward: with a
social movement on the ground and an independent political party that can
articulate the agenda and the solutions that can move us forward. We're in
this for the long haul. We are building. One of these days, we will turn the
White House into a greenhouse. And that will be a really good thing for the
people of this nation and the world.

AMY GOODMAN: What would you do in Syria right now?

DR. JILL STEIN: Well, you know, for starters, we would certainly uphold the
international treaty which is being negotiated right now, which you covered,
I believe, last week. Navi Pillay, the human rights coordinator with the
United Nations, made the point that armaments, which are being sold to both
sides of this conflict, have absolutely blown it up.

AMY GOODMAN: You would be out front on the arms trade treaty that they're
negotiating?

DR. JILL STEIN: We sure would, yes.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to leave it there. Thank you very much, both of
you, for joining us. We're going to look at the Green Party internationally
next. We've been speaking with Jill Stein, who's the Green Party's 2012
presumptive presidential nominee. The vote will take place tomorrow here in
Baltimore, where the Green Party convention is underway. We've also been
joined by Cheri Honkala, perhaps the country's leading anti-poverty
activist. Cheri Honkala herself was homeless for a time, national
coordinator of the Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign, now the
vice-presidential presumptive nominee of the Green Party.

When we come back, others who have come to the convention to talk about
Green Party politics worldwide. Stay with us.

Dr. Jill  <http://www.democracynow.org/appearances/dr_jill_stein> Stein, the
Green Party's presumptive 2012 presidential nominee.

 

  _____  

No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 2012.0.2179 / Virus Database: 2437/5132 - Release Date: 07/14/12



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:laamn-unsubscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:laamn-subscr...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:laamn-dig...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:laamn-ow...@egroups.com?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:la...@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/laamn@egroups.com>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    laamn-dig...@yahoogroups.com 
    laamn-fullfeatu...@yahoogroups.com

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    laamn-unsubscr...@yahoogroups.com

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to