Activists Locked Out by PA Governor

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Sunday, April 7, 2024

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

 

Activists Locked Out by PA Governor

By Doug Mason

Due to PA Governor Josh Shapiro’s stance on climate change many environmentalists were enthusiastic supporters and promoted his 2022 campaign for PA Governor. Now it appears that they have been fooled.

 

Shapiro claims that he has an open door policy. When two dozen protesters from Pennsylvania Action on Climate (PAC) went to his office in Harrisburg on March 19, the door was locked and surrounded by a dozen capital police and state troopers. PAC had tried to set up a meeting both in person and online with the governor to no avail.

During this attempted office visit, three members of PAC were arrested on the floor of the Capitol building: Rev. Tim Seitz Brown, a Lutheran pastor from York; Rachel “Renzy” Neffshade, a Pittsburgh climate activist; and Doug Mason, chair of the Sierra Club Moshannon Group and of the Green Party of Centre County. The Moshannon Group has 905 members from Pennsylvania’s central counties from Maryland to New York. The Green Party of Centre County is a chapter of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org). These three leaders were protesting Shapiro’s acceptance of bribes from the fossil fuel industry, despite his claims to be a climate advocate.

The three protestors attempted to read a statement from PAC, but it was ripped out of their hands. They were then handcuffed and taken to the basement of the Capital Complex to be processed. After about two hours, they were released on their own recognizance.

 

“I’m a 73 year old climate dissident who took the personal risk of acting in civil resistance against state government policies, as well as the business-as-usual activities of industry, economic systems, and individuals that fail to take urgent action to reduce and eliminate carbon dioxide emissions caused by fossil fuel use,” said Mason. “The risks I incur from this action are a small sacrifice compared to the scale and urgency of the threats of climate change to our existence.”

“I claim my right under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution to conduct this nonviolent civil disobedience as an expression of my freedom of speech to petition to the government for redress of the extreme and manifest grievance caused by government policies and laws failing to effect carbon dioxide reduction or lacking in the power to enact necessary preventative and remedial actions to reverse the negative effects of carbon emissions from fossil fuel burning and to limit fossil fuel extraction and halt the increase of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere that are causing global heating and climate change,” concluded Mason.

The previous few weeks had been contentious between the governor and environmentalists. Maya van Rossum from the Delaware Riverkeeper Network,  concerned about hydrogen hubs, interrupted Shapiro at a Philadelphia union event, and a Dimock resident and disabled veteran, Ray Kemble, challenged him at another union event a few days later in Scranton over lax enforcement and water-supply losses.


Apparently the governor’s “open door” is not for people who are concerned about political corruption, hurt by fracking or want to comment on development of hydrogen hubs in PA. These three issues are connected because it is very likely that the way hydrogen is produced in PA will support the expansion of fracking.

 

The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, has opposed fracking since 2008, and it continues to represent the environmental movement in elections to this day. The Green Party of PA is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

 

For More Information

Pennsylvania Action on Climate, https://www.pennsylvaniaactiononclimate.org

“Climate Activists Trying to Meet with Gov. Shapiro Arrested After Refusing to Disburse,” Patriot News, March 19, 2024, https://www.pennlive.com/politics/2024/03/climate-activists-trying-to-meet-with-gov-shapiro-arrested-after-refusing-to-disperse.html

Marcellus Shale Resolution, Green Party of PA, April 2011, https://www.gpofpa.org/fracking 

 

END ITEM


Green Party Kicks Off PA Nomination Campaign

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Friday, April 5, 2024

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

 

Green Party Kicks Off PA Nomination Campaign

Getting Green Party candidates on the ballot will be extremely important this year in Pennsylvania because there will be vital issues which candidates from the two corporate parties will not touch. Clean water, public housing, rights during an eviction, reproductive rights, public transit, climate change, genocide, and neo-colonialism are all issues which will be addressed by Green Party candidates. Now is the time to get on the ballot candidates who have solutions for homelessness, mass incarceration, global wars, and rampant industrial pollution.

On April 3, the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org/) announced the kickoff for the 2024 nomination campaign. Nomination papers are now being distributed state-wide.

The GPPA nominated Dr. Jill Stein on March 10 to be their candidate for President of the U.S. She has the answers for the big questions facing the nation. Co-leader Alex Casper (Philadelphia) of the GPPA Green Wave Team, says, “Jill needs our help, and so do our PA Attorney General and U.S. Senate candidates. Please help Greens win in 2024 so that we can make big changes happen.”

“For the Green Party candidates to appear on the General Election ballot,” continued Casper, “we will have to gather nomination signatures from 10,000 registered voters. The Green Wave Team will be hosting petition trainings each Wednesday at 7:00 pm and Sunday at 3:00 pm. Please check the GPPA Calendar, gpofpa.org/calendar, to RSVP for the next petition training.” 

The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

 

For more information:

 

“PA Greens Nomination Jill Stein for President of the U.S.” GPPA News Release, March 14, 2024, https://www.gpofpa.org/pa_greens_nominate_jill_stein_for_president_of_the_us  

 

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PA Greens Nominate Jill Stein for President of the U.S.

primary_gppa_2024_final.jpg

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday, March 14, 2024

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

 

PA Greens Nominate Jill Stein for President of the U.S.

 

On March 10, Green Party delegates and friends from 12 Pennsylvania counties met virtually for the Green Party of PA (GPPA) State Committee meeting. The 30 delegates were in good cheer because they had just completed the first GPPA Presidential Primary. There were two winners. Jill Stein came in first place and earned 75% of the vote and was awarded ten delegates. Jasmine Sherman came in second place with 19% of the vote and earned three delegates. Jorge Zavala and write-in candidates did not earn any delegates.

 

Marci Henzi, a GPPA State Committee delegate from Allegheny County, was very pleased. “I am glad that Jill Stein is running again and that she has been nominated by GPPA for President. Jill has proven to be a strong leader--not only through her phenomenal campaign in 2016, but by her presence for the Green Party in the eight intervening years. Her strength and powerful rhetoric continues to inspire new and seasoned voters alike. Jill Stein is a courageous representative of what we value and what we aspire to.”

“It is marvelous that Green Party voters have chosen Jill Stein to be their candidate in PA for president of the U.S.,” said Chris Robinson a State Committee delegate from Philadelphia. “Jill Stein has always stood for people, planet and peace over profit. Now, voters who agree with her will have a choice on November 5.” 

 

"As a member of Poor People's Army working with the organized poor everyday on the streets in the greater Philly area, I'm thrilled that Jill Stein won the GPPA presidential primary,” said Matthew Pillischer (Montgomery). “Poor and working people don't have an option that will actually mean something in either corporate party. One party smiles with a peace sign while they stab you in the back, and the other party stabs you in the chest while making fun of you. Neither party works for us. We need to build independent people power from the bottom and look for meaningful ways like this to express that in the limited but important electoral arena."

 

GPPA Co-chair Jeremy Griffin (Delaware) said, “Glad that we were able run a successful and transparent primary. Shout out to OpaVote and U.S. Postal Service for being the reliable tools used for our Green Party Presidential Primary. Special shout out to our GreenWave Team. GreenWave Team members came together and were the architects of this primary plan. I'm also very glad to see more people vote Green this upcoming election. I'm excited to see more Greens organized this year, too."

 

The GPPA State Committee also elected by consensus: a candidate for for U.S. Senate and Richard Weiss Esq. (Allegheny) for PA Attorney General. Weiss was the Green Party candidate for PA Attorney General in 2020, earning 70,804 votes.at

 

There will be virtual training for all who wish to help get Green Party candidates on the PA ballot on Sunday, March 17 at 3:00 pm. Please RSVP here, https://www.gpofpa.org/gppa_petitioning_20240317 The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

 

END ITEM


Gaza Ceasefire Testimony by Greens Before Allegheny County Council

 

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday, March 3, 2024

 

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

267-977-0570 and [email protected]

 

Gaza Ceasefire Testimony by Greens Before Allegheny County Council

Out of 93 people who signed up to speak in favor of a ceasefire in Gaza before the Allegheny County Council on February 26, there were eleven members of the Green Party of Allegheny County (GPOAC), including Margaret Champion, Emily De Ferrari, Helen Gerhardt, Theron Gilliland, Wanda Guthrie, Abi Hunter, Kelly Kuzemchak, Justin Laing, Mel Packer, Jay Ting Walker and Clara Weibel. Others who testified in favor of a ceasefire were from Jewish Voice for Peace, labor unions and progressive organizations. Walker spoke on behalf of the GPOAC.

By Jay Ting Walker

My name is Jay Ting Walker and I live in District 11. I’m the chair of the Green Party of Allegheny County (GPOAC). Our party is made up of more than 1000 registered members from every corner of our county, and I speak on their behalf. Every one of us is dedicated to our party’s four pillars of Peace, Ecology, Social Justice, and Grassroots Democracy. Many of our members have been local leaders in the Palestine solidarity community for many years and continue to be to this day.

What’s happening in Gaza is genocide. Members of the Netanyahu administration including Prime Minister Netanyahu himself have made it very clear that Israel's purpose is to remove Palestinians from Gaza. As of today more than 29,000 Palestinians have been murdered. This genocide has been financed and facilitated by the U.S. government including President Joe Biden, with support from both Houses of Congress utilizing OUR tax dollars. We here in this room and in this county are paying for the genocide of the Palestinian people. Just last week, both of our state’s U.S. Senators Casey and Fetterman voted to send an additional $14.1 billion dollars in military aid to Israel. Yes, the money could be spent in many other places but ignoring that, our tax dollars should NOT be financing an illegal occupation. They should NOT be financing the genocide of an entire people.

At our recent GPOAC convention, Green Party members voted overwhelmingly to organize for a ceasefire in Gaza in solidarity with Green Parties around the world. This stance is directly in line with the U.S. Green Party's platform which calls for an end to the occupation. As a result here today, the Green Party of Allegheny County is calling for a ceasefire resolution and for the Allegheny County Council to vote for such a resolution directed towards our full Congressional delegation to demand that they support a ceasefire. We needed a ceasefire more than 100 days ago. Having failed that, we need a ceasefire right now.

Jay Ting Walker is a member of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) Steering Committee. He was a co-chair of GPPA from 2020 until 2023.

The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

For more information, please see:

“Ending the Gaza War: Can a Just Peace Arise?” webinar, GPUS Peace Action Committee, December 1, 2023, https://www.gp.org/ending_the_gaza_war_can_a_just_peace_arise 

“Green Party condemns attacks on civilians in Israel and Gaza; calls for immediate ceasefire,” news release, Green Party of the U.S., October 12, 2023, https://www.gp.org/green_party_condemns_attacks_on_civilians 

END ITEM


Hydrogen Fuel Will Cause a Worse Climate Disaster

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Monday, February 26, 2024

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

 

Hydrogen Fuel Will Cause a Worse Climate Disaster 

PA Governor Josh Shapiro announced on October 13, 2023, an investment in two “hydrogen production facilities from renewable and nuclear electricity.” Many environmental activists reacted negatively. 

The Green Party Platform says, “Greens support research into advanced fuels when the purpose of the research is to develop a fuel that in its full cycle does not create more problems than it solves. We support the use of hydrogen as an energy storage medium; however we oppose the use of nuclear technologies or carbon-based feedstocks for hydrogen production.” The Green Party Communication Team asked a member of the Green Party of Montgomery County to explain why the Green Party does not support the use of hydrogen as a transportation fuel.

By Rick Denzien (Montgomery County)

The notion that hydrogen (H) can be produced for “clean” transportation is greenwashing pushed to the ridiculous. Hydrogen is the first element on the periodic table of elements and readily combines with many other elements including oxygen (O) in the air we breathe.

The combination form of H is water, a life giving compound (HO), which we all drink and even float upon. With more that 76% of the Earth’s surface covered with water (coming from crashing ice comets), it is natural to assume that if we could unglue the massive star power that created water and get free H and O, but like many things, free isn’t really free.

95+% of all hydrogen produced today does not come from splitting water, but from splitting CH (aka “methane” or “natural gas”). The fossil fuel companies are happy to promote this idea at every opportunity. After all, methane is one of the main products of hydraulic fracturing (“fracking”) -- the promise of cheap energy, along with free negative externalities like radioactive wastewater filled with hundreds of known cancer-causing chemicals.

CH is a powerful climate heating gas, 80 times more powerful than CO (carbon dioxide) as a gas that holds the sun’s heat in. In 2014, NASA discovered that there was a bubble of methane the size of the state of Delaware floating over the U.S. NASA scientists thought that there must be a huge mistake in instrumentation, but the instruments from space were correct. The evidence was vindicated on the ground.

It turns out that every oil and gas well ever drilled is leaking methane into the atmosphere -- some a little, most quite a bit, and a few are out of control. Millions of these wells are leaking methane, not just one or two. They all leak. The pipes leak, the consolidators leak, and at home we spray open methane into our furnaces. We turn on our gas stoves to cook. All are leaking methane.

The Dark Side of Hydrogen
Hydrogen has long been hailed as a clean and sustainable energy source with the potential to revolutionize the energy landscape. However, a closer examination reveals a darker side to this seemingly eco-friendly element. In fact, hydrogen -- when produced from methane, coal or ammonia -- poses significant human and environmental risk.

Hydrogen production from methane is one of the most common methods, a process called steam methane reforming (SMR). This process involves reacting methane (CH) with steam (HO) to produce hydrogen (H) and carbon dioxide (CO). Unfortunately, this also results in the release of CO, a very potent greenhouse gas contributing to global warming and climate change. In addition, when hydrogen is burned it forms warm water vapor, which is itself a greenhouse gas known to intensify storm weather systems. Particulate matter (PM 2.5) is also a concern under study.

Greenwashing by Fossil Fuel Companies
As the world increasingly shifts toward cleaner energy alternatives, fossil fuel companies are desperately trying to halt the downward spiral to stranded assets by attempting to rebrand themselves as environmentally responsible entities. Hydrogen, being touted as a green energy carrier, provides these companies with an opportunity for greenwashing – the practice of misleadingly portraying environmentally harmful activities as environmentally friendly.

Fossil fuel companies often invest in hydrogen projects, emphasizing their commitment to sustainability. However, the reality is that a significant portion of hydrogen production is derived from fossil fuels, perpetuating their reliance on non-renewable resources.

Environmental Impact
The environmental impact of hydrogen production from methane extends beyond greenhouse gas emissions. Extraction and transportation of methane, as well as the potential leakage of methane during these processes, further contribute to environmental degradation. In addition, the disposal of carbon dioxide generated during hydrogen production poses challenges, with carbon capture and storage technologies still in the early stages of development and implementation.

The released CO during the manufacture of H, goes right into the atmosphere as a climate-change gas. The fossil fuel companies will say that they can carbon capture the CO gas and store it underground but fail to point out the extreme expense and ineffectiveness of the proposed technology using up even more energy. As of this writing, 95%+ of H is produced today in the most irresponsible, dirtiest, and environmentally harmful way. Involvement in hydrogen projects serves as a cautionary tale, emphasizing the importance of scrutinizing the origins and practices of supposedly green technologies. As society strives for genuine sustainability, it is imperative to remain vigilant against the pitfalls of greenwashing and to prioritize truly clean and renewable energy sources.

Ron Denzien has been a member of the Green Party of Montgomery County since 2014. He is a singer/songwriter/performer and advocate for sustainable energy, transportation and environmental justice. Denzien’s solar array became the first home and business in Montgomery County to go 100% zero emission in 2014. Become a patron of his work: www.Patreon.com/RickDenzien

The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

For more information, please see:

PA the Only State to Secure Two Regional Clean Hydrogen Hub Projects, PA Department of Community and Economic Development, October 13, 2023,
https://dced.pa.gov/newsroom/governor-josh-shapiro-pennsylvania-the-only-state-to-secure-two-regional-clean-hydrogen-hub-projects/ 

Platform of the Green Party of the U.S.: III.Ecological Sustainability; B.Energy; 2.Move to Renewable Sources; Paragraph f; https://www.gp.org/ecological_sustainability#renewable 

Is Hydrogen Just Oil and Gas Greenwashed? By James Morris, Forbes, July 31, 2021,
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jamesmorris/2021/07/31/is-hydrogen-just-oil-and-gas-greenwashed 

Hydrogen Areas of Concern, Clean Energy Group, https://www.cleanegroup.org/initiatives/hydrogen/areas-of-concern/ 

END ITEM

Appeared:

GPUS website, https://www.gp.org/hydrogen_fuel_will_cause 


Have a Green International Women’s Day, March 8

GPPA_fem_2024_b.jpg

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday, February 6, 2024

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

 

Have a Green International Women’s Day, March 8

By Marci Henzi (Allegheny)

 

International Women’s Day (IWD) will be celebrated on Friday, March 8, this year.  But did you know that the first “Women’s Day” (No, not the still famous magazine first published in 1931 as a free leaflet for A&P grocery shoppers, almost exclusively women.) was celebrated on February 28, 1909, and that it was organized by the Socialist Party of America in NY City? Then it caught on throughout Europe, and in 1917, March 8 was declared a national holiday in Russia, right after women gained suffrage. That date stuck, and the day was associated with movements of the far left until the late ‘60’s women’s movement and the day’s adoption by the United Nations in 1977.

Now IWD has become more of a celebration of womanhood in the West, but in other parts of the world it is still marked by protest and calls for radical change. This twenty-first century contrast in meaning and significance has not gone without criticism.  Claims have been made that Western corporations have commercialized International Women’s Day and diluted its meaning. But still, the United Nations declares a yearly theme. This year’s theme is based on the United Nations 68th Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) priority theme: “Accelerating the achievement of gender equality and empowerment of all women and girls by addressing poverty and strengthening institutions and financing with a gender perspective,” or simply, “Invest in Women: Accelerate Progress.”

And did you know that there are colors associated with International Women’s Day? They are purple -- signifying justice, dignity and loyalty to cause; green -- symbolizing hope; and white -- signifying purity. 

Maybe you are thinking of one of the Green Party’s Ten Key Values (TKV). And, I wish you would this IWD!  Here it is, TKV # 7: Feminism and Gender Equality.

“We have inherited a social system based on male domination of politics and economics.  We call for the replacement of the cultural ethics of domination and control with cooperative ways of interacting that respect differences of opinion and gender. Human values such as gender equality, interpersonal responsibility, and honesty must be developed with moral conscience. We recognize that the processes of determining our decisions and actions are just as important as achieving the outcomes we want.”

Please consider the intersection of TKV #7 and TKV #3: Ecological Wisdom through Ecological Politics: Ecofeminists and the Greens by Greta Gaard, https://tupress.temple.edu/books/ecological-politics

Hoping you remember to have a Green International Women’s Day! 

