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Green Party Coverage
Ralph Nader, Cynthia McKinney and Elaine Brown matched up on the Green Party of California presidential primary ballot. This article includes primary results, and reports and analysis from the polls.
One report from Boston, but no statewide returns from Massachusetts yet:
From Massachusetts, from the Wicked Local:
"…the Green Party, where in Boston, 184 people cast ballots. Ralph Nader emerged the winner in the city with 67 votes, compared to 64 for second-place finisher Cynthia McKinney. There were also 26 write-ins and 14 people who had no preference…"
In California, where Nader’s name was directly on the ballot, Nader is leading with 66.8%, with former Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney in second place with 19.9%. There were actually similar results in the California Peace and Freedom Party, where Nader is winning with 40.2% of the vote, Cynthia McKinney is in second with 21.3% (despite being enrolled Green Party), and Gloria La Riva is in third with 20.6%.
Also in the California Green Party primary, it is noteworthy that former Black Panther Party Chair Elaine Brown came in 3rd place, in front of many other greens vying for the nomination. Ms. Brown received over a thousand votes in California, even after withdrawing from the race and resigning from the party. Ms. Brown's vote tallies may reflect a statement from grassroots greens to the national party about how diversity issues are handled at GP-US.
In Illinois, Ralph Nader’s name was not on the ballot (because of not being a declared candidate.) So, the McKinney-Nader match-up is hard to make a determination by. Though, McKinney won the whole Green field in Illinois with 57%. Howie Hawkins, as a stand-in for Nader, received 17%. Though, these Hawkins/Nader results may simply reflect a lack of understanding that Hawkins was a stand-in for Nader. Of course, the national media ignores our humble, third party. In addition, the national Green Party was late in sending out the summary press release listing which candidates were on which ballots.
In Arkansas, Nader was not even a choice on the ballot. So, one might imagine that the some of the 53% of greens there who voted “uncommitted” might have been expressing a wish for Nader to be listed. Regardless, the winner in Arkansas was Cynthia McKinney with 21% of the lead. With Jared Ball in second place at 11%.
Problems at the Polls: Unfair administering of the Green Party primary by the election officials:
Reports back from Illinois, Arkansas and California that pollworkers and systems made it difficult to even cast a Green Party vote. In Illinois-I think an incident separate from the Green Party-they had a situation where a pollworker falsely told voters that their vote could be cast in “invisible” ink, when in fact, he was having voters use a touch-screen stylus instead of a pen. Ironically, the Wall Street Journal inadvertently corroborated reports of problems in California, by quoting a very nice “Green Party member” who was saying that he was going to vote for Hillary Clinton, and instead voted for Obama. Greens in California were supposed to get Green ballots, and various media reports show this was not done correctly.
The Green Party is an alternative to the two corporate parties. The Four Pillars of the Green Party are: Grassroots Democracy; Economic and Social Justice; Ecological Wisdom; and Non-Violence/Peace.
From Massachusetts, from the Wicked Local:
"…the Green Party, where in Boston, 184 people cast ballots. Ralph Nader emerged the winner in the city with 67 votes, compared to 64 for second-place finisher Cynthia McKinney. There were also 26 write-ins and 14 people who had no preference…"
In California, where Nader’s name was directly on the ballot, Nader is leading with 66.8%, with former Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney in second place with 19.9%. There were actually similar results in the California Peace and Freedom Party, where Nader is winning with 40.2% of the vote, Cynthia McKinney is in second with 21.3% (despite being enrolled Green Party), and Gloria La Riva is in third with 20.6%.
Also in the California Green Party primary, it is noteworthy that former Black Panther Party Chair Elaine Brown came in 3rd place, in front of many other greens vying for the nomination. Ms. Brown received over a thousand votes in California, even after withdrawing from the race and resigning from the party. Ms. Brown's vote tallies may reflect a statement from grassroots greens to the national party about how diversity issues are handled at GP-US.
In Illinois, Ralph Nader’s name was not on the ballot (because of not being a declared candidate.) So, the McKinney-Nader match-up is hard to make a determination by. Though, McKinney won the whole Green field in Illinois with 57%. Howie Hawkins, as a stand-in for Nader, received 17%. Though, these Hawkins/Nader results may simply reflect a lack of understanding that Hawkins was a stand-in for Nader. Of course, the national media ignores our humble, third party. In addition, the national Green Party was late in sending out the summary press release listing which candidates were on which ballots.
In Arkansas, Nader was not even a choice on the ballot. So, one might imagine that the some of the 53% of greens there who voted “uncommitted” might have been expressing a wish for Nader to be listed. Regardless, the winner in Arkansas was Cynthia McKinney with 21% of the lead. With Jared Ball in second place at 11%.
Problems at the Polls: Unfair administering of the Green Party primary by the election officials:
Reports back from Illinois, Arkansas and California that pollworkers and systems made it difficult to even cast a Green Party vote. In Illinois-I think an incident separate from the Green Party-they had a situation where a pollworker falsely told voters that their vote could be cast in “invisible” ink, when in fact, he was having voters use a touch-screen stylus instead of a pen. Ironically, the Wall Street Journal inadvertently corroborated reports of problems in California, by quoting a very nice “Green Party member” who was saying that he was going to vote for Hillary Clinton, and instead voted for Obama. Greens in California were supposed to get Green ballots, and various media reports show this was not done correctly.
The Green Party is an alternative to the two corporate parties. The Four Pillars of the Green Party are: Grassroots Democracy; Economic and Social Justice; Ecological Wisdom; and Non-Violence/Peace.
For more information:
http://www.onthewilderside.net
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