GREEN CITY Amid the much-hyped speculation about whom Democratic and Republican party voters will choose as their respective presidential nominees this year, California members of the Green Party will vote for their representative Feb. 5.
Candidates Jared Ball, Kent Hesplay, Jesse Johnson Jr., Cynthia McKinney, and Kat Swift met for their only planned debate Jan. 13 at Herbst Theatre in San Francisco, addressing a near-capacity crowd and laying out platforms that are decidedly more aggressive in tackling environmental and social problems than any proposed by the major-party candidates.
The candidates echoed one another on plans for immediate withdrawal from Iraq and shifting funding from the Pentagon into domestic programs for education, health care, and jobs. All professed grave concern about the environment, with Johnson calling the coal-mining method of mountaintop removal "ground zero for climate change."
By the end of the debate, Ball, a Baltimore hip-hop artist and professor in communications studies, fully endorsed McKinney, a former Democratic congressperson from Georgia.
McKinney received the longest, most sustained standing ovation of the evening when she said, "Please unite the party. We can't do it divided." She said the Greens represent the best hope of bringing together the large percentage of the country that's spurned membership in both the Democratic and Republican parties. "I've never seen anything like I've seen in the Green Party," she said. "Please come together."
Also on hand not participating in the debate but taking questions afterward was Ralph Nader, a presidential candidate in 1996, 2000, and 2004, who hasn't yet ruled out another run this year. Some Greens and other high-profile figures are urging him not to run and expressing concern that he's become a polarizing figure who could hurt the party. Nader addressed the issue of party unity by saying, "I have very little to offer about how to unite the Green Party internally."
But he told the Guardian that if powerful institutional forces collude to limit his or the Green Party nominee's access to the ballot, as he charges they did in 2004, he might run to highlight the need for greater political participation, saying, "I'll be deciding within the next month." Nader has sued the Democratic Party, the John KerryJohn Edwards campaign, the Service Employees International Union, and a number of law firms and political action committees for allegedly conspiring to prevent him from running for president in 2004.
"Ballot access is a major civil liberties issue," Nader said. "Without voters' rights, candidates' rights don't mean anything."
Yet the five announced candidates and Green Party activists on hand all seemed ready to rally around a new nominee for 2008, even as questions remain about whether the party should pool its energy and resources for national races or focus on state and municipal elections. Greens ...
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