Marci Henzi has been a Green Party of Allegheny County (GPOAC) delegate to the Green Party of Pennsylvania State Committee since 2019. In the past, she was also a member of the GPOAC Executive Committee.

The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

 

For more information:

International Women’s Day, March 8, United Nations,
https://www.un.org/en/observances/womens-day

Green Party Ten Key Values, Green Party of Allegheny County,
https://www.alleghenygreens.org/about/ten-key-values

Ecological Politics: Ecofeminists and the Greens by Greta Gaard, Temple University Press, 1998, https://tupress.temple.edu/books/ecological-politics

 

END ITEM

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PA Greens Presidential Primary Candidate Information 2024 - GREENSTAR

February Special Election GREEN STAR

Who is on the PA Green Party '24 Presidential Primary Ballot for Registered Pennsylvania Greens to nominate?

On February 6, the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) Green Wave Team announced which candidates for President of the U.S. would appear on the Green Party Primary Election ballot. This special edition of the GPPA GREEN STAR will give you some background on the three candidates on our ballot and how to participate in the Primary Election.

This email is a project of the Green Party of PA Communications team, [email protected]  

 

JASMINE D. SHERMAN

https://www.jasminesherman2024.com/

 

NO PREVIOUS GREEN PARTY ELECTION RESULTS

Social Media:

https://twitter.com / FatSocialist

https://www.facebook.com/JasmineSherman2024

https://www.instagram.com/jasmineshermanforpresident/

https://www.tiktok.com/@fatblacksocialist

YouTube 

 

 

DR. JILL STEIN 

https://www.jillstein2024.com/

 

GREEN PARTY ELECTIONS DATABASE RESULTS

Social Media:

https://twitter.com / DrJillStein

https://www.facebook.com/drjillstein

https://www.instagram.com/drjillstein/

https://www.tiktok.com/@drjillstein

https://www.youtube.com/@JillStein2024

 

JORGE ZAVALA

https://votejz.org/

 

NO PREVIOUS GREEN PARTY ELECTION RESULTS

Social Media:

https://twitter.com / VoteJorgeZavala

Facebook

https://www.instagram.com/citizensforjorgezavala/

https://www.tiktok.com/@citizensforjorgezavala

YouTube

 

 

 

OR A WRITE-IN CANDIDATE

 

 

 

What is the Green Party Primary and Why do we do it? 

As with all national parties here in the United States - each national party is required to determine their organizations primary election results for the November Presidential Election.

The Green Party of the United States is a National Organization made up of Independent State Parties. Each State is responsible to submit the results of their state specific primary process at our Annual National Meetings of the Green Party of the United States. 

The Green Party's 2024 Annual National Meeting will take place online July 11–14, 2024

 

How is the Green Party of Pennsylvania Primary going to be conducted?

"Information on the 2024 process can be be found here
Deadline to request a ballot - Thursday, February 8

GPPA primary voting begins:

Mail-in ballots are mailed to voters – Wednesday, February 14

Online voting conducted via OpaVote begins – Thursday, February 15

GPPA primary voting ends:

Online voting closes – Thursday, February 29

Mail-in votes postmark deadline – Thursday, February 29

Mail-in votes must be received – Monday, March 4

 

If you are a new Green, the below links include information on Green Party our values and National platform.    

Ten Key Values | Green Party Platform | Green New Deal 

 

Green Party of Pennsylvania
https://www.gpofpa.org/


Green Party of Philadelphia hosts presidential candidates forum

The sounds of the Market-Frankford train above made the Zoom presentations difficult to hear, and the start of the event was delayed by 40 minutes due to a bevy of technical issues. But four Green Party candidates persevered at a forum presented by the Green Party of Philadelphia on Tuesday, giving their pitches for why they should represent the environmentally conscious political party. 

The candidates met at the Poor People’s Economic and Human Rights Campaign (PPEHRC) office on Kensington Avenue, and all four mostly agreed on hot button issues like addressing climate change, affordable housing, and criminal justice matters. 


Pennsylvania Capital Star
By John Cole
January 24, 2024


DaShaun “Davi” Davis of New York, a former candidate for that city’s mayor, opened with a song, and described his plan as an “American Refresh” and touted his “Earth Order” agenda. 

Jorge Zavala of California, who is visually impaired, joined the program via Zoom, and asserted he was not a politician, but a businessman. North Carolina resident Jasmine Sherman, said their platform provided a clear path to victory for the Green Party: “Provide everyone with their basic human needs. Housing, healthcare, education, and universal basic income.”

Perhaps the biggest name in the Green Party, 2016 and 2012 candidate Jill Stein, is again seeking the party’s nomination. She said she believes this is “an unprecedented opportunity” for the Green Party to fulfill its agenda. 

“I’m running to put a pro-worker, anti-war, anti-genocide, climate emergency campaign front and center in this election and on the ballot in every state across the country,” Stein said via Zoom. 

Three Green Party Inspectors of Election moderated the event, which was also live-streamed on their social media accounts and included ASL interpreters. Questions were also submitted by those within the organization and unhoused Philadelphians.

The candidates agreed that climate change needs to be front and center for a president from the Green Party.

Stein said that on day one of the presidency, she would declare a climate emergency and claimed President Joe Biden’s support for liquified natural gas plants “makes Donald Trump look like a climate activist.”

Zavala detailed his support for green technology, as Sherman discussed their support for creating green jobs, and Davi talked about improving the quality of air in the United States as a priority.

All of the candidates agreed that rents are too high and affordable housing should be a main focus. 

“I’m going to end houselessness in 91 days,” Sherman said, adding that they believe housing should be free. “A vote for Sherman is a vote for no more landlords and no more mortgages.”  

Davi said that people can “opt-out of capitalism and enroll” in his Earth Order plan, which addresses housing. “This is the opportunity we have to make homelessness an option,” he said, adding that the government should ensure there is quality housing available to those who need it. 

Stein said there’s a “housing emergency” in the U.S. and affordable housing is guaranteed in her “Economic Bill of Rights.” She said there’s enough vacant housing to address the issue. Rent control and a “Tenants Bill of Rights” are also needed, Stein said.

Zavala talked about making sure money goes back to the renters and the economic impact that homelessness is having on the nation’s economy. 

Candidates were also asked about their plans to address the issues of the carceral state and those returning from prison. 

Sherman said that they support abolishing prisons and creating a house arrest system and encouraged those to see the campaign website’s plan on abolishing the police. 

Stein said it was imperative to end the war on drugs, and end mandatory minimum sentences and cash bail. Zavala stressed education in the prison system and Davi said his plan will help those returning from prison reintegrate into society. 

While technical problems persisted throughout the evening, Green Party officials used it as an opportunity to seek donations.

“As Jasmine says, offer more support to us and we can make this work better,” said Green Party of Philadelphia Chair Belinda Davis.

Cheri Honkola, 2012 Green Party vice presidential nominee, highlighted the area where the forum was held, for those who are not be familiar with Kensington. 

“If you Google Kensington from around the country, our neighborhood can pretty much be described as Hell or Gotham,” she said. “A lot of people are not impacted until they actually come and walk the streets around here.” 

She likened the outdoor drug market that persists in the neighborhood as similar to the war zone in Gaza. Despite the high rates of opioid overdoses in the area, “there’s really no plan in sight to address these issues,” Honkola said. 

The Green Party’s most recent attempts to get a presidential candidate on the Pennsylvania ballot also suffered from some technical issues.

Howie Hawkins, who earned the presidential nomination by the Green Party to run in 2020, was not on the ballot in Pennsylvania after the state’s Supreme Court ruled that the candidate did not follow the proper procedures to appear on the ballot, a decision that was viewed as a victory for Democrats

In 2016, Stein tallied 48,912 votes in Pennsylvania, which was 0.8% of the vote. Stein finished in fourth place in the Keystone State, trailing Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, and Libertarian presidential candidate Gary Johnson.

Although the vote total for third party candidates was not high in the 2016 election, pundits believe it may have played a role in determining the winner in several swing states, while some analysts view them as the wild card for the 2024 presidential election.

A vote by the Green Party National Committee determined that the 2024 convention to select its candidate will be virtual.

 

Reprint credit to our source: https://www.axios.com/local/phoenix

 


Green Party Elects New PA Leaders

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Sunday, January 28, 2024

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

 

Green Party Elects New PA Leaders

The mission of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is to promote Green values throughout our Commonwealth by participation in the political process: electing candidates; enacting legislation; organizing communities; providing viable new political options; supporting the development of county Green Parties; and making government more open, democratic, and participatory for all Pennsylvania citizens. The party, which now has more than 9,000 members, will be growing by leaps and bounds during this presidential election year. In preparing for this growth in registered Greens, the party will have to expand its organizational reach.

Now, the GPPA State Committee has elected a new Steering Committee for 2024. The most significant tasks have been assigned to the GPPA co-chairs, who are authorized to execute the business of the Party by and with the advice of the Steering Committee and subject to the approval of the State Committee.

GPPA Co-chair Jeremy R. Griffin (Delaware) was elected in 2023 for a two-year term. After this year’s election, Griffin said, “Awesome to be a part of such an active chapter in the Green Party of Pennsylvania's history. I will be pushing for honest, transparent and efficient meetings from the new Steering Committee this year. I'm sure that the new Steering Committee will get a lot of work done. I'm also glad to be working right alongside new Co-chair Theron Gilliland. He is a super important part of this Party. He has made significant strides in leading our Green Wave Team recently.”

Newly elected Co-chair Theron Gilliland, Jr. (he/him) (Allegheny) responded, "With Jay Ting Walker's two-year term as co-chair coming to an end, I thought it would be beneficial to GPPA if his successor were also in Allegheny County, one of the most active chapters in the state. I had worked with Jeremy Griffin a bit in late 2023, and I felt that he and I have a complementary skill set. Jeremy is great at connecting with people, generating enthusiasm, and having the 'big ideas' that motivate others; I work best more behind the scenes, ensuring that the organizational structure we put in place runs smoothly. In a presidential election year, the Green Party needs both kinds of people at the helm."

Before his election, Gilliland had been a member at large of the GPPA Steering Committee and media coordinator of the Green Party of Allegheny County (GPOAC).  Last year he had also taken on the leadership of the party’s Green Wave Team, which organized the Green Party’s 2024 Presidential Primary Election.

Also elected by the State Committee was new GPPA Treasurer Jeff Kondrich (Westmoreland) who explained, “I accepted the nomination for Treasurer for two reasons. The first and foremost factor was the necessity of the position contrasting with members who were willing to step into the role. The second (and older) reason is that it's important to me that the Green Party grow stronger and execute substantial plans to garner reputation, requisition, and especially relevance in what are sure to be intense and trying years to come in our near future. I appreciate the opportunity, and I plan to make a positive difference.” 

Three new Steering Committee members at large were elected by the State Committee. Two of them shared their background and why they ran for the GPPA leadership.

Alex Casper (they/them) (Philadelphia) explained how they saw their new responsibility. “I ran for the Steering Committee to make sure our party infrastructure is well taken care of. I ran because I want to make sure we are doing efforts that grow our party, not just maintain its current status. I plan on doing this by changing our practice with regard to adapting to new marketing laws, involving more petitioning, and increasing the amount of contacts we make as a party in our communities.” Casper is an elected member of the Green Party of Philadelphia City Committee, and they are under consideration to become leader of GPPA’s Core Team.

Jay Ting Walker said, “I decided to run for the GPPA Steering Committee so I could help to maintain continuity from previous GPPA Steering Committees during a pivotal year for our state party. Maybe it's relevant to mention that this would be my fourth year on the Steering Committee. (I was appointed to fill a vacancy in 2020.) Walker has been co-chair of GPPA, chair of GPOAC, and a Green Party candidate for State Representative.

Newly elected Steering Committee member at large, Tim Runkle (Lancaster) is also chair of the Green Party of Lancaster County. Runkle had been GPPA Treasurer from 2018 until 2021.

The new GPPA Steering Committee will take office on February 1. The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

 

For more information, please see:

“New Leaders Vow to Expand PA Green Party,” GPPA News Release, January 23, 2023,
https://www.gpofpa.org/new_leaders_vow_to_expand_pa_green_party 

“PA Green Party Elects 2022 Steering Committee,” GPPA News Release, January 14, 2022, https://www.gpofpa.org/pa_green_party_elects_2022_steering_committee

“Introducing the New Leaders of PA’s Green Party” by Beth Scroggin and Tina Olson. GPPA News Release, January 19, 2021,
https://www.gpofpa.org/introducing_the_new_leaders_of_pa_s_green_party 

“PA Green Party Elects New Co-chair,” GPPA News Release, January 20, 2019, https://www.gpofpa.org/pa_green_party_elects_new_co_chair 

END ITEM 


Green Party of Pennsylvania Presidential Primary 2024

Please share this information widely.
WE RELY ON YOU ALL TO HELP SHARE THIS INFORMATION!
 

Green Party of Pennsylvania presidential primary 2024


Please note: GPPA primaries are conducted by the Green Party of Pennsylvania, not the state of Pennsylvania. These dates are different from those published by the state.
  • Deadline to register as a Green with the state at https://votespa.com – Monday, January 1
  • Deadline to request a ballot (EITHER electronic OR by postal mail) at https://tinyurl.com/GPPAprimary2024 - T̶h̶u̶r̶s̶d̶a̶y̶,̶ ̶F̶e̶b̶r̶u̶a̶r̶y̶ ̶1̶ This has been extended to Thursday, February 8!
  • GPPA primary voting begins
  • Mail-in ballots are mailed to voters – Wednesday, February 14
  • Online voting conducted via OpaVote begins – Thursday, February 15
  • GPPA primary voting ends
  • Online voting closes – Thursday, February 29
  • Mail-in votes postmark deadline – Thursday, February 29
  • Mail-in votes must be received – Monday, March 4
Due to very limited volunteer resources and the logistics of mailing out ballots, we highly recommend that voters opt to vote electronically.

Green Party To Add Delegates to PA State Committee

 

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Sunday, December 17, 2023

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

Green Party To Add Delegates to PA State Committee

At the State Committee meeting of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) on November 12, the 30 elected delegates voted by consensus to change the Rules (think “by-laws”) of the party to include more elected delegates from unorganized parts of the Commonwealth. Before this vote, around thirty percent of the GPPA’s 10,000 registered members lived in unorganized counties.

GPPA Co-Chair Jeremy Griffin (Delaware), explained, “The main reason this amendment had to be passed was to insure that we give a voice to unorganized Greens, no matter in which county they live. The amendment was discussed and approved by the Steering Committee, and I believe it will strengthen the GPPA’s democratic process at the state level.”

Green Party of Lancaster County Chair Tim Runkle, said: “The GPPA State Committee is both the governing body of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) and the representation of Greens across our Commonwealth. Our Green Party rules had been built in a way which ensures local representation through organized county committees. The rules, however, have failed to provide the vast unorganized areas of the Commonwealth a voice on the State Committee. The rule change proposed by the delegation from Lancaster County intended to resolve that issue as well as to preserve the intent of local representation. This change permits any registered Green in PA to participate in the State Committee while holding true the Green Party's Four Pillars of grassroots democracy and the Ten Key Values of decentralization.”

GPPA Communication Team Co-chair Chris Robinson (Philadelphia) predicted, "This will be the first step in building new Green Party Chapters in our Commonwealth's 50 unorganized counties. With a presidential election in 2024, it will be important to give a voice to every Green Party member."

The Rules of the Green Party of Pennsylvania, Rule II State Committee, Section 2.b)  has been amended to read:

“All State Committee members shall be elected as determined by the rules of the County Committee of the county of their residence to one year terms, or a part thereof. Registered Greens who have no organized County Committee in their county of residence shall be elected by the State Committee during the first meeting of the calendar year. The number of members permitted for unorganized County members shall be no more than two per county.” 

The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

For More Information Please see:

Ten Key Values, Green Party of the U.S., https://www.gp.org/ten_key_values 

The Rules of the Green Party of Pennsylvania, https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1G4U0TsI0fzoQY4akq4TeRpsMmE9XQcIh 

END ITEM


Green Party Calls for PA Presidential Primary in February 2024

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Thursday, December 7, 2023

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

Green Party Calls for PA Presidential Primary in February 2024

On November 12, thirty elected delegates and friends from seven PA counties voted to hold a Green Party of PA Presidential Primary in February 2024. The plan which was proposed by the GPPA GreenWave Team included the following dates:

January 1, 2024, Last date for voters to register Green in order to vote in the Green Party of PA Presidential Primary;
February 1, 2024, Last date for presidential candidates to be approved for the Green Party of PA Presidential Primary ballot;
February 1, 2024, Deadline for Green Party voters to apply for an absentee ballot;
February 13, 2024, Green Party of PA mails absentee ballots to voters;
February 15, 2024, Green Party of PA Presidential Primary virtual voting begins;
February 29, 2024, End of virtual voting and last date for postmark on absentee ballots;
March 4, 2024, Final date for receipt of Green Party of PA Presidential Primary absentee ballots;

March 13, 2024, Report results of Green Party of PA Presidential Primary to candidates and the media.

This will be the first time for the Green Party of PA to use virtual voting in a Presidential Primary. During previous presidential elections, GPPA relied upon county caucuses (like Iowa) to choose its presidential candidate.

 The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

__________________________________

2024 PA ELECTIONS
IMPORTANT DATES TO REMEMBER
(EDITED FOR Green Party of PA Presidential Primary)

January 1      Last day to REGISTER GREEN before the GPPA Presidential Primary

February 1    Last day for candidates to be approved for GPPA Presidential Primary

February 1    Last day to apply for absentee ballot for GPPA Presidential Primary

February 13   GPPA mails absentee ballots to voters

February 14   First day to circulate and file nomination papers for GPPA candidates

February 15  GPPA Presidential Primary virtual voting begins

February 29  GPPA Presidential Primary virtual voting ends

February 29  Last date for postmark on GPPA Presidential Primary absentee ballots

March 4        Last date for receipt of GPPA Presidential Primary absentee ballots

 

March 13      Report results of GPPA Presidential Primary to candidates and the media

 

April 8           Last day to REGISTER before the PA Primary Election

 

April 23        PA PRIMARY ELECTION (Best time to harvest signatures on minor party nomination papers.)

August 1       Last day to circulate and file nomination papers

August 8       Last day for withdrawal by candidates nominated by nomination papers

October 21    Last day to REGISTER before the November election

October 29    Last day to apply for a mail-in ballot

November 5  Last day for County Boards of Elections to receive voted mail-in ballots

 

November 5  PA GENERAL ELECTION

Note: All dates in this calendar are subject to change without notice.

Adapted from,
https://www.vote.pa.gov/About-Elections/Pages/Upcoming-Elections.aspx

____________________________


Green Party Watchdog in McKean County, PA

 

Barbara Laxon has been an active Green Party member since 1993. She was an elected member of the Green Party of PA (GPPA) Steering Committee during 2020. Barbara has also represented GPPA on the GPUS EcoAction Committee since 2021.

