from the L.A. TIMES, November 20, 2000:

 >Struggling [San Fernando] Valley [of Los Angeles] Greens Are Proud of 
Their Votes for Nader

Politics: Members of the relatively small group say they had no obligation 
to Al Gore. Their goal is to build a progressive reform movement.

  By SUE FOX, Times Staff Writer

Don't bother calling Ceil Sorensen a spoiler.

At 79, she's got a "Ralph Nader for President" button pinned to her baby 
blue sweater and fistfuls of pro-living wage and anti-sweatshop fliers--but 
not a shred of patience with any suggestion that her Green Party candidate 
robbed Democrat Al Gore of the crucial votes that would have ensured his 
victory. As the messy battle between Gore and Republican George W. Bush for 
Florida's 25 electoral votes continues to spill from one court to another, 
an optimistic band of San Fernando Valley Greens--many of them 
elderly--trooped into a cramped side room at a Ventura Boulevard acting 
studio last week to plot the next moves in their grass-roots uprising.

When another member wondered aloud how Greens ought to fight "all this 
negative bashing we've been getting" over the unfathomably tight vote 
count, Sorensen glared through her squarish glasses.

"We don't have to apologize for anything," she said. "We have every 
democratic right to vote for whomever we want!"

They have no discernible leader, no Valley headquarters, barely any money 
and only about 25 hard-core members who regularly show up at meetings. But 
the Valley Greens, a polite bunch of graying lawyers, ponytailed teachers 
and other activists, say the Nader campaign energized their admittedly 
loosely run operation and built a momentum that they intend to ride into 
future races.

No matter that their precinct walking was hobbled when a batch of campaign 
literature arrived late. Or that the "corporate media," as they call this 
newspaper and others, failed to cover Green candidates with what they 
considered the proper gusto.

Even Nader's inability to win 5% of the popular vote nationwide--the 
threshold the Greens needed to qualify for federal election funds in 
2004--was viewed as just an unfortunate bump in a long road toward building 
a progressive reform movement.

"The model of this campaign was: We're doing the best we can," said 
75-year-old Donald Tollefson, a retired divorce attorney from Encino who 
led the precinct-walking effort.

The Valley group started organizing a decade ago to help put the Green 
Party on the ballot in California. The Greens are also active on the 
Westside, in Burbank, Agoura Hills and the Antelope Valley, as well as on 
various college campuses, including Cal State Northridge.

But only the Valley Greens have been meeting regularly since 1989, making 
them (in the precise wording typical of many a well-educated Green) "the 
longest continuously meeting group in Los Angeles County," said Faramarz 
Nabavi, 23, one of Nader's two paid campaign organizers in Southern 
California.

Voter registration certainly has grown a tinge greener in the Valley. Four 
years ago, there were just 3,166 Greens in the three congressional 
districts that make up most of the area. Party registration has climbed 
55%, for a grand total of 4,904 voters here.

Of course the Nader campaign attracted support this year from many other 
quarters, including independents.

Almost 18,000 people voted for Nader in the Valley districts, out of about 
518,000 who cast ballots, according to the Los Angeles County 
registrar-recorder's office. That means Nader captured more than 3.4% of 
the Valley vote, compared with about 3% nationwide. Nader got 3.1% of the 
vote in Los Angeles County.

All of which establishes the Valley--nationally known for its decidedly 
un-Green transformation from open ranchland and orchards into a swarm of 
subdivisions and strip malls--as something of a modest Green refuge. ...<

for the rest, see: http://www.latimes.com/news/state/20001120/t000111481.html

Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] & http:/bellarmine.lmu.edu/~JDevine
"It takes a busload of faith to get by." -- Lou Reed.

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