News Release - Monday, December 03, 2001

Home | Press

Home

Green Party Names More Names: Reps. Platts, Hill, Snyder Now on Fast Track Target List.

3 more House Representatives Join Reps. CLEMENT, DICKS, SMITH, GREEN, KIND, KLECZKA. Greens Promise that Fast Track Support Will Be Top Campaign Issue.

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Green Party officials extended a blunt warning to three additional congressional incumbents today, promising that Green Party challengers will run aggressive campaigns against them and six other incumbents based upon support for Fast Track legislation currently before Congress. 

"Our message to these incumbents is clear: You vote for Fast Track on Thursday, you'll lose votes to us next November," said Nathalie Paravicini, Secretary of the Green Party of the United States.

The Green Party released a new list of nine targeted Democratic and Republican members of Congress against whom they intend to run serious challenges: 

REPRESENTATIVE TODD PLATTS (R-PA, 19) - Coming from a strong progressive tradition, Ben Price of Carlisle, PA has taken on Platts, a Republican incumbent who his critics in the labor movement accuse of betraying the interests of working people with his support of Fast Track. Ben Price is the current President of the Pennsylvania Consumer Action Network (PCAN), a powerful statewide coalition fighting for universal health care, electoral reform, the environment and other issues. 

"My campaign is about justice, jobs, and peace, all issues the old parties seem to have forgotten," declared Price, who is seeking the nomination of local Green Party locals, "Having just elected 13 new Greens in Pennsylvania this November, the Greens plan to win by vividly showing voters that we are the party working on things people care about in their everyday lives." 

REPRESENTATIVE BARON HILL (D-IN, 9) - Social psychologist Jeff Melton has declared his candidacy for the Green Party nomination in south central Indiana, where he intends to take on incumbent "New Democrat" Rep. Baron Hill. The 9th District is home to the Indiana University-Bloomington, a politically active and progressive campus community that provided heavy support to the 2000 Nader/LaDuke ticket; it is also home to thousands of electrical, steel, and other industrial workers who have suffered years of lay-offs due to job export and corporate downsizing by Thomson Electronics (RCA), General Electric, Otis Elevator, and other major corporations. 

"The American labor movement may be wedded to the Democratic Party, but it's an abusive relationship. So-called 'free trade' agreements supported by Democrats like Baron Hill have been a black eye for American workers, costing thousands of previously well-paid union workers here in the 9th District their livelihoods. Hill solicits campaign contributions from labor unions by pretending to be a friend of working people, but so far he's mainly been a friend to sweatshops and corporate polluters, not workers,"  said Green candidate Jeff Melton. 

REPRESENTATIVE VIC SNYDER (D-AR, 2) - Following their recent first-time congressional race in a 3rd District special election in which Green candidate Sarah Marsh captured 1.8% of the vote, Arkansas Greens are now considering taking on Democrat Vic Snyder in the 2002 elections. 

"It appears to us that Snyder is soft on Fast Track, and that puts him at odds not only with the Green Party but also with most of his working class constituents. So, with the right combination of a candidate, organization and Snyder's vulnerability on Fast Track issues, I am sure that Greens in Little Rock will take long hard look at taking him on. Of course, if he's willing to "mend his ways" regarding Fast Track and other core issues, they might decide to focus their energies elsewhere," said Ed Tarvin, Campaign Organizer of the just-completed Sarah Marsh campaign. 

REPRESENTATIVE BOB CLEMENT (D-TN, 5) - Rep. Clement faces a growing challenge from mathematics professor Dr. Jonathan D. Farley, of Vanderbilt University in Nashville. Dr. Farley, an advocate of reparations for slavery and segregation, is a rising star who has been featured recently in Essence Magazine, the hip-hop magazine The Source, and Ebony as a "Leader of the Future." 

"My opponent is a favorite of the corporate lobby, and they are counting on him to deliver on Fast Track. But, thanks to pressure from the Greens, he may oppose it," said Dr. Farley. "If he doesn't, come next November, Congressman 'Inclement' may just get down-sized." 