The legacy of the oil and gas industry here in Bradford City, McKean County, PA, is centuries-long. It is still poisoning the inhabitants through the leaking oil and gas wells throughout the city. I have had to step up as a watchdog to bring awareness to the public of what is happening in what has become an environmental justice neighborhood.

While checking general trouble spots around town on August 23, I noticed what appeared to be a spill running from one of the hoses at the tank battery on Leigh Street. The spill ran across and down the street, following the natural incline of the street and the many cracks in the road.

I called the PA Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) emergency line to report what I saw, and the man who answered did not seem surprised and said he would "talk to Cline about it."

My friend Laurie Barr from Save Our Streams PA said she would follow up with a written report on the DEP website. Laurie came and got the GPS coordinates and took a video of the area. She and I both noted the smell in the area, which is always evident, seemed even stronger than usual.

Laurie Barr has complained about this site in the past, since I brought it to her attention a few years ago. Leigh Street is at the end of Kennedy Street, just a few blocks above Bradford City Hall and the police station. It is also approximately five long blocks from Bradford Regional Medical Center and even closer to School Street Elementary School.

Within three days following my report, I noticed that the dirt on both sides of the street in the area of the spill had been excavated, and a pile of rubble appeared just down the road. Also evident were heavy-duty tire tracks leading to the area where the 'spill' ended, the vegetation was flattened, and there was a brown puddle at the end.

A few days after this, I returned to find what looked like a sinkhole where the vegetation had been flattened. I could see a black pipe in the bottom of the hole. Dirt had been returned to one side of the road. Nothing had been done to the road itself despite it being also covered by the 'spill.' I also noted that the other side of the road was asphalt with a groove to allow any fluid to run down into the ditch that had been created (with the hole at the bottom with the pipe running through it). The rubble was still there.

The next time I returned the hole seemed to be spreading down the hill. The rubble seemed to have been moved slightly, and now I could see what looked like plywood under it. At my most recent visit, I noticed that large fist-sized gravel had been poured down the hill filling in the sinkhole. I have pictures of all of this.

As a long-term Green, I have long known the dangers the oil and gas industry poses to human health, and to the environment and climate. The Green Party of Pennsylvania has been aware of this since its inception and works to counteract or eliminate these dangers.

Barbara Laxon is a member of the GPPA Communication Team.

The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitterhttps://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

For more information:

Laurie Barr's video, which is included in her report on the DEP website, is available here. 

 

Save Our Streams PA,
https://saveourstreamspa.org/

"Allegheny National Forest: What Goes on Behind the Scenes" by Barbara Laxon, GPPA News Release, April 8, 2020, https://www.gp.org/allegheny_national_forest_what_goes_on_behind_the_scenes


March in NY City to End Fossil Fuels

Green Party of Pennsylvania
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, October 2, 2023
 
CONTACT: 
Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader
215-843-4256 and [email protected]

March in NY City to End Fossil Fuels

By Alex Casper (they/them) 

On Sunday, September 17, 75,000 people marched across New York City to End Fossil Fuels. Two Green Party candidates seeking the nomination for President of the U.S. were in New York marching as VIP’s, and I was lucky enough to have my photo taken next to them.

Candidates Jasmine Sherman and Dr. Cornel West both met up with Green Party members at the beginning of the march. Dr. West said his presence at the march was to fuse with other voices. “This march is all about voices in solidarity to push out the fossil fuel industry and to break the back of the corporate duopoly.”

I was unable to get my question answered by Dr. West as the crowd surrounded him, but Jasmine Sherman provided me with an answer on her housing policy. “I support funding public housing and creating more opportunities for people to be supported by the system. We need to be taking care of everybody.”

The march was a fantastic experience. I met other Greens from around the country. Familiar faces from our neighbors in New Jersey, New York, and Maryland showed up.I am really thankful for Barry Bendar, co-chair of the Green Party of New Jersey, as well as for GPUS National Committee delegate and YES National Committee member Dustin Young from Rutgers (originally from Philadelphia) for helping me carry the Green Party of Philadelphia’s banner. I had a great time meeting everyone and learning about the different kinds of activism our members have been involved in.

Next year I hope more folks will join me and more Pennsylvania chapters can be represented in the March to End Fossil Fuels. The president has a lot of power, and while we can do a lot to make an impact on our daily consumption of fossil fuels, the people we elect for president have the power with the stroke of a pen to end the biggest consumer of fossil fuels.

59 million tons of CO2 are emitted into the atmosphere by the US military. More than any other emitter. There are entire developed countries that do not have a rate of emissions as large as the US military. Sweden, Morocco, Hungary, Finland, Norway, Switzerland, and New Zealand to name a few. Our country has this fascination with an unsustainable lifestyle consuming oil. Meanwhile, there are only five years of oil left at our current consumption rate in the U.S. if we were unable to import. We are less than 100 years from running out. 
 
We continue to build giant roads in suburban communities with homes spaced massively far apart. These roads extend the commutes we drive to our jobs, increase the subsidies to maintain and repair, while increasing our reliance on fossil fuels. We don’t have to live this type of lifestyle. We do not have to destine our children to despair and a crisis we know will happen in their lifetimes.

The best thing we can do to save our country, our planet, and everyone's future is to choose a different path, an actual Green New Deal. This will put an end to the corporate stranglehold we endure from the duopoly. We must choose another option in the 2024 elections and take every opportunity to get out, organize, and speak out. We must not be complacent. We have an Earth to save, and a duopoly co-opting the Green Party message around climate change. President Biden still has not provided a deadline to end fossil fuel consumption by the Pentagon. While Democrats and Republicans are increasing the reliance and consumption with their development practices. Only you can do anything to change that. Organize, register and vote, Green Party.

This is about our ability to afford to live in our communities we have always called home. This is about our ability to drink clean water, and have a warm home in the winter when we get old. This is about our ability to leave our communities and commute to work in the future. This is about our ability to maintain any kind of system where you and I can survive and thrive. We have to make drastic changes. That is why I marched in New York. That is why I hope you will march with me next year.

Alex Casper (they/them) is a delegate to the Green Party of Pennsylvania, membership secretary of the Green Party of Philadelphia (GPOP), and the GPOP representative to the Philadelphia Rent Control Coalition. They also serve in the Reimagine Philadelphia Steering Committee in the Philadelphia Department of Planning and Development, and as a Minority Inspector in Philadelphia Election Ward 47.
The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitterhttps://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA
 
END ITEM

Mozambican Liberation Day and Green Party Ecological Wisdom

GREEN PARTY OF PHILADELPHIA
FOR RELEASE
Sunday, October 8, 2023
 
Media Contact, Chris Robinson
[email protected] and 267-977-0570
 
Mozambican Liberation Day and Green Party Ecological Wisdom
 
Belinda Davis, chair of the Green Party of Philadelphia, spoke at Philadelphia City Hall during the flag-raising of the Mozambique flag on September 25, 2023. The event took place on the 59th Mozambican National Liberation Day. 
 
By Belinda Davis (she or they)

I am truly honored to be speaking to you today, among such distinguished guests. In the name of the Green Party of Philadelphia (www.gpop.org), I want to welcome the ambassador of Mozambique, members of the consulate, and the other dignitaries who have come to join in this flag-raising. 

We know the green in the flag stands for the gifts of nature and living in harmony with it, and that is what we too are about, as Greens. We are here in the interests of friendship and building on that friendship in peace and justice. I have been asked to talk briefly about Ecological Wisdom, one of the Green Party’s four pillars, and connected with the messages of the Partido os Verdes de Moçambique and the Ecological Party of Mozambique.  

I believe, as an historian as well as chair of the Green Party of Philadelphia, that it is especially important for those in the U.S. and the global north generally to recognize the historical and the ongoing ecological damage rendered out of all proportion in the global south, including and even especially in Mozambique.  Friends don't let friends contend alone with destructive droughts and related fires. Friends don't cause friends to confront catastrophic floods and cyclones, with their devastating immediate and also cumulative effects. 

Aside from exponential increases in the spread of disease that can be linked to climate change, there are now already extremely serious deficiencies in the availability of surface water, despite the country’s many rivers, and the intrusion of saltwater deep into the country. Average temperatures are quickly climbing, especially in the southern and central regions, challenging the survivability for people, animals, and plants alike, even as conditions have paradoxically caused an astronomic increase in fossil fuel consumption from the mid-‘90s to present. 

These conditions also deeply threaten relations with Mozambique’s neighbors, such as Zimbabwe and Zambia, while at the same time foreboding a crisis of climate refugees. Even in moments as celebratory as the present one, we need to all take action to halt further climate change, as well as to deal equitably with its already drastic effects in Mozambique as in the U.S., and across the world in the spirit of friendship and peace.  

We are one planet. We are here to celebrate and build on relations. Building those relations means knowing one another better. I look forward to learning more about the vibrant nation of  Mozambique today - - including what we can learn from Mozambicans about ecological wisdom. Thank you! 

Belinda Davis (Mount Airy) has been chair of the Green Party of Philadelphia since 2019. 
The Green Party of Philadelphia (GPOP, www.gpop.orgis an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPOP candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPOP, please follow GPOP on social media:  FacebookInstagram, and Twitter
For more Information:
“Ten Key Green Values,” Green Party of the U.S., https://www.gp.org/ten_key_values 
 
END ITEM

Growing Ethical, Accountable Government from the Grassroots

 

Green Party of Pennsylvania

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Wednesday, September 27, 2023
CONTACT: 
Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader
215-843-4256 and [email protected]

 

Growing Ethical, Accountable Government from the Grassroots

 

GREEN STAR contributor Patrick O. McNally posed several questions to Alex Noyle, Green Party candidate for Auditor of East Norriton Township, Montgomery County.

 

GS, Please give us an idea of what went into your decision to run for elected office.
Noyle: First and foremost, I am running to increase the accountability of my local government. Without our campaign on the ballot, the only option East Norriton voters would have to audit the township is a member of one of the parties currently in power. I don’t think the parties who run the township should be their own financial watchdog. I am also running to grow my local Green Party chapter’s active membership by making contact with existing registered Greens who don’t currently show up to meetings, and by registering non-voters to participate for the first time. Another goal I have with this campaign is to grow the number of elected officials GPUS has to bolster our movement nationally, from the bottom-up.

GS, Did you get inspiration from the Green Party's Ten Key Values?

Noyle: In my experience on the campaign trail over the years, many people are Greens already, but they just don’t realize it yet! That was certainly true for me prior to joining the Green Party in 2016. The Ten Key Values are a moral compass that I always try to apply to my everyday life. “Future Focus” connects with me most of all. The question in front of us is not just what kind of future we are going to have, but whether we are going to have one at all. That is why we need Green voices in the halls of power more than ever.

 

GS, Now that you have a soapbox, what do you plan to say to the voters?
Noyle: My message to voters is that they have an opportunity to elect an “Independent, Ethical, and Accountable” Township Auditor. As someone who is not tangled up in the two-party system, I have no institutional representation in East Norriton, nor anywhere else in Montgomery County. I thus have no incentive to cover for those in power. If I see any irregularities, I will call them out. Voters can trust me to be honest because I take no corporate money and neither does my party. I am the only candidate on the ballot for any election in the township who can say that.

 

 
GS, Did you receive help from other Green Party members? Maybe from people who are not Green Party members?
Noyle: Most of my current volunteers are active members of the Bucks and Montgomery Green Parties. During my campaign, I aim to grow my volunteer base by prioritizing new contact with registered Greens and Independents. I want this run to serve as an on-ramp for disenfranchised and underrepresented people in East Norriton to get involved with independent politics.

 

GS, How will you campaign before the November 7 General Election? Snail mail? Literature drops in your township? Phone banking?

Noyle: My campaign meets once a week, on Wednesday nights. We will be organizing weekly door-to-door canvassing events on weekends starting in October. If we can’t reach someone after multiple attempts, we will leave behind a campaign flier so that they still hear of our campaign. Our aim is to introduce ourselves to as many residents as we can, so that they don’t look at their ballot and see a stranger. We are also planning to promote our campaign with literature, yard signs and targeted online advertising.

 

GS, Are you planning to fundraise for these expenses?
Noyle: Yes. We have raised $250 so far, which is our financial limit until we can find a campaign treasurer. Our primary expense has been printing campaign literature. We are looking for an experienced volunteer from GPPA to take on the important role of Treasurer by the end of September. To help us afford yard signs, handouts, and other promotional material, we will try to raise over $1,000 from small-dollar donors.

 

GS, What help would you like from Green Party members who live near your township?
Noyle: Most importantly, we need all hands on deck for Election Day, November 7. If we have volunteers posted at East Norriton’s six polling places throughout the day, it will make all the difference in the election. Until then, we are looking for volunteers to do door-to-door canvassing, and to show up to campaign meetings on Wednesday nights with their ideas!

 

Follow and Support Alex Noyle’s campaign: 

 

 

The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected].

 

 

For More Information: “Ten Key Values,” Green Party of the U.S., https://www.gp.org/ten_key_values 
 
END ITEM

Green Party leader supports rent control in PA

By Alex Casper (they them)

Early in August , Seattle Socialist City Councilmember Kshama Sawant brought forward legislation to set universal rent control to cap rent increases with inflation. Cornel West, running for the Green Party nomination for president, endorsed the plan. Hundreds of tenants, workers, and union members packed the Seattle City Hall to where attendance was standing room only, but the Democratic Party led city council struck down the bill.


Green Party of Pennsylvania
www.gpofpa.org

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, August 24, 2023

CONTACT:
Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader, [email protected]


West called this bill a “moral imperative,” and I agree. The impact of stabilizing rent to the current rate of inflation in Seattle would be a 4.6% annual increase. Last year the average rent increased at 9.9% according to Apartment List. The year before it increased 18.9% in the region. This type of rent increase is unsustainable for a community and will displace residents through gentrification. In Philadelphia, between June 2022 and June 2023, the region saw a rate of inflation of 3.1%. But the rental cost inflated 4.5% this year and 6.8% from the year before according to Apartment List. Greater Philadelphia saw rental costs inflate by 9.4% in 2022. The Pittsburgh Metro saw a rent inflation rate of 3.1% in the past year, and 8.8% the year before. As of now, this rent control policy will not impact Pittsburgh as the price of rent has not increased as fast as other parts of Pennsylvania. Considering how New Yorkers came to Philadelphia with the three-hour commute to escape high rent, leading to gentrification here, the long term outlook could see Philadelphians looking to move across the state to Johnstown, Pittsburgh, and other more affordable towns with decent public transit systems and healthcare access leading to their prices also increasing down the road.

48% of Greater Philadelphia’s renters are cost burdened. We have a 20 year long waitlist for public housing in Philadelphia. From my own personal calls, every non-profit is out of funding for rental assistance. So at this rate, people will go homeless, and the rate of death of our homeless community will continue to increase. Last year over 311 homeless people died in Philadelphia in 2020 -- more than every other city in the U.S. besides Los Angeles and New York.

It is a murderous policy to leave people unsheltered and without public services such as housing and the social workers they need to access mental health benefits and resources. It keeps victims of domestic violence afraid of economic consequences to flee home, and it costs our economy more to keep people homeless than it would cost to just house people. As a Philadelphian who has been homeless twice. I applaud Seattle workers and tenants for fighting for their rights to be able to afford to stay housed in the community they work and seek medical services in. I applaud Cornel West for taking a stance on housing affordability.

I support Universal Rent Control and I hope to see more initiatives be supported by Cornel West and elected officials focused on addressing our housing crisis, reducing the cost of housing, and preventing and ending homelessness. It is clear that we need an alternative to the two corporate parties, if we want to see these types of policies be seriously addressed. Neither major party will support people being able to afford to stay in their homes or address homelessness. Seattle City Council being led by the Democratic Party voting against rent control shows us this is the case. 185 people died in Kings County, WA, in 2020, and Seattle Democrat’s said it’s okay to not address the leading cause of housing insecurity.

Pennsylvania Democrats and Republicans have been just as silent to my neighbors dying preventable deaths. This week Democrats just reinstated a deadly Landlord Tenant Officer system in Philadelphia, which has resulted in three shootings in four months this year to continue doing evictions to violently unhouse Philadelphians and make them homeless at the orders of Democratic and Republican Party judges. Elected leaders have power as a collective to take direct action to enable change with the support of public tax collected funds. The only dividend they give us in return for those tax investments are neocolonialist wars and state sponsored militias to shoot you for any potential dispute to being forcibly removed from your home for being laid off or disabled.

Alex Casper (they/them) is a delegate to the Green Party of Pennsylvania, membership secretary of the Green Party of Philadelphia (GPOP), and the GPOP representative of the Philadelphia Rent Control Coalition. They also serve in the Reimagine Philadelphia Steering Committee in the Philadelphia Department of Planning and Development, and as a Minority Inspector in Philadelphia Election Ward 47.


The Green Party of Pennsylvania is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity.

For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.

For more Information:

“Green Party Joins Philadelphia Rent Control Coalition,” Green Party of Philadelphia News Release, July 19, 2023,
https://www.gpofpa.org/green_party_joins_philadelphia_rent_control_coalition

Philadelphia Rent Control Coalition,
https://rentcontrolphilly.org/

Philadelphia Tenants Union,
https://phillytenantsunion.org/

“Rent Control,” Green Party Platform, II. Social Justice; J. Housing & Homelessness;
https://www.gp.org/social_justice/#sjHousing


Green Party Joins Philadelphia Rent Control Coalition

FOR RELEASE
Wednesday, July 19, 2023

 

Media Contact, Chris Robinson
[email protected] and 267-977-0570

Green Party Joins Philadelphia Rent Control Coalition

At their General Membership Meeting on June 27, the Green Party of Philadelphia (www.gpop.org) decided by consensus to join the Philadelphia Rent Control Coalition. The coalition consists of a dozen community organizations which plan to demand rent control legislation from Philadelphia City Council.

The goal of the Rent Control Coalition is “to keep affordable housing affordable and to prevent forced displacement caused by unreasonable rent increases.” The Green Party’s platform includes the “right to enact local rent control laws, including vacancy control/recontrol . . . . Provide for publicly elected rent control/stabilization boards for communities with local rent control laws,” and “preserve and increase affordable housing supply.”

"The idea of rent control is gaining more popularity, even before the COVID-19 pandemic made worse this country's affordable housing crisis," said long-time Green Party and Philadelphia Tenant's Union member, Asantewaa Nkrumah-Ture (Cedar Park). "We are seeing more powerful, creative ways of addressing the housing crisis. Rent control is one and, additionally, there are more tenants unions being started. Access to public land to form community gardens is demanded to address food scarcity and public demands for repairs to long-abandoned buildings, etc., all serve to raise the collective voices of tenants.  Lastly, we must also face the fact of violent and/or illegal evictions in too many incidents across this country. If we say, 'housing is a human right,' then all such landlords must be held accountable for their criminal actions."  

