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Towards a just & healthy democracy in the Commonwealth... and beyond!
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Fri Aug 13, 2010 at 11:23:27 AM EDT
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(Ideas, schmideas. Debates just clutter the political discourse! - promoted by eli_beckerman)
I am asked frequently if I will debate my incumbent opponent before our two-way race culminates in the general election on November 2. The answer is 'YES.' I will debate in any race if the event organizers do not exclude a fellow candidate who is on the same ballot.
In the special senate election in Massachusetts earlier this year, Martha Coakley implored upon debate organizers to include all three candidates, but did not go as far as I would have in requiring it.
This condition of mine - to participate only if no candidate is exluded - is irrelevant if there are only two candidates. But many primary and general election races, including this years gubernatorial election in Massachusetts, have more than two candidates. |
| scott_laugenour :: Candidate Debates |
| During the 2008 New Hampshire Republican Party primaries, the state republican party withdrew its sponsorship and endorsement of a debate when Fox News insisted on excluding Ron Paul and Duncan Hunter. Unfortunately, the other invited candidates did not take a principled stand and the show went on. (Also unfortunate was the purging of the state party's brave statement on the subject from its web site a few weeks later.)
In Canada, also in 2008, the ruling party leadership along with a sponsoring media group were compelled to reverse themselves and invite the Green Party leader, Elizabeth May, who had been excluded from a national elections debate. The general public and one other party leader loudly protested the exclusion. The show went on with Ms. May present.
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/20...
(My Canadian friends tell me that they don't want their country following the example of their southern neighbor, neither in health care nor in political debates.)
Dennis Kucinich learned during the Democratic Party primary that each debate organizer sets it own criteria. He witnessed the criteria shift around, and he learned that other candidates were more than ready to comply with exclusionary practices. He did not receive the kind of support from any state affiliate of his party that Ron Paul and Duncan Hunter received from the New Hampshire Republican Party. In one instance, for a debate in Las Vegas in early 2008, he had first been exluded, then formally invited, and then summarily dis-invited. An appeals court upheld the exclusion, determining that a media corporation had a first amendment right to free speech, which would be violated if the corporation were forced to include a candidate against its wishes.
As a candidate I will not participate in exclusionary debates and as a voter I do not watch them. This is out of respect for the hard work it takes to get on the ballot and my respect for those who run, regardless of political ideology. I politely walk out of gatherings of people that do tune in, explaining my reason for doing so. I missed seeing first-hand what color shoes Sarah Palin wore to the vice presidential debate because Rosa Clemente and three other vice presidential candidates, all of whom were on the ballots in enough states to garner the needed number of electoral college votes to win election, were excluded.
Jill Stein, this year's Green-Rainbow candidate for governor in Massachusetts, issued a statement yesterday. She had been notified of financial criteria that another media consortium is imposing on gubernatorial debates this year. Please read it.
http://www.jillstein.org/2010/...
I'll never forget the woman who approached me and asked an innocent question in Lenox on election day in November, 2008. I was standing in front of the polling station with a Cynthia McKinney sign. The woman saw that Cynthia McKinney was the Green Party candidate for president. She said that she was very happy to see that the Green Party was active. "We need to hear the green party perspective," she declared. I gave her some information about the party. Then she asked me, "Why was it that the Green Party chose not to be in the presidential debates?" I let a few moments of silence pass with a small sigh. The days when the League Of Women Voters organized debates in the spirit of democracy and voter service are long gone. I provided the woman with a short lesson on the recent history of debate practices, which I will leave for others to elaborate upon at another time.
Let's insist on real debates. I'll see you there. |
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Green Mass Group is an online forum for Green thought and collective action in Massachusetts. It is a community forum for justice, sustainability, democracy and health in the Commonwealth and beyond.
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| Quotes |
"Now, is this the deal I would have preferred? No. I believe that we could have made the tough choices required - on entitlement reform and tax reform - right now, rather than through a special congressional committee process. But this compromise does make a serious down payment on the deficit reduction we need and gives each party a strong incentive to get a balanced plan done before the end of the year. Most importantly, it will allow us to avoid default and end the crisis that Washington imposed on the rest of America."
--President Barack Obama on the debt ceiling "deal"
"Despite Democratic control over the White House, despite Democratic control over the Senate, despite overwhelming opposition from the American people, a small minority of the members of the Republican-controlled House have successfully pushed an extreme right-wing agenda onto the American political landscape. It is an ideology which believes that despite the fact that the rich are getting richer, the middle class is shrinking, and poverty is increasing, all - all of the burden for deficit reduction should rest on working people."
--Independent Senator Bernie Sanders on the debt ceiling "deal"
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Then and Now
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Then...
"Last year Evergreen, a Massachusetts company, agreed to establish their first-ever United States based manufacturing facility here in Massachusetts. They did so, or are doing so, at Devens. They have now agreed and chosen to triple their size at Devens. Their next phase of expansion, right here in Massachusetts, a signature company in a signature sector, and we congratulate all of the folks at Evergreen and look forward to continuing to work with you...
We made a personal commitment to Evergreen for the sake of Evergreen, but also because we wanted to show that there are ways in which state government, in working together with private industry and with the utility companies, could begin to create a different kind of environment, a different kind of business climate here, to grow that sector, and it is happening. It's happening. Evergreen is one of the most prominent examples, but there are a whole host of examples."
--Governor Deval Patrick, April 7, 2008, boasting about state investment in Evergreen.
and Now...
"Evergreen Solar Inc. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection yesterday, completing a stunning reversal of fortune for a high-flying alternative-energy company that once seemed to herald a new era for the Massachusetts economy... At its peak, Evergreen employed roughly 900 people locally and attracted more than $50 million in state support, as its stock price soared above $100 a share.
Yesterday, Evergreen's stock closed at 18 cents. The company shuttered its manufacturing plant in Devens earlier this year and now has only 85 employees left. Massachusetts is one of its top creditors, owed $1.5 million in rent."
--Erin Ailworth, Boston Globe, August 16, 2011
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