The Greens have been following Ryan’s advice about focusing on local races. The 
Greens have won over 1200 elections over the years and have over 100 elected to 
local office currently.

The Greens ran over 200 down ballot candidates this year and won at least 10 
races: https://www.gp.org/2020_candidates <https://www.gp.org/2020_candidates>.

That can be scaled up from the hundreds to the thousands.

A major objective of Green presidential campaigns is to secure ballot lines. In 
40 of the 50 states, the presidential vote affects whether the Greens have a 
ballot line for the next election cycle. 

It is much easier to get on the ballot with a qualified ballot line than 
independent nominating petitions, which in most states require orders of 
magnitude more signatures. 2020 was a difficult year for the Greens given the 
big anybody-but-Trump vote. The Greens got wiped off the ballot in a number of 
states after this presidential election, including New York and North Carolina. 

Thanks to a new election law attached to the state budget by the Democrats in 
April while attention was focused on the pandemic, the number of votes was 
tripled and the frequency doubled from every four years to every two years to 
qualify for the ballot for the next election cycle. To get back on the ballot, 
NY now has the hardest independent nomination petition signature requirement of 
any state in the nation — 45,000 signatures in a six-week window, which means 
90,000 signatures to withstand the inevitable Democratic petition challenge.

It took the Greens 30 years of lawsuits, law changes, and petitioning to get 
ballot status in NC for the first time this year. The independent nomination 
petition in NC is now not as difficult as NY, but doing it will be a lot harder 
than having a ballot line and all the petitioning will drain time and money 
from the campaigns.

Republican voter suppression is despicable. The failure of Democrats in charge 
as Secretaries of States and Governors in states like Michigan and North 
Carolina to restore the voter registrations of mainly black people purged by 
their GOP predecessors is just as bad. The Democrats complicity in this voter 
suppression seems to me to reflect two objectives on the part of Democratic 
leaders. One is the fear of white Democratic leaders of black competitors. The 
other is that it helps the corporate wing defeat progressive challengers in 
primaries.

For the Greens, the Democrat’s party suppression efforts against the Green 
Party is another form of voter suppression. Most Green voters don't’ vote if 
the Greens are not on the ballot. Exit polls from 2016 showed that 61% of Jill 
Stein voters would have stayed home. 

Running for office is about as full of expression of 1st Amendment freedoms as 
there is — free speech, petitioning the government for redress of grievances, 
free press. The Democrats’ suppression of the Green Party by ballot petition 
challenges and rulings in the courts about the challenges by Democratic 
partisan hacks sitting on the bench is about as authoritarian as it gets. 
Changing the laws to kill the Green Party is another method. As the NY Times 
headline 
<https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/29/nyregion/election-third-party-ny.html> read 
when they got wind of the NY election law change that passed this year, 
“Democrats’ Secret Plan to Kill Third Parties.”

The media narrative about the law change was that Cuomo was going after the 
party’s annoying progressive wing, the Working Families Party, that sometimes 
supports primary challengers but always puts the Democrats other line in the 
general elections, including Cuomo three times. But Cuomo came clean this weak 
in a radio interview 
<https://nystateofpolitics.com/state-of-politics/new-york/ny-state-of-politics/2020/11/05/how-the-wfp--conservatives-kept-their-ballot-lines>
 where he said, "We always expected the Working Families Party to survive," he 
said. "It was set deliberately so. We always expected the Conservative Party to 
survive.” The Conservatives almost always run Republicans on their line. So New 
York now has two parties with two ballot lines each and no independent 
alternatives.

Greens think Cuomo has been coming for us after we got 5% for governor in 2014 
when he wanted to run up his vote to get ready to run for president, get more 
than his father Mario ever got, get more than he got when he was first elected 
in 2010. He got less and couldn’t take our 5% of the voters for granted. To 
compete for those voters, he adopted a number of our demands that he had not 
supported before, including a ban on fracking, a $15 minimum wage, and paid 
family leave. Cuomo was not happy about that.

Greens will be back running local candidates in the next few years, even if it 
means more ballot access petitioning. Greens understand that building a 
political base and foothold in the political system through local elections is 
the foundation for winning seats in state legislatures and the House and 
advancing real solutions to the problem of climate, poverty, racism, and war.

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Groups.io Links: You receive all messages sent to this group.
View/Reply Online (#3313): https://groups.io/g/marxmail/message/3313
Mute This Topic: https://groups.io/mt/78103542/21656
-=-=-
POSTING RULES &amp; NOTES
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly &amp; permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
-=-=-
Group Owner: [email protected]
Unsubscribe: https://groups.io/g/marxmail/leave/8674936/1316126222/xyzzy 
[[email protected]]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-


Reply via email to