The Green Party membership also appointed by consensus Alex Casper (Francisville) to be their liaison to the Rent Control Coalition, Casper said: “The City of Philadelphia currently has a 20-year waitlist for public housing access. We are one of the fastest inflating housing markets. I have been homeless in this city twice, and know from experience how hard it is to afford and access a home. We have 250,000 residents identifying as having a disability on the census who are not sure where they will be able to afford to live in the next year because the housing-choice voucher waitlist is closed. We have 300 people a year dying while homeless in Philadelphia, the second most of any community in the U.S. We know housing first and rent control initiatives will lead to participation in programs leading to recovery from addiction, vocational rehabilitation to continue working with a disability, and reduce violence and suicide. We must address this deadly crisis as a party, and I am proud to represent the Green Party of Philadelphia in their support for affordable and accessible housing.”

Casper continued, “I will stand for initiatives that increase the public housing supply, create a fund that continuously builds new public housing units, increase landlord participation in the housing choice voucher program, set a ceiling on rent increasing, and get folks who are homeless into permanent homes with the social support systems they need to rehabilitate and seek job training. We need to make a city which those who grew up here can afford to live in. We can't let America's second most densely populated big city become as expensive as New York and San Francisco. We can't let our neighbors keep dying unsheltered on the street without a place they feel safe to go. We can't make homelessness a consequence of escaping domestic violence. Housing shouldn't have a paywall, and we should have a right to shelter in Philadelphia.”

The Green Party of Philadelphia (GPOP, www.gpop.org) is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPOP candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPOP, please follow GPOP on social media:  Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter

For more information:

Philadelphia Rent Control Coalition, https://rentcontrolphilly.org/

Philadelphia Tenants Union, https://phillytenantsunion.org/   

“Rent Control,” Green Party Platform, II. Social Justice; J. Housing & Homelessness;
https://www.gp.org/social_justice/#sjHousing

END ITEM


Green Party Leader Finds Blueprint for Organizing in PA 2023 Goals

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday, July 18, 2023

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

Green Party Leader Finds Blueprint for Organizing in PA 2023 Goals

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) 2023 Goals were passed at the November 2022 State Meeting. Those goals said, "County parties are our cornerstone. They support our petitioning efforts, our candidates, and our local actions."

Many Green Party leaders acclaimed the GPPA 2023 Goals as long overdue because none could remember the last time there was a strategy for building GPPA. The goals were the work of GPPA Co-Chair Jay Ting Walker (Allegheny), who told the press, “My intention is for the Steering Committee to be focused on implementing the 2023 Goals. With our 2023 Goals, county delegates to the GPPA State Committee will focus on a return to the basics of organizing. We will build up our county parties so that we can better act on the issues we care about, while supporting Green Party candidates around the Commonwealth."

In order to assess the Green Party progress with building the party, Chris Robinson (Philadelphia), GPPA Communication Team co-leader, asked county leaders, “How do you feel about our 2023 Goals?” Robinson explained, “I am trying to get a sense of what we are doing right, and what we still need to work on.”

Robinson received an interesting report from Chair Riley Mahon, Green Party of Allegheny County (GPOAC), “We are on track to reach all of the goals except for the 500 signatures one. I'll go through the goals one by one here.”

Green Party 2023 Goals in Allegheny County
By Chair Riley Mahon, Green Party of Allegheny County

4 Meetings (Quarterly)
GPOAC meets monthly on the first Tuesday. Our July General Assembly (GA) meeting will be pushed back one week because people have plans on the 4th so we'll have it on 7/11 instead.

1 Local Candidate (for 2023)
GPOAC has three local candidates: Tara Yaney for Edgewood Borough Council; Liv Bennett for County Council District 13; and Carl Redwood for County Council District 10. We officially endorsed Carl on 7/11. GPOAC is also working on getting a candidate or two for Township Auditor, but that's not a sure thing yet.

5 Heavily Involved Members
GPOAC has a seven-person executive committee and a few more people I would describe as "heavily involved" as well.

10 Active Members
I am quite proud that GOAC has around 30 people who will show up to things from time to time, maybe more.

500 Signatures Gathered
We have been very slow to get going on this, but I remain confident that all of our candidates will make it to the ballot.

3 GPPA State Committee watch parties
GPOAC did not have a watch party in June, and I don't remember if we had one in March. This is not a high priority for me personally, but we'll try to have watch parties for the remaining two meetings this year.

1 PA State House Candidate (for 2024)
If I remember correctly, GPOAC has one potential candidate for PA House next year. Also, Richard Weiss has said that he is willing to run for state-wide office, if we need him to. We'll be able to find someone to run a paper campaign even in the worst case scenario.

100% GPPA State Committee Delegation
I'm not sure if this means just having all the spots filled or to actually have a full delegation come to a meeting, but either way, yes, we have done this.

4 Direct Actions Participated In
GPOAC has marched in Pride and tabled at several community events. There is a Post-Gazette picket on 6/30, which I am trying to get people to go to. I don't have a full list off the top of my head of the events we've been to or done, but we've definitely done more than four already in 2023.

Based on Mahon's report, Robinson concluded, "There can be no doubt that the GPPA 2023 Goals have been useful in building the Green Party, especially when county leaders make use of them as a blueprint for organizing.”

The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.  

For more Information:

“GPPA 2023 Goals,” Green Party of PA, Statement, December 10, 2022,
https://www.gpofpa.org/2023_green_party_of_pa_goals

“New Leaders Vow to Expand PA Green Party, Green Party of PA, News Release, January 23, 2023,
https://www.gpofpa.org/new_leaders_vow_to_expand_pa_green_party

END OF ITEM 


Green Party Endorses Michael Bagdes-Canning for Mayor of Cherry Valley, PA

 
Green Party of Pennsylvania
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, May 17, 2023
 
CONTACT: 
Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader
215-843-4256 and [email protected]

Green Party Endorses Michael Bagdes-Canning for Mayor of Cherry Valley, PA
Meeting virtually on May 7, the Steering Committee for the Green Party of PA (GPPA) endorsed Michael Bagdes-Canning for Mayor of Cherry Valley, PA. Badges-Canning has been an energetic campaigner for the Green Party, especially in 2022 when he ran for PA Lieutenant Governor. He has been the Mayor of Cherry Valley, PA, and a committed campaigner for climate sanity and for ending legalized "gifts" to PA legislators, which always seem to benefit special interests (fracking) more than public health. The endorsement for re-election was passed by consensus.
“I last witnessed Michael Badges-Canning in a nonviolent protest against political payola in Harrisburg,” said GPPA Steering Committee Member Jubalyn ExWilliams (Dauphin County). “A state lawmaker removed him by force before entering a lobby-donor luncheon that wintry day. Legal bribery can give a nod to expansionist shale and oil companies whose extraction, refinement, storage, and transportation activities threaten, at the very least, drinkable water in forgotten rural communities like Cherry Valley.”
“From rural Butler County, Michael travels to Harrisburg and all the way to Washington, DC, with Cherry Valley and its residents in mind,” continued ExWilliams. “A time or two before that, I witnessed him among those of us marching in the misty mountains against bribery during the last of a three-day journey between York and Harrisburg. From an arrest on the climate collapse to his work on the state coordinating committee of the Pennsylvania Poor People's Campaign, Michael Badges-Canning has my confidence that he has the best interest of Cherry Valley in mind. I endorse his re-election as mayor of the borough.”
GPPA Secretary Joe Murray said, “I had the pleasure of supporting Mike as the GPPA candidate for PA Lieutenant Governor in 2022, during the age of COVID. Mike drove from Butler County to Berks County to campaign twice. First he came to Earth Day in Reading’s City Park which was led by Green Party of Berks County Co-Chair David Kurzweg. Mike especially enjoyed talking to the young people from our community service groups which is not surprising because he had been a teacher. Mike also drove out for the West Reading Street Festival which is a major event in Berks for performing artists, craft and food vendors,” continued Murray. “He enjoyed mixing and mingling and of course enjoying the place of Gut Essen (Good Eating), Berks nickname. Mike represented the values of the GPPA with integrity and humanity, and I am proud to endorse him for mayor of Cherry Valley. I am also a little envious of Cherry Valley.”
“I did not know Bagdes-Canning very well when I first interviewed him for the January 2021 GREEN STAR Newsletter,” said Chris Robinson, Co-Leader of the GPPA Communication Team. “I was quite impressed when he told me:
‘My platform was unlike ANYTHING that a Democrat or a Republican has run on in this area [Butler County]. We ran on a Green New Deal, Medicare For All, government you can trust, a living wage, protected and expanded civil liberties, water you can drink, and education that is educational. We ran on these things because these are issues that resonate with folks in this region. We’ve been hemorrhaging jobs and young people for the last 40 years, we are dealing with the toxic legacy of the oil industry and fracking, our schools and colleges are underfunded, and we work harder for less and are more impoverished than much of the state. Specifically, our messages around anti-corruption and jobs seemed to touch people.’”
GPPA Co-Chair Jay Walker said, “I'm proud to endorse Michael for mayor because of his many years of dedication to environmental causes and strong support for organized labor.”
If you are ready to run for elected office as a Green Party candidate, please contact [email protected]
The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected].
 
For more information, please see:
“Nonviolent Direct Action to Stop Climate Change,” Michael Bagdes-Canning for PA Lt. Governor News Release, June 22, 2022, https://www.gpofpa.org/nonviolent_direct_action_to_stop_climate_change 
“This Unjust System Cannot Survive the Storm,”  Michael Bagdes-Canning for PA Lt. Governor News Release, April 23, 2022, https://www.gpofpa.org/this_unjust_system_cannot_survive_the_storm

“Reflections on 2020 Election by Green Party Candidate Michael Bagdes-Canning,” GPPA News Release, December 11, 2020, https://www.gpofpa.org/reflection_on_the_2020_election_by_pa_green_party_candidate_michael_bagdes_canning 
END ITEM      ***      END ITEM      ***      END ITEM

Green Party Members Rebuff PA School Censorship

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday, May 2, 2023

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

 

Green Party Members Rebuff PA School Censorship

 

Members of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) have been shocked by the use of official censorship sweeping public schools in our Commonwealth. Right now, Pennsylvania has the third most books baned from school libraries (behind Texas and Florida). Chris Robinson (Philadelphia), co-leader of the GPPA Communication Team, said, “Every member of the Green Party should rebuff the rampant censorship poisoning Pennsylvania’s classrooms.”

 

“Bigoted actions by school boards in PA have now become public policy; an outright, reactionary suppression of ideas complete with punishment for violators of those bans,” continued Robinson. “PA school districts in Berks, Bucks, Chester, Crawford, Erie, Lancaster, Monroe, Montgomery and Westmoreland Counties have censored their library’s books or the language used by teachers in an attempt to prevent an understanding of modern politics by the next generation.”

 

The Green Party Platform says, “Independent, critical media are essential to an informed and healthy democracy. Citizens must have ready access to news and information to make responsible informed choices as voters and to carry out their other duties of citizenship . . . . Since governments too often have an interest in controlling the flow of information, we must constantly guard against official censorship.”

 

“As a father, it is my job to work with my children to help them understand difficult ideas and to explain cursing, morally offensive behaviors, or insensitive language, which they may find in books or society protected by the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution,” said David Ochmanowicz Jr. (Bucks), co-chair of the Green Party of Bucks County and a former member of the Quakertown School Board. “As a citizen and parent of public middle school and elementary school-aged children, I believe that all children should have the rights and ability to explore and understand essential cultural and historical knowledge, as well as different points of view. Censorship due to religious or political reasons should remain unconstitutional.” Ochmanowicz is also co-leader of the GPPA Communication Team. 

 

Christina “PK” DiGiulio (Chester), GPPA 2022 candidate for PA Governor, said, “Having a library full of information allows people to make educated decisions for themselves. Limiting that information by filtering it through a fear-based ideology sets up future generations to make uninformed decisions. This type of controlling behavior is placing our children at a disadvantage. They should be prepared to live in a modern society, which is naturally moving towards inclusivity. Using censorship to disrupt evolution shows how ignorant some people are of natural law. What's next . . . burning the books?"  

 

"Schools are institutions of learning,” said Riley Mahon (Allegheny) who was a Green Party candidate in 2019 for Upper Saint Clair School Board. “Libraries should give students access to any academic subject they wish to study, especially controversial subjects. For the sake of having a functional democracy, it is vital that kids are taught to be politically, civically, and scientifically literate. This trend of banning books in schools is indicative of how this country views education. They want to use schooling as a way to teach obedience and jingoism, instead of as a way to teach creativity and critical thinking." Mahon is now chair of the Green Party of Allegheny County.

 

“Books open our minds to different ways of thinking about the familiar as well as enabling us to learn completely new things,” explained Jocolyn Bowser-Bostick (Delaware), who was the Green Party 2018 candidate for PA Lieutenant Governor. “This diversity makes us mentally sharper, more creative and better able to adapt to the twists and turns our lives are going to take. We would be crippling our children emotionally and intellectually if we try to hide the messiness of life, different lifestyles, the abuse and ugliness toward many different groups which has occurred in our country’s history and which continues for many. Our children will not be able to make a healthier, more compassionate, more just, and peaceful world if they can’t openly and honestly think and talk about more than what their parents like. We should want to equip our children with the skills and intellectual openness that allows them to learn from, cooperate and collaborate with many different types of people.”

The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

 

For more information, please see:


“Students, authors fight censorship in PA schools” by Chris Ullery, Bucks County Courier Times, April 18, 2023,

https://www.phillyburbs.com/story/news/state/2023/04/18/book-ban-censorship-pushback-teens-authors-pennsylvania-central-bucks-policy/70115924007/ 

 

 “Central Bucks teacher is suing the district” by Maddie Hanna, Philadelphia Inquirer, April 12, 2023, 

https://www.inquirer.com/news/central-bucks-andrew-burgess-lawsuit-aclu-lgbtq-20230411.html 

 

“Central Bucks Teacher Sues District for Retaliating Against Him After He Advocated for Transgender Student,” ACLU PA news release, April 11, 2023, 

https://www.aclupa.org/en/press-releases/central-bucks-teacher-sues-district-retaliating-against-him-after-he-advocated 

 

“Central Bucks alumni sign letter alleging anti-LGBTQ bias by board” by Maddie Hanna, Philadelphia Inquirer, March 10, 2023,
https://www.inquirer.com/news/central-bucks-school-district-alumni-anti-lgbtq-letter-20230309.html 

 

“ACLU-PA Files Federal complaint alleging widespread discrimination in Central Bucks School District,” ACLU PA news release, October 6, 2022, 

https://www.aclupa.org/en/press-releases/aclu-pa-files-federal-complaint-alleging-widespread-discrimination-central-bucks 

 

“PA Has 3rd Most Banned Books Nationwide, As Censorship Soars” by Justin Heinze, Patch, September 18, 2022, 

https://patch.com/pennsylvania/across-pa/pa-has-3rd-most-banned-books-nationwide-censorship-soars 

 

“Central Bucks School District decisions lead LGBTQ students and faculty to fear for civil right” by Emily Rizzo, WHYY, May 11, 2022, 

https://www.witf.org/2022/05/11/central-bucks-school-district-decisions-lead-lgbtq-students-and-faculty-to-fear-for-civil-rights/ 

 

Editorial: Lancaster County school officials shouldn't surrender to those seeking to ban books from school libraries, Lancaster On Line, January 23, 2022, 

https://lancasteronline.com/opinion/editorials/lancaster-county-school-officials-shouldnt-surrender-to-those-seeking-to-ban-books-from-school-libraries/article_5f493712-7b0e-11ec-905a-4fe0b3a3fab1.html 

 

“Efforts to ban books at Lancaster County school districts part of national trend” by Alex Geli, Lancaster on Line, January 18, 2022,

https://lancasteronline.com/news/local/efforts-to-ban-books-at-lancaster-county-school-districts-part-of-national-trend/article_59b4e756-77b7-11ec-b124-ab61afebdbfa.html 

 

Pennsylvania School Librarians Association, 

https://www.psla.org/materials-challenge-resources 

 

Unite Against Book Bans, American Library Association,

https://www.ala.org/advocacy/fight-censorship 

 

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Green Party Will Appeal to Gen Z in PA

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

 

Green Party Will Appeal to Gen Z in PA

By Jeremy R. Griffin, GPPA Co-Chair

I am Jeremy R Griffin, and as the new co-chair of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA), I intend to create political power for the most important third party in our Commonwealth. I plan to do this by getting the next generation involved in the Green Party.

Through my years of environmental activism and even being a part of some Green Party electoral campaigns myself, I’ve come to the conclusion that to really make a lasting change we, as environmentalists, have to recruit, fund and educate the next generation. By the next generation, I am specifically referring to Gen Z (birth years 1998-2012) and Gen Alpha, coming after it. 

I recognize why the youth haven't been active in our political process recently. Gen Z does not see itself among the candidates of the two corporate parties. Political jargon is foreign to them, and public officials are constantly unveiled as selfish scammers. That doesn’t even mention that the most important political issue -- which is climate change -- is barely spoken about in detail during debates between Dems and Repubs. In fact, fixing irreversible climate damage seems like an astronomical feat, especially through means of a long political process. 

The good news is that the Green Party of Pennsylvania is the alternative that Gen Z can utilize and even occupy. Young people not only have the morals but also the motivation to make revolutionary change in our current representative democratic system. They are the ones who will feel the impacts of the climate policies made today. These are the policies that will affect life for them on Mother Earth for years to come.

I believe the Green Party would be a great fit for Gen Z because of our candidates, especially when compared to the other political parties in the country. Unlike the others, the Green Party actually runs 100% legit grassroots campaigns. This means GPPA has the most important candidates, running the most important campaigns, because they are not funded by corporations. There are no strings attached to any corporation when a Green Party candidate is elected to office.

Our candidates really can keep the promises made on the campaign trail. When they say they will ban fracking, or stop refineries, or transition to 100% renewables by 2035, they mean it! No need for them to pay off the fossil fuel industry or make tax cuts for the companies actively polluting the planet for monetary gain. Greens are the people that Gen Z and all environmentalists can actually trust! 

One of the benefits the Green Party has is a clean slate. Gen Z has watched the Dems and Repubs do horrendous actions (or inactions) since they could remember. They have watched the corporate media cover their own candidates’ scandals, flaws and mishaps. As for the Green Party, we have a clean slate in many young voters’ minds. The youth haven’t seen the impact of Green Party candidates elected to much more than hyper-local offices, like borough council and judge of elections. This means that GPPA does not have much blame for the current situations with poverty, social unrest or climate inaction. The Green Party has no dark blemish over our names on the ballot box.