REPRESENTATIVE NORM DICKS (D-WA, 3); REPRESENTATIVE ADAM SMITH (D-WA, 9) -  Prominent Greens in Washington state, frustrated with the unresponsiveness of Representative Dicks and Smith both to respectful appeals and to picketing by Greens and labor activists regarding their respective trade stances, have made a public appeal for candidates to challenge them. Rep. Dicks is considered a firm "yes" vote on Fast Track and Rep. Smith is considered to be on the fence; Greens consider both to be vulnerable in their reelection bids. 

Washington Greens have reason to expect success: Last year, Green Party candidate Joe Szwaja won 20% of the vote in his challenge of Rep. Jim McDermott, and political observers have noted McDermott's recent leadership in questioning the bombing of Afghanistan and fighting the passage of Fast Track. 

"Our message to Representatives Dicks and Smith is crystal clear: You won't be able to take the progressive vote for granted, we're going to speak for the interests of workers, consumers, and nature, and we will define the issues in this campaign," said Szwaja, the most successful Green Party candidate for federal office thus far in the United States. 

REPRESENTATIVE GERALD KLECZKA (D-WI, 4) - Greater Milwaukee Green Party member Brian Merrill Vasquez Verdin has announced an anti-war pro-democracy campaign for the Green Party nomination for Congress. Verdin is a member of the International Association of Machinists union (IAM) with deep roots in the labor movement and Milwaukee's Latino community. Verdin expects to face incumbent Rep. Kleczka after redistricting next year. Although Kleczka has said he may vote against Fast Track legislation, Milwaukee Greens say he's failed to lead on the issue and will be held electorally accountable for the outcome of the vote. 

"I want to join Barbara Lee. I want to be one more congressperson who will stand with Barbara Lee and say 'Hell No!' to war, Fast Track, and corporate profiteering," said Verdin. 

REPRESENTATIVE MARK GREEN (R-WI, 8) - Rep. Green can soon expect to face a serious Green Party challenger in northeast Wisconsin, as his likely opponent will announce her candidacy within two weeks. The Wisconsin Green Party has committed to this race in the 8th District, a region that is home to many Green Party locals. Rep. Green is currently considered to be a fence-sitter on Fast Track.

REPRESENTATIVE RON KIND (D-WI, 3) - Rep. Kind has significantly angered western Wisconsin dairy farmers and steelworkers with his past voting record on trade issues, and is considered vulnerable in this independent-minded district that gave the Nader/LaDuke ticket some of its best percentages in 2000. Kind is considered to be leaning in favor of a 'yes' vote on Fast Track even though thousands of workers in his district have lost their jobs at La Crosse Boot, Heileman Brewery, Rayovac, Lands End, and other factories due to trade-related job exports. The Wisconsin Green Party is actively recruiting candidates in the 3rd District and is committed to the race. 

The above races are against congressional incumbents considered key to the upcoming Fast Track vote. Greens also have declared their candidacies for Congress in California (41st) and Nevada (1st), and are gearing up to run serious campaigns in hundreds of other congressional and statewide races next year. Over 277 Greens vied for federal, state, and local office in 2001, and at least 55 of these won election. 

"Green Party congressional candidates will fight to defend American sovereignty against anti-democratic trade pacts, and we will campaign to hold congressional incumbents accountable for their betrayal of working people and the environment," said Ben Manski, Co-Chair of the Green Party of the United States. 

H.R. 3005 would grant Fast Track trade negotiation powers to the President and represents a substantial transfer of Congress' constitutionally-mandated authority over trade to the executive branch. Greens join with the AFL-CIO, the Sierra Club, Friends of the Earth, Public Citizen, and hundreds of other unions, civil rights, environmental, student, farm, and democracy groups in strongly opposing the bill. Greens generally oppose the establishment of trade agreements which undermine democracy and erode environmental, labor, and civil rights protections. Greens specifically oppose the granting of Presidential Fast Track authority because of the perception that the Presidency is insensitive to citizen concerns about trade policy. 

Recent Green Party Releases on Fast Track:
http://www.gp-us.org/press/pr_10_18_01.html 
http://www.gp-us.org/press/pr_11_19_01.html

Contacts:
Nancy Allen, Media Coordinator, 207-326-4576, nallen@acadia.net 
Scott McLarty, Media Coordinator, 202-518-5624, scottmclarty@yahoo.com
Ben Manski, Co-Chair, 608 239 6915, manski@greens.org 

search: elct

News Release - Monday, December 03, 2001

Home | Press