With so many voters entangled in the false dichotomy within mainstream American elections and corporate propaganda, it’s safe to say that the progressives disgusted by this system might feel hopeless. Honestly why would progressives not be; the Dems and Repubs are literally running some of the trashiest nonsensical and non-substantive candidates in years and the masses are voting in numbers we've never seen before. This is a clear sign that Gen Z is not one of the voting blocks we should give up on.

The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

Jeremy R, Griffin is a podcaster, public speaker, educator, researcher, geographer and Kutztown University Alum. He was elected co-chair of the Green Party of Pennsylvania on March 12.  

 

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Green Party of PA Concedes to Corporate Funded Democrat Republican Alliance

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Saturday, April 1, 2023

 

CONTACT: Communication Team

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

 

Green Party of PA Concedes to Corporate Funded Democrat Republican Alliance 

 

Founded in 1985, The Green Party of the United States will mark its 40th Birthday in January. Inspired by anti-nuclear movements around the world, its original organizers in Maine could have never foreseen how difficult this fight for clean air, water and soil would be all these years later.

We don’t want to let you down but advocating for Green Values seems to no longer be trending.

With our mastery of all sciences the need for promoting environmental sustainability is not an imperative. Human ingenuity and the development of human made solutions for world sustainability has made trees obsolete. Clean air, water, energy, old growth forests and open space are no longer necessary.

The system we have painstakingly developed, apathetically allowing corporate sponsored special interest money to influence our media, voter perception and elected officials’ decision making is working out well enough. 

The effort of a well-rounded representative democracy is just too hard.

Having to go outside and vote one or two times a year seems like a lot of work when ultimately our ZIP code determines how long our voting queue is and how our long-term health can be predicted to a fairly accurate statistic.

As the only party of Peace, we just can’t bring ourselves to fight the right wing party alliance anymore.

 

See the full Green Party of Pennsylvania statement here

 

https://www.gpofpa.org/april_1_2023_full_statement

 

 

The Green Party of PA (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]

Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA 


Green Party Candidate Announces Bid For PA House of Representatives District 113

Richard Maopolski

for

PA House District 113

 

For Immediate Release

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

 

Contact Person: Richard Maopolski

272-249-0195 and [email protected]  

 

Green Party Candidate Announces Bid For PA House of Representatives District 113 

 

Richard Maopolski of Scranton, PA, has officially declared himself a Green Party candidate in the 2024 electoral race for Pennsylvania State Representative District 113. The District is in Lackawanna County, and is composed of most of Scranton. Maopolski will run as a Green because he says, "The Republicans have forgotten fiscal responsibility, but it's the Democrats in power who have forgotten why we fight." He will caucus with neither party and looks to build a coalition of sharp-as-auditors fiscal representatives with a group of progressives who haven't forgotten to get into "good trouble."

 

Maopolski attended Harvard University, took courses at Lackawanna College, but never finished his degree. His sobriety was too important. If elected Maopolski says he plans to finish his degree at Widener University, and consider taking on an MBA at the University of Pennsylvania after that. 

 

The candidate has been a member of the board of the Hugh O'Brian Youth Leadership Seminar in Millersville, PA; Scranton Tomorrow's Economic Restructuring Subcommittee; and is currently a member of Scranton Counseling Center's Assertive Community Treatment  (ACT) Board. He is also a constant presence in the community trying to turn people on to local events and to shop local. He is always at a cafe reading comics or something from the library. 

 

Indeed, the candidate has had a constant social media presence and can be found on Facebook by searching Richard Maopolski. His Instagram page is updated through his Facebook posts so you will get the same story there, if you prefer that platform. The Instagram account is RICH4REP. Twitter is @RichardMJM but is not updated frequently. He can be found on LinkedIn the same way as Facebook, but he prefers the less professional approach of Facebook and will post there more frequently. It is the best place to follow the action. 

 

To join Richard Maololski's Campaign Committee, please contact [email protected].  

 

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PA Greens Celebrate International Women’s Day, March 8

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Monday, February 20, 2023

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

 

PA Greens Celebrate International Women’s Day, March 8

 

By Tina Olson.

 

“The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don’t have any.”

-- Alice Walker

 

Women in America have come a long way despite the work that still needs to be done. This year’s theme for International Women’s Day (IWD) will be “Embrace Equity.” The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org/) supports the principles of this day of recognition on March 8 because it adheres to our Ten Key Values. 

 

We believe that in order to confront inequalities we must include the diverse intersections many people cross. This includes gender, gender identity, race, religion, sexual orientation, mental, and physical challenges. Our circumstances are not always equal. There is no equality without equity. “Embracing Equity” means recognizing and supporting policies that lift everyone up to a level playing field. 

 

In the big picture, it will be women who blaze this trail for future generations. It was women who plowed through the decades with protests for the equal treatment that we deserve. None of this was easy and sometimes the gains feel slow like stone work. Nevertheless, each stone is building a new inclusive world.

 

“I am not free while any woman is unfree, even when her shackles are different from my own.”

-- Audrey Lorde

 

Unbelievable as it may seem, there are still states within the U.S. which have yet to ratify the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA). This would enshrine equality and equity among vulnerable groups, including people of color and transgender individuals who have been the recent target of escalated hate. It will also create the basis for equity because the ERA recognizes differences in how women are treated within our patriarchal society.

 

Additionally, we will continue the push for equity by understanding pay gaps. According to the US Government Accountability Office in 2021, women earned $0.82 for every one dollar men made. Hispanic or Latina women earned about $.58, and Black women earned about $.63 for every dollar white men earned. This is a clear indication that our work is not done. We need equal pay for equal work. The Green Party supports the path to a more egalitarian society. As we fight for ourselves, we fight for women across the U.S. and the world. 

 

In the past year, we have seen some rights be challenged as Roe V Wade was overturned. This sliding backwards came as many Democrats became complacent while being chummy with the Republican Party, which would rather see women forced to give birth. In Florida, Republicans are banning books and Critical Race Theory. They would rather see our children never learn the importance of equity while drinking from a sippy cup of watered-down U.S. history. We see these negotiations and compromises becoming more invasive to women and other marginalized communities. This cannot continue, we need proportional representation so that Greens can hold the line for our freedoms.

 

“We don't need a seat at the table, we need a new table!”

-- Lilly Saini Singh.

 

As we celebrate women on March 8, it is important to understand the difference between equality and equity. Equity is essential for equality. Our job is far from done.

 

Tina Olson (Northampton) was co-chair of the GPPA Steering Committee during 2021. 

The Green Party of PA, https://www.gpofpa.org, is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

For more information, please see:

“Our Ten Key Values,” Green Party of the U.S.,
https://www.gp.org/ten_key_values

 

Equal Rights Amendment, https://www.eracoalition.org/ 

 

Women in the Workforce, U.S. Government Accountability Office, December 15, 2022,
https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-23-106041  

 

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PA Green Party Joins MLK Week of Peace Actions

 Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Monday, January 30, 2023

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected] 

 

PA Green Party Joins MLK Week of Peace Actions

By Jocolyn Bowser-Bostick.

 

For about two billion people throughout some Asian countries such as China, South Korea, Singapore, and Vietnam the lunar calendar is used to mark the progress of months and years. The Lunar New Year began on January 22 with celebrations lasting up to 16 days. The Chinese predict this lunar year to be marked by peace, prosperity, and optimism.

As a member of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org), I long for this to be true because the U.S. is a key player in sustaining too many violent conflicts around the world instead of being, as it could be, a major force for facilitating and maintaining peace, prosperity, clean energy, and environmental sustainability. The U.S. could and should be a leader in achieving the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which include the four goals cited above. They were adopted and committed to by the U.S. and 192 other countries in 2015.

These SDGs are about achieving social, economic, political and environmental progress for all of us but especially for the most vulnerable and exploited people on our planet. The Green Party’s 10 Key Values are very similar to the United Nations’ 17 SDGs.

Working to achieve and to maintain peace in our communities and between all the different nations of the world is such a crucial value and goal of the Green Party and an absolute necessity in helping to accomplish the other 16 SDGs. There are other NGO’s, thankfully, that make agitating for peace a high priority, and the United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC) is one of them.

Early last year, UNAC called for several days of actions and protests titled, STOP U.S. Wars: MLK Week of Actions, to run from January 13 through January 22, because it encompassed the U.S. holiday that celebrates the birthday of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., a great visionary who understood the importance of promoting peace, love for humanity and the use of non-violent protest as a strategy to gain needed societal changes and social/economic justice. The GPPA Steering Committee endorsed these ten days of action to focus on changing policies and funding priorities to promote peace domestically and internationally, such as:

  • Cutting the U.S. military budget in half;
  • Ending new U.S funding of nuclear weapons and having the U.S. sign onto treaties that reduce nuclear weapons and the threat of nuclear war;
  • Having the U.S. deescalate the war in Ukraine and promote a peaceful resolution to the violence between Russia and Ukraine;
  • Stopping the U.S. military support of the Saudi-led war in Yemen; and
  • Ending U.S. financial, political, and military backing of the physical, social, and environmental violence and oppression being inflicted by Israel on the Palestinian people. 

Many of these issues and other policy changes that promote peace and social/economic justice are addressed in the Peace Platform of the Green Party of the U.S.

In Pennsylvania there were peace actions in Pittsburgh and King of Prussia (KOP), and three events in Philadelphia. The events in Philadelphia and KOP were also endorsed by the Green Party of Philadelphia. GPPA Communications Team Co-chair Chris Robinson participated in two of these events, which shared an emphasis on uplifting the anniversary of the U.N. Nuclear Weapon Ban Treaty. Robinson said, "I was glad to see the Green Party presence on January 22 for the Anniversary of the UN Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. This action was hosted by the Brandywine Peace Community and co-sponsored by the Grannie Peace Brigade, No War Now, and Divest Philly from the War Machine -- in addition to the Green Party. Despite the poor weather, the rally in front of the Federal Building was vigorous and finished with a march around the Liberty Bell." 

Other themes supported at these PA events were:

  • NO to NATO!
  • YES to Peace in Ukraine! and
  • More funding for our communities to improve healthcare, improve and expand affordable housing, improve the access to and the quality of education, and save the environment – rather than the bloated war machine. 

The following are some observations that can be made about the STOP U.S. Wars: MLK Week of Actions:

  • In the state of New York there were peace actions in the cities of Rochester, Schenectady, Syracuse, Albany/Delmar, Binghamton, Buffalo, and Ithaca;
  • Across New York City there were four rallies, two rally/march actions, and an action over several days to recognize countries which have already ratified the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons; and
  • About ten different actions in several cities across Massachusetts.

Some actions focused on specific issues tied to decreasing U.S. militarism such as ending NATO, stopping the involvement of the U.S. and NATO in the war in Ukraine, ending U.S. provocation of China over Taiwan, stopping U.S. weapons and money going to Saudi Arabia to help end the war in Yemen, and stopping the financial and military backing of Israel to end the suffering of the Palestinian people.

Other actions were broader in focus, identifying several issues the U.S. government would have more money for by cutting military spending and issues it must approach differently to foster peace, such as immigration, ending poverty, Indigenous treaties, reducing gun violence, universal healthcare, sanctions against Cuba, Venezuela and other countries, police brutality/over funding of police, the Green New Deal, and corporate capitalism. Some actions targeted state or federally elected officials with protest letters and petitions to urge them to take actions that promote peace, justice, and cuts to military funding.

Other demonstrations for peace occurred in Alabama, Arizona, California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Texas, Wisconsin, Washington and Washington, DC; Berlin, Germany; Hamilton, Montreal, Vancouver and Victoria, Canada; and Melbourne and Sidney, Australia.

The need for these protests against militarism, racism, and materialism to vigorously continue was made even more obvious to me when I read the sickening comments by Dutch Admiral Rob Bauer, Chair of the NATO Military Committee, on January 28 with RTP, a Portuguese broadcasting organization. According to RTP, “Rob Bauer insists that NATO is prepared for a direct confrontation with Russia and admits that rearmament is the Alliance’s top priority . . . . Bauer recalled that during the NATO summit in Madrid last year the Alliance decided to establish four additional multinational battlegroups in Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania and Slovakia in response to Russia’s actions in Ukraine.

“Bauer said that NATO countries ought to gear civilian industrial production to the needs of the military and expressed his support for the idea of a ‘war economy in peacetime’ . . . .” In a previous interview Admiral Bauer said that Russia will remain a threat to NATO even if its forces are defeated in Ukraine.

Clearly, we cannot be silent or inactive if we don’t want to be slaves to the war machine.

Jocolyn Bowser-Bostick is a former member of the GPPA Steering Committee and a current delegate to the GPPA State Committee from Delaware County.

The Green Party of PA (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

 

For more information, please see:

“Take Action for the Sustainable Development Goals,” United Nations, https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/sustainable-development-goals/

“Our Ten Key Values,” Green Party of the U.S.,
https://www.gp.org/ten_key_values

“Peace and Disarmament,” Platform, Green Party U.S., I. Democracy, D. Foreign Policy, https://www.gp.org/democracy#demForeignPolicy

Top NATO official says Alliance ready for direct confrontation with Russia,” Yahoo!News, January 28, 2023, https://news.yahoo.com/top-nato-official-says-alliance-212040555.html

Photo by Rich Gardner from the peace rally on 1/22/23 at the federal building in Philadelphia, PA.

 

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New Leaders Vow to Expand PA Green Party

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Monday, January 23, 2023

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected] 

 

New Leaders Vow to Expand PA Green Party

On January 8, fifty delegates and friends of the PA Green Party State Committee (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) met online to elect their 2023 Steering Committee. The Green Party members present hailed from  Philadelphia and Allegheny, Beaver, Berks, Bucks, Butler, Centre, Chester, Dauphin, Delaware, Erie, Huntingdon, Lancaster, Lebanon, McKean, Monroe, Montgomery, Wayne and Westmoreland Counties.

GPPA Co-chair Jay Ting Walker (Allegheny), who was halfway through a two-year term in office, had proposed a plan to expand the GPPA’s membership and influence. This plan, “GPPA 2023 Goals,” was adopted by the party in November 2022, and will be implemented by the newly elected Steering Committee. It calls for organizing well-functioning Green Parties in ten PA counties.

In explaining his plan, Walker said, “My intention is for the Steering Committee to be focused on implementing the 2023 Goals. With our 2023 Goals, county delegates to the GPPA state committee will focus on a return to the basics of organizing. We will build up our county parties so that we can better act on the issues we care about, while supporting Green Party candidates around the Commonwealth."

In explaining his role in implementing GPPA 2023 Goals, Joseph U. Murray (Berks), the new GPPA Secretary said, “As Secretary my role will be to keep all steering committee members fully informed of all meetings, minutes for each meeting and documenting team leaders reports for the State Committee and party membership. I will also assist the co-chair and team leaders in our goal work as needed.”

Two of the three newly-elected Steering Committee Members at Large explained their roles: 

Theron Gilliland Jr. (Allegheny) said, “For years the GPPA could boast of an incredible Communications Team, and the time is ripe to revitalize the other Teams in support of the county parties across the state. The new Steering Committee has considerable enthusiasm to tackle these challenges, and I personally hope to focus my energies on the Core and Greenwave Teams."

James E. Rasmussen (Beaver) said, “It’s important to keep moving GPPA forward and while activism remains core to our mission, we also have to build our voting base to win elections. I believe the GPPA 2023 Goals will begin that process and look forward to working with Jay Walker and other party members to achieve them.”

The Green Party of PA (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

 

For more information, please see:

 “2023 GPPA Goals,” Green Party Statement, November 11, 2022,
https://www.gpofpa.org/2023_green_party_of_pa_goals

“PA Green Party Elects 2022 Steering Committee,” GPPA News Release, January 14, 2022, https://www.gpofpa.org/pa_green_party_elects_2022_steering_committee

“Introducing the New Leaders of PA’s Green Party” by Beth Scroggin and Tina Olson. GPPA News Release, January 19, 2021,
https://www.gpofpa.org/introducing_the_new_leaders_of_pa_s_green_party 

“PA Green Party Elects New Co-chair,” GPPA News Release, January 20, 2019, https://www.gpofpa.org/pa_green_party_elects_new_co_chair 

  

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Organization Turns Passion into Action

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Thursday, January 19, 2023

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Co-Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

Organization Turns Passion into Action

 

By Beth Scroggin, Green Party of Chester County

 

After serving on the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org) Steering Committee for over five years, I am taking a step back and allowing room for new leadership to step forth. I officially joined the Green Party in 2016, founding the Green Party of Chester County after seeing my efforts in the Bernie Sanders campaign sabotaged by establishment Democrats. Since Ralph Nader's presidential run in 2000, I had considered the Green Party to be the "cool party" and decided to devote my energy for politics to a party where my efforts may actually make a difference. 

 

Although I was at first hesitant to lead a county party with my only prior experience serving as a "worker bee" on the Bernie Sanders campaign, I quickly found many like-minded individuals at my county local meetings, which were held at the home of a generous elderly couple who always provided us with snacks and refreshing "down-with-the-man" sentiments. 

 

After attending the GPPA state meeting in Harrisburg in January 2017, I felt particularly inspired as Cheri Honkala announced her run in a special election for PA House District 197. I gladly walked along the streets of Kensington under multiple layers of warm clothing, canvassing for a woman who had been fighting for social and economic justice since I had been in preschool. That same year, my good friend Nate Craig ran as a Green for mayor of Phoenixville and earned an impressive 10% of the vote as a first-time candidate! Those of us who worked on his campaign had little or no prior experience in politics, but what we lacked in experience, we made up for with passion and a willingness to support an inspiring candidate. At the end of that year, I ran for GPPA Steering Committee Member-at-Large, and I was elected.

 

Just six weeks later, at the January 2018 State Committee meeting, I was elected Secretary of the GPPA. What I learned in my time as Secretary is that organization and record-keeping are absolutely critical to an organization's success. People need to know when meetings are being held, what topics are covered, what happened at meetings that they missed, and who is responsible for which roles. Organization is probably my greatest strength, and I was proud to put that strength to use in such a meaningful role. Organization helps turn passion into action!

 

In January 2021, I was elected Co-Chair of the GPPA. I was more hesitant than ever taking on this role, as our party membership had shrunk considerably during the pandemic. While I pride myself on my organizational skills, I have never considered myself an inspirational "idea-person," a quality I had admired about previous Co-Chairs. Thankfully, I had wonderful fellow Co-Chairs Tina Olson (2021) and Jay Ting Walker (2022), both of whom embodied co-chair qualities quite well!

 

What I have learned in my five years on the GPPA Steering Committee is that passion and commitment to shared values are essential for overcoming obstacles. As a small party which refuses to accept corporate funding, we are at a disadvantage in a country that allows endless corporate influence in politics. Well-funded politicians and corporations masquerading as special-interest groups would love to see us fail. Commitment to what unites us (Our Four Pillars -- Ecological Wisdom, Grassroots Democracy, Social Justice/Equal Opportunity, and Nonviolence) and turning that passion into action is what will make us successful. 

 

To all current and future members of the Green Party, I ask you to consider what your strengths are, and how you can put those strengths to use in our party. Be honest with yourself and others about how much time you can devote to our cause, and then commit to devoting that time. A proverb in many traditions says, “Many hands make light work.”� Take pride in what you can and do offer, but don't pressure yourself into committing to more than you can deliver. Consider quality over quantity when working as an activist.

 

An unfortunate setback that I have seen within the Green Party (more at the national level than at the state level, although it does appear at the state level from time to time) is people wasting their time with stubbornness. Seek first to understand, then to be understood. Consider what is really important. We want the planet to continue to be habitable for ourselves and future generations. We absolutely must regain the power over our lives that corporations are stealing at an accelerating pace. On these principles I hope every Green would agree. There is room for compromise in most other places. Let's not cut off our noses to spite our faces. We can accomplish great things when we focus on what unites us and work toward common goals.

 

Although I am stepping back from the GPPA Steering Committee to focus more on my family, my career, and self-care, I do still plan to keep my county local party active. I also still plan to attend state meetings, because they are genuinely a fun place to be. No one inspires me more than my Green friends. I wish everyone reading this all the best in this new year. Let's make it a productive one!

The Green Party of PA (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

For more information, please see:

Four Pillars, Green Party of the U.S.,https://www.gp.org/the_four_pillars 

 

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Green Party Will Solve Hunger in PA

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Thursday, January 12, 2023

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

Green Party Will Solve Hunger in PA

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org/) meeting in Harrisburg on June 11, 2022, decided by consensus to find solutions for bread and butter issues. One important issue is food insecurity, defined as inadequate caloric intake or access to the proper food.

More than ten percent of the U.S. is experiencing food insecurity. People of color are twice as likely to have issues with food. The numbers in 2019 were: Blacks - 19.1%, Hispanic – 15.6%, and Whites – 7.9%. Looking at education, neighbors with no high school diploma were at 27%.

 “During 2020 there were 1,772,340 of our PA neighbors living with food insecurity (including 537,080 children),” warns Chris Robinson (Philadelphia), a GPPA delegate. “The average PA food insecurity rate was more than 13 percent (childhood rate more than 20 percent), according to the most recent statistics from the PA Department of Agriculture.”

The following 49 PA counties have food insecurity higher than or equal to the U.S. average of 10 percent:

Cameron, Fayette, Forest and Philadelphia have more than 14 percent;

Blair, Cambria, Clarion, Clearfield, Clinton, McKean, and Potter Counties have more than 13 percent;

Armstrong, Crawford, Erie, Greene, Huntingdon, Indiana, Jefferson, Lackawanna, Lawrence, Luzerne, Lycoming, Mercer, Mifflin, Northumberland, Schuylkill, Sullivan, Tioga, and Venango have more than 12 percent;

Beaver, Bedford, Bradford, Carbon, Columbia, Fulton, Somerset, Susquehanna, Warren and Wayne have more than 11 percent; and

Allegheny, Elk, Juniata, Lehigh, Montour, Snyder, Union, Washington, Westmoreland, and Wyoming have more than 10 percent.

Fortunately, the Green Party has some policies which will relieve food insecurity. One solution is to eliminate factory farming, a type of farming in which animals are raised in large groups to be harvested in factories. One-half of all grain is used to feed the animals in factory farms.

A second Green Party solution would be to eliminate as much food waste as possible. These are two fixes which could be done right away, but it is also important to look at food insecurity in more detail. Access to clean water is also part and parcel of the problem.

The U.S. is the largest exporter of food in the world, and yet it has 13.7 million people who are hungry. It is now time to put the Green Party on the ballot.

[Thanks to Bill Jones (Allegheny), who did much of the research for “Green Party Can Solve Hunger in PA.”]

The Green Party of PA (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

 

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PA Green Party Endorses STOP U.S. Wars: MLK Week of Actions

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

MEDIA ALERT

Thursday, December 22, 2022

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected]

PA Green Party Endorses STOP U.S. Wars: MLK Week of Actions

 

The Green Party of PA (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org) Steering Committee has endorsed STOP U.S. Wars: MLK Week of Actions, which will take place from January 13 through January 22, 2023. This nation-wide MLK Week of Actions was called for by the United National Antiwar Coalition (UNAC). The week will include a variety of actions from demonstrations to teach-ins, banner drops to chalk-ins, street meetings to webinars.

 

As the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. so correctly reminded us, the U.S. is the greatest purveyor of violence in the world.  Since WWII, the U.S. has initiated more than 60 military interventions in foreign countries. The U.S. is now in direct confrontation in Ukraine with Russia, another nuclear power.  As Dr. King said on April 4, 1967, “The greatest purveyor of violence in the world: my own government. I cannot be silent.” 

 

In addition, the Green Party is encouraging its county Green Parties in PA to organize and to participate in peace events during the STOP U.S. Wars: MLK Week of Actions. For more information, please contact Chris Robinson, GPPA Communication Team, at [email protected].

 

The Green Party of PA (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.  

 

For more information:

United National Antiwar Coalition, https://unac.notowar.net/martin-luther-king-jr-week-of-actions/

Popular Resistance, https://popularresistance.org/stop-us-wars-mlk-week-of-actions-jan-13-22-2023/

 

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Renewal of PA’s Green Party



 Green Party of Pennsylvania
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Sunday, November 20, 2022
 
CONTACT: 
Chris Robinson, Communication Team Leader
215-843-4256 and [email protected]

Renewal of PA’s Green Party
 
By Chris Robinson, Green Party of Philadelphia (GPOP) delegate to Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) State Committee
 
I was impressed by the way elected delegates to the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) came together on November 13 to accept by consensus a plan to rebuild their party during the coming year. Thirty delegates and friends from 12 PA counties discussed a plan which was drafted by GPPA Co-chair Jay Ting Walker from Allegheny County.
 
Walker’s plan was called “2023 GPPA Goals,” but it was much more than that. It also included targets for expanding the Green Party’s influence and helping the Green Party impact local and county elections during the coming year.
 
I asked Walker what motivated him, and he said, “Our 2022 campaigns demonstrated that our state and county parties needed to be strengthened. In 2023 the GPPA is setting out to deepen our organizing around the state by focusing on supporting the continued development of our county parties, by developing our fundraising abilities, and by building on our already strong communications.”
 
“To accomplish this,” Walker continued, “the State Committee is finalizing 2023 GPPA Goals to make sure that we have benchmarks to hit in continuing to develop our statewide organization. GPPA will also be supporting municipal [and county] candidates around the Commonwealth. The Green Party already has a strong message that prioritizes the environment and working people. By strengthening our organization, we'll be able to deliver our winning message to more people throughout the Commonwealth.” 
 
The main plank in this program will be development of ten well-functioning Green Parties at the county level. At the present time, GPPA has active locals in Allegheny, Berks, Centre, Lackawanna, Lancaster, Montgomery and Wayne Counties and Philadelphia. Over the last few years, previously active Green Parties in Adams, Bucks, Chester and Erie Counties have been allowed to atrophy. 2023 GPPA Goals says, “County parties are our cornerstone. They support our petitioning efforts, our candidates, and our local actions. We need to make sure it's easy to run one and that there's lots of guidance.” 
 
Following the meeting, I asked some of the delegates to the GPPA State Committee what they thought of the 2023 GPPA Goals, and their response was genuinely positive.
 
Treasurer Joseph U. Murray of the Green Party of Berks County told me, “Large numbers of Americans say they want a choice other than Democrats or Republicans. They do not appear to understand, however, that only they can build that party. Our central task is to drive that understanding home and to show people that Green Party principles and values are the foundation to build on. So yes, we fully agree with and support Jay's 2023 GPPA Goals, and our December local meeting will be devoted to planning our tasks to achieve these goals.” 
 
“On the whole, I do like the goals that Jay made,” Miguel Diaz from Monroe County told me, “and at first glance, many of these goals appear achievable and well-measured. It has specific goals that are also within reason. The boundaries and the definitions for goals need to be clear enough to orient everyone toward a common direction. They need to be big enough so that everyone is excited, and they need to be reasonable enough so that people do not get discouraged. This plan certainly does that.” 
 
“I am so grateful to Jay Ting Walker for articulating goals that are both achievable and essential for the future of GPPA,” Co-chair of GPPAA Beth Scroggin from Chester County told me. “Chester County plans to host quarterly meetings next year, recruiting active members so that we can achieve ballot access for any local candidates in 2023 and state-wide candidates in 2024.” 
 
“We now have a framework to help us forge stronger local Green Parties at the county level,” said Chair Doug Mason of the Centre County Greens. “In central Pennsylvania, these goals will lead to lasting stability and durability.”
 
As for me, I have requested that the Green Party of Philadelphia place the GPPA 2023 Goals on the agenda for our next general membership meeting. It is time for us to renew the Green Party.
The Green Party of PA (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebookhttps://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitterhttps://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.  
 
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PA Green and Keystone Parties Plan Debate for U.S. Senate Candidates

Richard L. Weiss
for
U.S. Senate from PA
For Immediate Release
Saturday, November 1, 2022
 
Contact Person: Chris Robinson
267-977-0570, [email protected] 
PA Green and Keystone Parties Plan Debate for U.S. Senate Candidates
Green Party candidate Richard L. Weiss and Keystone Party candidate Daniel Wassmer are two candidates on the General Election ballot for U.S. Senate. Both were ignored in the recent debate between the Democratic and Republican Party Candidates. 
“Candidly, debates were meant to be inclusive since most voters will be basing their decisions regarding who will represent them on the ideas presented,” said Daniel Wassmer, an attorney and college professor from Pike County.
The Keystone Party and the Green Party agree on many of the issues, particularly election reform, and criminal justice system reform. In addition, both parties support protection of civil liberties and legalization of cannabis. The two major parties don’t offer options like these. They both seem to be in lock step in support of expanding the police state, trillion-dollar military budgets, supporting genocide in Yemen, allying with repressive regimes like Saudi Arabia, as well as invading to overthrow sovereign nations like Syria without Congressional authorization. 
Pennsylvania voters are beginning to become aware that they don’t have to vote to continue the status quo, and they are also learning that there are better alternatives.
"Voters deserve to know there are candidates in favor of peace and that war is not the only choice on the ballot on November 8," said Richard Weiss, a lawyer from Allegheny County.
These two candidates, Wassmer and Weiss, have been making themselves available to media outlets willing to listen.  VEEM in Pittsburgh, for example offered a forum for our candidates to be heard, as did PennLive, CNET, and PCN. Oz should accept our invitation to have a public chat on the issues that concern Pennsylvania’s voters! 
The Keystone Party and the Green Party invite all voters to learn more about our candidates. For more information about the debate, please contact Daniel Wassmer, [email protected]; and Richard Weiss, [email protected]. You may follow Daniel Wassmer here, http://www.wassmer4pa.com/. You may follow Richard Weiss on Twitter, @RichardLWeiss.
The Keystone Party of Pennsylvania (https://www.keystone.party) has a mission to create a culture of positive policy change with workable solutions that solve real-world problems. Policy changes such as limiting government overreach, government spending within its means, and criminal justice reform to name a few. This will be achieved by electing honest and reasonable candidates who support a small, effective and efficient government. Follow us on social media: Twitter, https://twitter.com/KeystoneofPA; and Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/KeystonePartyofPA.
The Green Party of PA (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org/) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit https://www.gpofpa.org/ or email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA; Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; and Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/
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No More War In Ukraine

  
 
Friday, October 21, 2022

No More War In Ukraine

 
      Because the United States is fighting a proxy war with Russia in Ukraine, it is important that the Green Party of the United States have an official statement regarding its position on the war in Ukraine. It is especially important because of the grave danger of nuclear war in which the government has placed our country and the rest of the world. Because one of the Green Party pillars is Peace, we should have a position that is likely to end the hostilities and resolve the differences between Russia and Ukraine in a peaceful manner.
      The Green Party of the United States (GPUS) endorse the following statement, on October 10th, 2022, as the official position of GPUS regarding the war in Ukraine:

GPAX/GPUS Statement On War In Ukraine

      The Green Party of the United States (GPUS) views the war in Ukraine with great concern. As the US party of peace, we emphatically oppose the recourse to war as a means of inter-state dispute resolution and, accordingly, condemn the present violence in Ukraine by all sides. With respect to the US and Western response, we express specific concerns regarding:
  1. The militaristic approach of indefinitely arming Ukraine. This strategy is demonstrably flawed. Ukraine is losing the war (despite heavy Western military assistance) and protracting the conflict through further armament will only lead to more death and destruction in Ukraine – not to a Ukrainian victory. This approach does not reflect a sincere interest in the well-being of the Ukrainian people, but rather the geopolitical and financial interests of Western elites.
  2. The misbegotten approach of imposing inefficacious and self-destructive sanctions on Russia. This strategy is empirically flawed. In keeping with the long track record of previous failures of punitive sanctions regimes, the current sanctions on Russia have not altered its behavior in Ukraine. Instead, they have increased its energy revenues and strengthened the Ruble, while damaging the Western European economy and undermining confidence in the US financial system. Aggravating international tensions through economic warfare will not bring peace to Ukraine.
  3. The unwillingness to engage in diplomacy. A ceasefire, and subsequent negotiated peace, is the only realistic way to end the war shy of the utter ruination of Ukraine. Adoption of a realistic negotiating position and willingness to make concessions is essential to the initiation of genuine peace talks, but the US has failed to pursue a diplomatic solution.
  4. The dishonest portrayal of developments in Ukraine. Russian aggression is rightfully covered and denounced. However, sole attribution of blame to Russia whitewashes an extended history of inimical US interference in Ukraine, contributing to current hostilities. Additionally, depiction of the Zelensky Government as a democratic force representative of the Ukrainian people and selective coverage of Ukrainian military successes deceitfully engender popular support for the failing strategy of continued military aid. The West proudly lauds its freedom of speech and press. We encourage Western media to make use of this right in accurately and critically covering events in Ukraine.

    GPUS calls for cessation of unconditional military aid to Ukraine, lifting of counter-productive sanctions regimes, and initiation of genuine negotiations toward a ceasefire and sustainable peace framework! We implore the Biden Administration to use its position of influence to facilitate peace by encouraging peace talks and engaging with Russia to de-escalate tensions – not to fuel war by further arming Ukraine and prolonging a terrible conflict.

For more information, please see: 


Green Party candidate stops in State College

WTAJ Your News Leader
Monday, October 17, 2022

Green Party candidate stops in State College

 
      CENTRE COUNTY, Pa (WTAJ) – Another candidate for lieutenant governor made a stop at State College today.
      On Monday, Oct. 17, the stop was part of Michael Bagdes-Canning’s “The Trouble with Normal, is it only gets worse” tour.
 
      Bagdes-Canning says his campaign is focused on three major issues. Those three issues are building alternatives, climate, and the one most important to himself, corruption.
 
      A third-party candidate often has to fight the misconception that a vote for them is wasted.
      “What I’ve seen with the data is that no, we’re not throwing our votes away,” Bagdes-Canning said. “We are bringing new people into the process. there are people who are
disgusted when you look at polls of politicians almost everybody is dissatisfied with our government so what we do is bring people in who normally wouldn’t vote at all.”
https://www.wtaj.com/news/local-news/green-party-candidate-stops-in-state-college/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZ6PvJX7d6A

Green Party Candidate at East Falls Neighbors in Philadelphia

Christina “PK” DiGiulio
For
Governor of PA

For Release, Tuesday, October 18, 2022

For information or interviews, please contact


Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570, [email protected]

 

Green Party Candidate at East Falls Neighbors in Philadelphia

 

Green Party candidate Christina DiGiulio, who is running for PA Governor, spoke with Philadelphia voters on October 10 at the East Falls Presbyterian Church. The East Falls Community Council meeting was chaired by Emily Nichols, while candidates had been invited by John Gillespie. DiGiulio had stepped in to speak for Richard L. Weiss, Green Party of PA candidate for U.S. Senate. Weiss had received the invitation but was not available.

 

After reading Weiss’ prepared statement, DiGiulio explained to the voters why she was “running for governor in an election which I cannot win.” She said that her task is to raise the issues which other candidates avoid, “Candidates from the two corporate parties have no solutions for the many problems faced by the voters. They offer voters a scarcity of new ideas. The Green Party has solutions,” explained DiGiulio, “for climate change and for our healthcare crisis. The Green Party has solutions for corruption in Harrisburg.”

 

Given her background as a water protector near Marsh Creek State Park, DiGiulio eloquently explained how fracking for fossil fuel is poisoning PA’s air, water and land. “This must stop,” she said. “Just think of our children’s future.”

 

One East Falls neighbor asked, “Isn’t the Green Party a spoiler taking votes away from the other parties?” DiGiulio patiently explained that exit polling has shown that 60% of Green Party voters would have abstained from voting for any candidate from a corporate party. “We bring out more voters to the polls,” said DiGiulio, “and that could also help other progressive candidates to win.”

 

 Christina “PK” DiGiulio needs your help to get elected in the 2022 General Election. To volunteer, please email [email protected] or telephone (717)-839-2395. You may follow her campaign for Governor of PA on twitter, @PKforPA; and Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/PKforPA

 

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PA Green Party Candidate Demands Broadband Internet

Michael Bagdes-Canning

for

PA Lieutenant Governor

For Immediate Release

Tuesday, August 23, 2022

 

Contact Person: Michael Bagdes-Canning

724-431-8560, [email protected]  

 

PA Green Party Candidate Demands Broadband Internet

By Michael Bagdes-Canning, Green Party candidate for PA Lt. Governor

 

In early August, Christina “PK” DiGiulio for PA Governor and I earned our places on the 2022 General Election ballot. I am thrilled by the support we received from some of our fellow Greens and others who wanted a real choice in November. Our volunteers averaged around 100 signatures. Now that we are on the ballot, I hope we can enlist some of that energy for the next phase, building county Green Party organizations. 

Just think of the local issues for which the Green Party has solutions. There are many local issues in your county, which could be approached by your local Green Party. Here is one, which affects where I live in Butler County.

Last year, my local grandchildren, like many other children across PA – and their parents and grandparents -- were introduced to a new concept: remote learning. Obviously, this came with some social costs and a learning curve for all of us. On many days, my two grandkids came to our home, while their parents were at work. It was during these times that it dawned on me that there was something seriously wrong with our internet service.

In our area; we have “high speed internet.” This means that we are served by a copper direct service line. Copper is old and slow technology. What this lousy service meant was our two grandkids could not do remote schooling at the same time, or the system would bog down. Then they would lose connection with their teachers. It also meant that my wife, Karen, and I had to forego meetings and other internet-based things during school hours.

As I said, we are pretty well off for our district. There were some students (and their caregivers) who had to drive to the school parking lot to access their remote schooling, because they did not have access to internet or cell service. This is a horrible solution.

According to the Census Bureau, up to 20% of Pennsylvania households do not have access to broadband internet. However, folks living in rural areas and black and Hispanic families, and households earning less than $30,000 are disproportionately impacted, less likely to have access to basic internet service. The lack of broadband internet access has, among other consequences, social, medical, and economic ramifications.

I believe that internet service is the equivalent of what roadways, telephones, water, sewerage, and electricity were for prior generations. Students and businesses that are lacking infrastructure, suffer consequences that lead to unequal outcomes. We must do better.

When I am elected Lt. Governor of PA, I will see that PA publicly funds last-mile installation of fiber optic cable to underserved areas. PA should also reclassify the internet as a Title II communications service. This designation will allow the FCC to protect consumers against abuses by service providers, prevent unfair data caps and shut-offs, ensure network reliability, and affordability. PA should also remove barriers to competition -- including incentivizing public options. The digital divide is real and bridging it is an important step to revitalizing areas on the wrong side of the digital tracks.

As the focus of this campaign shifts, we’ll be looking for places to get our message out. We’re willing to go anywhere. If you would like to organize a backyard gathering, a campus event, a table at a local street fair, or anything else that we can attend, let us know. We will also respond promptly to media requests.

 

To join the DiGiulio Campaign for PA Governor and the Bagdes-Canning Campaign for PA Lt. Governor, please sign up here, https://www.greenslate2022.com/volunteer. To contribute to their Campaign, please visit, https://www.greenslate2022.com/donate

 

For more information:
Broadband Internet access should be open to bidding, not simply the current choice between cable or telephone company monopolies, where grassroots Internet service providers must merge or go out of business. Broadband access should be a taxpayer-funded utility, like water and sewer, ending the "digital divide" that keeps low-income folks from access to the Internet.”
Platform, Green Party of the US, IV. Economic Justice & Sustainability, L. Advanced Technology and Defense Conversion, Paragraph 8, https://www.gp.org/economic_justice_and_sustainability_2016 

 

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Prepare for the Surge Howie Hawkins Tells PA Greens

 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) held its state-wide delegates meeting on September 10 in Belefonte, PA. There were 25 delegates and visitors participating live and almost as many via Zoom. The Keynote Address was given by Howie Hawkins, the Green Party candidate for President of the U.S. (2020) and candidate for Governor of New York (2022, 2018, 2014 and 2010).

 

By Howie Hawkins, GPPA Keynote Speaker on September 10

GPPA Co-Chair Jay Walker asked me to come here and to talk about whatever I think will rally the Green Party of PA. So, I will give you some suggestions for party organizing and then about policy.

 

My Main Point: Don’t be Discouraged.

The Green Party has always had internal fights and periods of low membership. For instance in the 1990s we had the GPUSA split with the ASGP. Then in the 2000s, we had the split between the Cobb and Nader factions.

When Ralph Nader ran for President as the Green Party candidate in 2000, we got 2,900,000 votes. Four years later, our candidate David Cobb got 120,000 votes. Gradually, this was rebuilt until our candidate Jill Stein received 1,500,000 votes in 2016. In 2020, I was your candidate, but I could not get on the ballot in 21 states – including Pennsylvania. I received 405,000 votes.

Still, it is our job to rebuild the Green Party membership and to build the vote for our candidates.

 

Fill the Vacuum on the Left.

Republicans are not just a conservative party. They have become an extremist, far-right, racist and authoritarian party -- a fascist party. The Democrats are a party of the corporate establishment with a program of neoliberal austerity at home and economic and militaristic imperialism abroad. Progressive Democrats make their party look better than it is, but they have little power.

Democrats don’t fight the fascists. They adapt to them. Biden is still seeking bipartisanship with the party that tried -- and is still trying -- to overthrow his 2020 election. The Democrats failed with their top issue, the For the People Act (HR 1), for voting rights. It wasn’t a priority for the Democrats. Biden and Schumer never made lifting the filibuster a priority or a public issue. The Washington Post kept score. There were about 10 Democratic Senators who really didn’t want to change the filibuster. So they gave the Republicans a veto. That’s not how to fight fascists.

Meanwhile, we know from public opinion polling that Green Party positions are 60%+ majority positions: Medicare for All; Green New Deal; Tax the Rich; Raise the Minimum Wage; and Tuition-free Public College. Sooner or later, there will be a surge of support for our policies and candidates.

 

Organize to Take in the Surge.

Social movements explode with little warning. Remember Occupy and George Floyd/Black Lives Matter? Social change comes in leaps, not a gradual linear accumulation of reforms.

So we have to be organized and ready to take in people when that surge comes. That means our local and state parties need to be well-organized and well-resourced so we can respond to people who come to us. We need to expand our base beyond the usual suspects who respond to our Facebook events.

Our county locals should be canvassing year round. Deep canvassing, not drive-by election canvassing. Deep canvassing, or relational organizing, where we talk with people one-on-one, usually on doorsteps (but also tabling or street corner leafleting) where we listen instead of preach.

We have found this to be the most persuasive form of political communication. First, we build relationships and trust, and then we can debate policy. Don’t despair if it seems we are small. Build the organization capacity so we are ready when mass movements arise.

 

Hawkins went on to answer questions and to discuss policy like fair ballot access, proportional representation, ecosocialist green new deal, economic bill of rights, and the war in Ukraine.

 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org or email [email protected]. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook and Twitter.

 

For More Information:

“Strategic Plan,” Green Party of the U.S.

https://www.gp.org/strategic_plan


Zarah Livingston PA Green Party Candidate to Meet Voters in House District #32

Zarah Livingston
for
PA House District #32
For Immediate Release
Saturday, September 7, 2022
 

Contact Person: Chris Robinson
267-977-0570, [email protected] 

 

PA Green Party Candidate to Meet Voters in House District #32

By Zarah Livingston, Green Party Candidate for PA House District #32

 

Hello. My name is Zarah Lvingston, and I am campaigning to be the PA Representative for District 32. I plan to meet the voters while knocking on doors in Oakmont, Penn Hills, Plum and Verona, and I am sure that we will build a close relationship.

 

I hope to be a Green Party representative who actually feels close to the community. Then, I will be able to formally address the ongoing gun violence with practical programs for youth and their parents. I plan to make it easier for my constituents to access public information, for example campaign records, public funds information, etc.

 

The things which really make me angry about Harrisburg are the continuing issue with gifts to legislators, which in my opinion gives people the capacity to kind of buy themselves out of trouble. Whether that’s in the format of handling things monetarily -- commonly called hush money -- or gifts from fossil fuel companies -- commonly called bribes.

 

I’m now along the journey of this campaign, however, where I will actually get to learn what all of you have been yearning to see fixed or beginning to be fixed in your respective areas. And yes, I may be YEARS younger than my counterpart, but my experience in community work (on my own free time) gives me perspective on how to talk and to truly converse with my neighbors.

When is the last time my opponent came out into the neighborhood? I plan to attend town meetings, block parties, and church socials. 

 

To join the Zarah Livingston Campaign for PA House District 32, please visit her website, https://www.zarahforpa32.com/. You may follow Zarah’s campaign at @ZarahForPA32 and https://www.facebook.com/zarahforpa32

 

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PA Green Party Candidates, Unions Can Build Working Class Unity

For Immediate Release

Sunday, September 4, 2022

Contact Person: Chris Robinson

267-977-0570, [email protected]  

 

PA Green Party Candidates, Unions Can Build Working Class Unity

On Labor Day 2022, Green Party candidates for PA Governor and Lt. Governor recognized the importance of organized labor in moving forward our Commonwealth. Green Party candidate for PA Governor, Christina "PK" DiGiulio (Chester County) said, “I am inspired to see a new generation of workers forming labor unions to elevate and protect their workforce.”

DiGiulio said she liked the statement made by her counterpart Paul Glover, who received 27,792 votes as a Green for PA Governor in 2018. At the time, Glover had said, “As I see it, unions should demand greater ownership, not just greater wages. This means ownership of factories and banks and farms. As we build such labor institutions, workers will escape middle class treadmills . . . .  These ultimate unions will empower workers as owners of co-operative enterprises whose purpose is to meet basic needs while replenishing the earth.”

Green Party candidate Michael Bagdes-Canning (Butler) for PA Lt. Governor, expanded upon this thought, saying, “Our economy is set up to keep us fighting against each other rather than for each other. The same forces keeping us as wage slaves are also destroying the very climate we depend on for survival, pitting us against each other – using race, gender, immigration status, and our zip codes to divide us. When we in the working class unite, that will all change.”

“That’s what inspired me about the history of our labor movement,” continued Bagdes-Canning. “Workers organizing in unions changed the face of the workplace and beyond. Those workers organized across the differences that divided them and brought workers together to fight for radical change.”

The Green Party Platform says, “The Green Party supports the irreducible right of working people, without hindrance, to form a union and to bargain collectively with their employer. This right was guaranteed under the National Labor Relations Act of 1935. We support the right of workers, without penalty, to inform other workers on the premises of a union being formed. This includes advertising and recruiting.”

To join the DiGiulio Campaign for PA Governor and the Bagdes-Canning Campaign for PA Lt. Governor, please sign up here, https://www.greenslate2022.com/volunteer. To contribute to their Campaign, please visit, https://www.greenslate2022.com/donate

 

For more information, please see:
Green Party Platform, GPUS, II Social Justice, G. Labor; https://www.gp.org/social_justice/#sjLabor 

 

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U.S. Senate from PA, Vote Green Party – Not the Same Old Story

Richard L. Weiss

for

U.S. Senate from PA

For Immediate Release

Saturday, August 27, 2022

 

Contact Person: Chris Robinson
267-977-0570, [email protected] 

 

U.S. Senate from PA, Vote Green Party – Not the Same Old Story 

 

By Richard L. Weiss, Green Party Candidate for U.S. Senate from Pennsylvania

 

In the November General Election, you will see my name listed as the Green Party Candidate for U.S. Senate from Pennsylvania. This is why you should vote for me.

 

First, End Cancer Causing Fracking

I believe that fracking is ruining the water and health of Pennsylvania. The latest UN report on climate change predicts heat waves, drought, famine and rising sea levels which the UN Secretary General says “puts us firmly on track towards an unlivable world” and which underscores the need to immediately make all efforts to stop emissions of greenhouse gasses. This can be accomplished through a "just transition" to renewable energy that provides jobs, and does not cause cancer like fracking and burning fossil fuels.

Pennsylvania is at a crossroads. The technology exists today. All we need to do is implement it. Fossil fuels provide fewer jobs, which are temporary, produce more expensive energy, leave behind environmental disasters and cause cancer. Renewable energy provides more and permanent jobs, produces cheaper energy, preserves the environment and doesn't cause cancer. Cancer is a high tax to pay. If you think the fires, droughts and floods we have seen so far around the world are bad, we haven’t seen anything yet from climate change.

As your U.S. Senator, I will work to end fracking and invest in a just transition to renewable energy as soon as possible.

 

Second, Universal Health Care

The pandemic shows no sign of slowing down let alone stopping. Recent research shows that 1 in 8 Covid cases (including mild cases) results in lasting symptoms post infection. These Long Covid symptoms may be debilitating and of possibly lifetime duration. In the media we see talk of a labor shortage and claims that people don’t want to work. There is no talk of the millions who are currently unable to work because they are either disabled by Covid or caring for someone who was disabled by Covid. Covid affects all organs and blood vessels, causing problems with kidneys, liver, pancreas, thyroid, brain as well as micro-clots and high blood pressure, which is why we are seeing strokes and heart attacks skyrocketing in all age groups. Post Covid there is increased risk of psychotic disorder, cognitive deficit, dementia, and epilepsy. Covid infects the cells of the pancreas that make insulin, resulting in record new onset diabetes cases. A case of Covid may age cells in the body 10 or 20 years.

Contrary to popular belief, past infection does not provide protection against future infection. In fact, the opposite. Covid weakens the immune system, making reinfection more likely, as well as increasing susceptibility to infections of all kinds and making latent infections active again. This is why we are seeing many infections spreading in addition to Covid, including monkeypox and now polio. Monkeypox spreads the same way as chickenpox. When I was little we did not have a varicella chickenpox vaccine. Everyone (~90%) got chickenpox. We do not want to do this with monkeypox, which has a higher case fatality rate than Covid.

Regardless of your position on vaccine mandates and masks, indoor air quality standards requiring CO2 levels to be maintained below 700 parts per million (ppm) would greatly reduce transmission. CO2 is a marker for the amount of air recently exhaled by others. For reference, a CO2 level of 800 ppm indicates 1% of the air in an indoor space was already exhaled and is being rebreathed. There are also HEPA filters and UV methods that remove or kill viral particles.

Furthermore we could have hours of operation for those who want masking. For instance, the hours of 6:00 am to 12:00 pm could be made mask-only at supermarkets, pharmacies, banks, and other essential services. We could have mask-only buses and mask-optional buses. The same with flights.

The Covid pandemic underlines the need for universal healthcare. Many who lose their job cannot afford to maintain their health insurance. In the modern gig economy, many do not receive health insurance through their employer. They may face the choice of paying for rent or healthcare, but not both. Current health insurance has too many deductibles, co-pays and limitations on coverage. Employers who provide healthcare will benefit from Medicare for All by having costs reduced. Employers who do not provide healthcare will benefit from Medicare for All by having healthier workers. Medicare for All costs less for better care.

 

Third, Negotiate Peace

I believe we need to negotiate peace in Ukraine, revoke the AUMF, reduce overseas bases to pre-9/11 levels, bring troops home and spend that money at home. Climate change is the greatest national security threat. Engage with China on an equal basis to reduce tensions. Stop funding terrorists and pass the Stop Arming Terrorists Bill proposed by Tulsi Gabbard. Freedom of contract is a fundamental Constitutional right including the right not to purchase, i.e. boycott. Create a Palestinian state. End U.S. support for the war in Yemen. Free Julian Assange, who only reported facts, and prosecute the perpetrators of the war crimes he revealed.

 

Fourth, Protect Civil Liberties, Reduce Crime, Save Taxpayer Money

Reproductive rights are in the Green Party platform, https://www.gp.org/social_justice/. My personal position on abortion can be found here:  http://ivoterguide.com/candidate?elecK=778&raceK=11199&canK=56347&

End civil asset forfeiture, the drug war, over-criminalization, pre-textual stops, excessive force, qualified immunity, mandatory minimums, the death penalty, the Patriot Act, FISA 702, secret watch lists, NDAA indefinite detention, and cash bail. Stop caging kids. Legalize cannabis and expunge prior records. Enact sensible gun laws.

Develop police standards of conduct. Put body cameras at all times on both officers and anyone arrested. All training and equipment should be devoted to taking suspects alive, and a death considered a failure. Our system of justice is based on the principle that it is better to let a guilty person go free than to convict an innocent one. Let us develop a system of policing based on that principle. I would rather take a bullet than shoot an innocent person.

 

If You Want Something Different, Vote for Something Different.  

Richard L. Weiss is a native of southwestern Pennsylvania where he grew up working in his family’s bakery business. He has worked as an attorney for the federal government at the U.S. Agency for International Development, and privately overseas. Weiss has worked on financing for the largest geothermal power plant in Indonesia in Sarulla on Sumatra Island. He earned a J.D. at the University of Denver and was a Ford Foundation Fellow in Public International Law at American University in Washington, DC. In addition, he has an M.B.A. from the University of Chicago. 

 

You may volunteer to get Richard L. Weiss on the ballot here, https://www.greenslate2022.com/volunteer.  You may follow Richard’s campaign here, Twitter: @RichardLWeiss


PA Green Party Calls for Community Based Economics

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Thursday, August 18, 2022

 

CONTACT: 

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected] 

PA Green Party Calls for Community Based Economics

By Treasurer Joseph U. Murray, Green Party of Berks County

Housing, food and utilities are the basics for a human life. Yet in a nation with a $25 trillion economy, homelessness, hunger and poverty are steadily increasing as a recent letter from Habitat for Humanity stated: “17% of children in your home state of PA are living in poverty . . . . Secure housing provides a pathway to financial stability, safety for children and a healthy environment in which whole families can thrive.”

I paraphrased Habitat’s letter. They referred to home ownership, but the same applies to safe, affordable decent rental housing. The Green Party Platform warns, “State governments continue to weaken or preempt local rent control laws, while landlords who violate housing code requirements by failing to keep their property in habitable condition, are often tolerated or given lenient penalties. Housing discrimination also remains rampant against people of color, immigrants, disabled, single people, gays and lesbians, and families with children.” .

All those reading this should know their take home pay and their monthly living costs. This article focuses on housing costs, their skyrocketing level, and why you can never get ahead. The following figures are from a Zillow analysis in August to September 2021 and are for the Philadelphia Housing Market cited by a SOFI report:

Median monthly mortgage cost: $1,595
Median Studio Rent: $762
Median one-bedroom rent: $805 
Median two- bedroom rent $971
Median three- bedroom rent: $$1,085
Median four-bedroom rent: $1,155
Median gross rent: $951

Average utility costs in Pennsylvania: $ 353
Average grocery and food costs in Pennsylvania $278 per person per month.

These figures were before inflation took off in 2022 and rents, mortgage interest rates and food costs shot up so that all workers wage gains were wiped out and their actual earnings were driven down.

Behind this lies record profits for the oil and gas industries and cash flows for the private equity firms that snapped up foreclosed homes after the Wall Street-caused financial crash of 2008. Since that time those same financial corporations have been buying rental housing from small landlords in hot markets and jacking up rents while evicting rent-subsidized tenants to maximize investment returns.

It makes basic sense that stable housing in a community with all the essential basic services available and affordable make for a stable society in which gun violence records are not set daily. Why this isn’t the case is very clear and open, our society exists to serve the maximizing of profits and wealth concentration for those who control the assets, production, commodities, and property of PA.

This system is fully supported by the Democratic and Republican Parties which are the political franchise of the Wall Street powers. They will tell you it’s the best system for the majority and those who don’t benefit from it are at fault. This is a well proven lie by our own history, by the results of the GI Bill and VA mortgages which were established after WW II veterans fought politically for them here at home.

The Green Party has a different vision of how our society should work. Compare our existing system to this Green Party Key Value:

COMMUNITY BASED ECONOMICS

“[The Green Party supports] redesigning our work structures to encourage employee ownership and workplace democracy. We support developing new economic activities and institutions that allow us to use technology in ways that are humane, freeing, ecological and responsive and accountable to communities. We support establishing a basic form of economic security open to all. We call for moving the narrow “job ethic” to new definitions of work, jobs and income in a cooperative and democratic economy. We support restructuring our patterns of income distribution to reflect the wealth created by those outside the formal monetary economy – those who take responsibility for parenting, housekeeping, home gardens, community volunteer work and the like. We support restricting the size and concentrated power of corporations without discouraging superior efficiency or technological innovation.

The Green Party Platform calls for renter/tenant’s rights, publicly elected local rent control boards, promotion of affordable housing policy as a national priority, and vigorous enforcement of fair housing laws. The focus of Green Party values is community, humanity and the Earth that sustains all life. If we continue with the present system of politics and economics you will witness human civilization devour itself and the Earth leaving only the mocking cries of scavengers as our legacy of existence.  .

The Green Party of PA (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org/) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org or email [email protected].  Please follow GPPA on social media:   Facebook and Twitter.

For More Information:
“Our Ten Key Values,” Green Party of the US, https://www.gp.org/ten_key_values 

“Green Party Platform,” Green Party of the US; Section II. Social Justice Paragraph K. Housing and Homelessness; https://www.gp.org/social_justice/#sjHousing 

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PA Green Gubernatorial Candidates Say “End Legalized Bribery!”

For Immediate Release

Sunday, August 14, 2022

 

Contact Person: Chris Robinson

267-977-0570, [email protected]    

 

 

PA Green Gubernatorial Candidates Say “End Legalized Bribery!”

 

The Harrisburg Four were arrested inside the PA Capitol on June 13. They appeared in magisterial court on August 9, including Green Party candidate for PA Lt Governor Michael Bagdes-Canning. The Four were in the Capitol, appealing to all 203 members of the PA House of Representatives to support a gift ban. The Gift Ban, HB 1214, is a bill to ban lobbyist gifts to legislators. It has been supported by a number of organizations including March on Harrisburg and the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org).

 

All of the defendants used a necessity defense and were found not guilty of various charges including criminal trespass. The defendants’ arguments included citing a recent report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which compiled the scientific findings from thousands of studies around the world.  The report made a stark case that climate change is accelerating, is caused by human development, and can only be halted by a rapid transition away from fossil fuels and carbon-intensive industry.

 

"The IPCC lays out the case for urgent action clearly in their recent report on climate change, and we're glad Judge O’Leary agreed," said Bagdes-Canning. "We're calling on all elected officials and candidates this year to pledge to uphold Article 1, Section 27, of the Pennsylvania Constitution demanding that we protect the environment for future generations, instead of taking lobbying gifts – sometimes called 'bribes' -- from fossil fuel companies which are destroying that future."

 

“From the beginning, March on Harrisburg and Veterans for Peace were with us,” said Bagdes-Canning. “They lent their expertise and helped recruit folks for the action. The Ohio Valley Environmental Resistance and Extinction Rebellion, too, were plugged in, and they brought their skills.”

 

"I find it disgusting that corruption is effectively legal in PA," said Green Party candidate for PA Governor Christina DiGiulio. "I support the Harrisburg Four's message. When elected PA Governor, I pledge to support a lobbying gift ban and to refuse bribes from lobbyists, especially fossil fuel interests. I promise to fight for a just transition that bans fracking statewide, while making sure no worker or family is left behind."

 

"I call on all candidates for PA Governor this year to make the same pledge and to declare a climate emergency," DiGiulio added. "Climate action cannot wait. We must act now."

 

To join the DiGiulio Campaign for PA Governor and the Bagdes-Canning Campaign for PA Lt. Governor, please sign up here, https://www.greenslate2022.com/volunteer.


To contribute to their Campaign, please visit, https://www.greenslate2022.com/donate

 

 

For more information:

 

Constitution of the Commonwealth of PA, Article 1, Paragraph 27, Natural Resources and the Public Estate, https://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/LI/consCheck.cfm?txtType=HTM&ttl=00&div=0&chpt=1&sctn=27&subsctn=0

“'Delay means death' - UN climate report urges immediate, drastic action,”  

https://www.reuters.com/business/cop/delay-means-death-un-climate-report-urges-immediate-drastic-action-2022-02-28/

 

Gift Ban Legislation, PA House Bill 1214 (HB 1214), https://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/pn/public/btCheck.cfm?txtType=HTM&sessYr=2021&sessInd=0&billBody=H&billTyp=B&billnbr=1214&pn=1274

 

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Green Party of Pennsylvania files nomination petitions to put fracking, healthcare, more on ballot

 

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Saturday, August 6, 2022

 

CONTACT: 

Garret Wassermann, Green Wave Team Leader

[email protected]   

and

Chris Robinson, Communication Team Leader

215-843-4256 and [email protected] 

 

PA Greens File Nomination Petitions to Put Fracking, Healthcare, More on the Ballot

 

On Monday, August 1, the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org/) filed more than 500 petitions containing thousands of signatures from registered voters from across the state to qualify five candidates for ballot access in the November 2022 general election. This will put critical issues like fracking, climate change, healthcare, criminal justice modernization, corruption in government, and voting reforms on the ballot, giving voters a starkly different political vision than offered by Republicans and Democrats.

The Green Party candidates include Christina "PK" DiGiulio for PA Governor, Michael Bagdes-Canning for PA Lieutenant Governor, Richard L. Weiss for U.S. Senator, Jay Ting Walker for PA Representative District 23, and Queonia "Zarah" Livingston for PA Representative District 32.

These Green Party candidates call for a statewide ban on fracking; a just transition for workers and families to a renewable energy green economy to address climate change; a single-payer healthcare system that protects and expands abortion rights; decriminalization of cannabis and an end to cash bail; a gift ban to address legislative corruption; ranked choice voting and proportional representation for fair elections that end gerrymandering and better reflect constituencies; and more. More information about the candidates and the full GPPA platform is available at www.greenslate2022.com.

The Green Party of PA (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org/) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org or email [email protected].  Please follow GPPA on social media:   Facebook and Twitter.

 

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PA Green Party candidate: It is time to fix things

 

When my candidacy for PA Lt. Governor was endorsed by the Green Party of PA (GPPA), I was excited to have the opportunity to relate to the movement for change on a different level. Over the last 40 years, I had become deeply involved with the movement to end fracking and to stop climate change. There were all kinds of struggles going on around me, but these movements were happening in silos. There was energy for change, but no one was doing the analysis or encouraging folks to turn up for the other’s events.


Michael Bagdes-Canning for PA Lieutenant Governor
www.facebook.com/michael.bagdescanning

For Immediate Release
July 27, 2022

Contact Person:
Michael Bagdes-Canning, [email protected]


It sometimes seems to me that things are impossibly broken. The climate fight seems lost. The Supreme Court has rolled back protections for women, the environment, and voting rights. We’re in yet another war. It seems that there is a mass shooting every week. Our prisons are filled. We are faced with a housing crisis, a crisis at our border, and the pandemic still rolls on. There seems to be no way out of this, and many have given up.

I’m reminded of a Bob Dylan song (Copyright ©1989 by Special Rider Music):

Everything Is Broken

Broken lines, broken strings,
Broken threads, broken springs,
Broken idols, broken heads,
People sleeping in broken beds
Ain't no use jiving
Ain't no use joking
Everything is broken

Recently, I had a conversation with George Lakey, the nonviolence strategist and author of How We Win: A Guide to Nonviolent Direct Action Campaigning (2018). George is an octogenarian with a wealth of experience in bringing about change. George and I were arrested in 2021 with 11 others in front of a JPMorgan Chase Bank headquarters in Wilmington, DE, demanding that Chase stop financing fossil fuel projects.

I asked George about our “brokenness.” Is it too late to do anything? George reminded me that times like these are ripe for change. He reminded me of the 1930s and the 1960s. They were both times of great upheaval, violence, repression, and war, but also times that changed the U.S. fundamentally.

What was it about those times? People were organizing across issues, thinking strategically, being relentless, escalating, demanding justice.

Broken bottles, broken plates,
Broken switches, broken gates,
Broken dishes, broken parts,
Streets are filled with broken hearts
Broken words never meant to be spoken,
Everything is broken

While organizing to stop fracking and climate change, one of the epiphanies I had occurred when I was working with folks in the struggle against mountaintop removal (MTR) coal mining in WV. One of their organizers said, “You know, we’re fighting the same monster, it just has many heads.” When I looked around, I noticed that not only were fracking, climate, and MTR related, but the monster also had its dirty hands in crushing unions, destroying local economies, pitting people against people in another region. Once I saw that, I knew that the monster was also pitting us against each other.

Seem like every time you stop and turn around
Something else just hit the ground

Somewhere along the line, I looked up and saw that there were all kinds of resistance right in my own community. There were folks trying to save our local hospital. There were folks looking to pass an anti-discrimination ordinance. There was a group trying to rebuild the local farm economy. There was another group pushing back against attempts to close a long-term care facility. There were folks decrying racism, embracing Black Lives Matter.

Broken cutters, broken saws,
Broken buckles, broken laws,
Broken bodies, broken bones,
Broken voices on broken phones
Take a deep breath, feel like you're chokin',
Everything is broken

Running for PA Lt. Governor has given me another way to bring many movements together. I’ve come to believe that just showing up for each other is not enough. It is important for us each to see where our struggles intersect. We also have to overcome the divisions that artificially keep us apart. We have to come to know each other. I’ve seen this play out. My friends in the Green Party of Allegheny County (GPOAC) have done an amazing job of building the Green Party but also making connections with front-line struggles. GPOAC consistently shows up, and they get to know people who oppose injustice. They have helped build bridges between groups. They are a great example of what building strength looks like.

Every time you leave and go off someplace
Things fall to pieces in my face

On June 13, I was arrested with 10 others at the PA Capitol. Many of us were climate activists, but there were also a good many from a group which is fighting corruption in Harrisburg. The action we pulled off was a good example of fusion. We are facing the existential threat of catastrophic climate change. Despite having science and public opinion firmly on the side of climate action, our state government is actually taking steps in the wrong direction.

Broken hands on broken ploughs,
Broken treaties, broken vows,
Broken pipes, broken tools,
People bending broken rules
Hound dog howling, bull frog croaking,
Everything is broken

We need to build solidarity across fights. We need to recognize that we are often fighting different heads of the same monster. That’s what my run for PA Lt. Governor is all about. I want to build bridges between the many organizations which oppose injustice. There’s lots that is broken. It is now time for us to fix things.

If you would like to join Michael Bagdes-Canning’s campaign for PA Lt. Governor, please contact 724-431-8560 and [email protected]

For more information, please see: 

“Nonviolent Direct Action to Stop Climate Change,” Michael Bagdes-Canning for PA Lt. Governor News Release, June 22, 2022, https://www.gpofpa.org/nonviolent_direct_action_to_stop_climate_change 

“This Unjust System Cannot Survive the Storm,”  Michael Bagdes-Canning for PA Lt. Governor News Release, April 23, 2022, https://www.gpofpa.org/this_unjust_system_cannot_survive_the_storm 


PA Green Party Candidate on “Boomers & Stickers”

By Michael Bagdes-Canning, Green Party Candidate for PA Lt. Governor
  
      When I received the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) endorsement to be their candidate for Lieutenant Governor, I spent some time thinking about how my life has changed in the last 40 years and how much I have learned.  When my wife, Karen, and I moved into our homeplace 40 years ago, seven acres were scarred by an active strip mine. The house had suffered from years of neglect. The Butler, PA, economy, too, was in tatters: jobs had been extracted to warmer climes and the exodus of young people had already begun. My parents were beside themselves –  not only did we move into a ramshackle home on an abused piece of land, we moved into a “depressed economy.”
      Once upon a time, Butler County, and much of the rest of the U.S., could feed itself. Vegetables, pork, beef, poultry and eggs were all produced on local farms and grown in a sustainable fashion by local farmers. Those were the good old days before industrialization, globalization and ill-conceived farm policy, before forces that encouraged consolidation, over-mechanization, conglomeration, and specialization. Those same forces spelled the end of the small, diversified family farm and the advent of the industrial farmer.

      I now see that our legislators decided to favor big farms and to squeeze family farmers. Their choices led to today’s system in which farmers receive just 15 cents of every dollar spent by consumers on food. Many farmers have to get off-farm jobs just to survive, and many more have decided it’s easier to get out of farming or sell the farm. Our current farm policy seems to be designed to prop up the industrial farm and the profit-taking middleman and to drive the little guy out of business. I think this needs to be rethought. Until we can feed ourselves, we can have no homeland security.

      The same can be said of our local economies. Towns like Cherry Valley once had thriving local markets. Many people of my generation grew up in homes where a family could function with one income. There were lots of good-paying, family-sustaining jobs. The streets of our cities and towns were lined with local, prosperous businesses. There was never a shortage of folks willing to step up to staff the volunteer fire department or to volunteer at polling places.

      Our legislators decided to favor big box stores over local merchants. They gave tax breaks to the superstores and offered them infrastructure they needed to locate outside town. Now, our towns are boarded up, shadows of what they used to be.

      Our legislators decided to change labor law to weaken unions. Trade agreements were passed that globalized our economy. States competed with other states to lure businesses away. “Accept lower pay or we’ll move,” our employers told us. The new labor laws left our unions too weak to put up much of a fight as we were pitted against the workers in Arizona, who were pitted against the workers of Mexico, who were pitted against the workers of China -- a race to the bottom which has left middle-class wages flat for decades while corporate profits and wage inequality have exploded.

      A single income is no longer enough to get by, so both parents must now work outside the home, shouldering the dual burden of childcare costs and lost time with their sons and daughters. People don’t have time anymore to volunteer at the fire halls, to serve in government, to work the polls, or engage in mutual friendliness.

      I could go on and on. In the almost 40 years that I’ve lived in PA, I’ve watched it hemorrhage jobs and young people. It’s time for that to end. Our communities are fractured; many of us don't even know our neighbors, and fewer of us make decisions based on neighborliness because we don’t have the time. Decisions made by our “leaders” have robbed us of community.

      Novelist and environmentalist Wallace Stegner (1909 -- 1993) separated Americans into two camps: Boomers and Stickers. Boomers (and here he was not talking about the generation I am part of) are “those who pillage and run” and want “to make a killing and end up on Easy Street.” Stickers are “motivated by affection, by such a love for place and its life that they want to preserve it and remain in it.” When I reflect on my life in Pennsylvania, this rings true.

      Our legislators have empowered Boomers and punished Stickers. Rather than rewarding those who cherish their neighbors and the place they live, they have incentivized extraction of wealth – leaving most Pennsylvanians struggling and places like Cherry Valley neglected, impoverished, and shrinking.

      For too long our “leaders” have promised us the world, only to sell it to the highest corporate bidder. The corruption of our politicians has been the millstone around the neck of our once thriving working class communities. The jobs we have lost are gone, but the grit and love of place are still here. We Stickers are anxious to build back what is lost.

      I can now see that we have the best government money can buy!

      In PA, it is COMPLETELY legal for paid lobbyists to “gift” (bribe) our elected representatives with anything: vacations, sports tickets, and -- of course -- endless wining and dining, EVERY SINGLE NIGHT WHEN THE LEGISLATURE IS IN SESSION in Harrisburg. Is it any wonder legislators are more responsive to lobbyists than to constituents?

      In PA, there are NO limits on the amount of money that a person or entity can give to legislative campaigns. A single person can give tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars to a single candidate.

      In PA, legislators are reimbursed for their meals and housing while in Harrisburg, but do not have to turn in receipts. It’s called the “per diem.” Anywhere from $177 to $200 per day! Many of them pocket their “per diem” and then dine with lobbyists to avoid spending a cent on food. Some politicians use their campaign accounts as personal slush funds maintained by a steady flow of donations from shady lobbyists.

      In fact, some legislators, like Senator Gene Yaw (R-District 23), have outside jobs. This, despite the fact they are paid as full-time legislators with all the perks. And some of those legislators, like Senator Yaw, have jobs that look like gross conflicts of interest. Yaw works for the McCormick Law Firm, which does a fair amount of work with the oil and gas industry, while he chairs the Senate Environmental Resources and Energy Committee which writes laws that directly impact the oil and gas industry.

      The lobbyists in Harrisburg, and there is ONE OIL AND GAS LOBBYIST FOR EVERY LEGISLATOR, do not feed and donate to our officials out of the kindness of their heart. They expect something in return.

      When elected Lt. Governor in November, with my running mate Christina “PKA” DiGiulio as PA Governor, we will fight for poor and working people. Our sole focus will be on bringing good-paying, family-sustaining jobs back to PA. Instead of looking to bring back 20th century jobs in dying industries, we will push for 21st century jobs that will not leave. The skilled craftspeople that used to work in those dying industries will be employed to manufacture and install solar panels. Our underemployed building trade workers will be employed retrofitting our housing stock, making them less leaky and more self-sufficient.

      Pie in the sky? No! It’s a change of priority. Instead of enriching Wall Street, it’s time to invest in Main St. It’s time to empower Stickers and to boot the Boomers. We can create a new generation of high-quality jobs by investing in a Green New Deal that restores the damage done by extractive Boomer industry and prepares our home for the future. It would also provide for an economy where our young people can stay and raise their families.

      I believe PA can be a place where every person can live a dignified life: where every person who is able to work can work, where every person can comfortably afford the basic provisions they need to survive, and where we exist harmoniously with the land we live and rely on.
 
If you would like to join Michael Bagdes-Canning’s campaign for PA Lt. Governor, please contact 724-431-8560 and [email protected].

July 2022

Working toward a future where people and planet are valued, and our government represents all of us.

 

July 2022

 

A guide to the PA Green Party ticket and some of each candidates’ top issues

By Harrison Cann, City & State PA, May 9, 2022

 

While most election talks are focused on red versus blue, there’s another color looking to get on the ticket in the Commonwealth: green.

The Green Party has fielded candidates for Governor, Lieutenant Governor and U.S. Senate in a crucial election year in PA. Despite the lack of electoral success for third parties, the Green Party is hopeful it can get its three candidates on the ballot in 2022. The party’s platform stands on four ideals: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom and social justice. The candidates are seeking to be an alternative for apathetic voters tired of the two-party gridlock in Harrisburg and Washington, DC.

Here are the Green Party candidates seeking nomination in the Commonwealth.

CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR: CHRISTINA “PK” DIGIULIO

DiGiulio, 44, a former analytical chemist for the Department of Defense, is the co-founder of the Watchdogs of Southeastern Pennsylvania and the Better Path Coalition. From Upper Uwchlan Township in Chester County, she got involved in politics as a vocal opponent of the Mariner East pipeline. City & State spoke with DiGiulio in March when she first began her campaign and received the party’s endorsement. She stressed that outside of environmental concerns, the Green Party is focused on being the voice of the people rather than the voice of the party’s donors.

“It’s time to focus on the people 100%. We need basic human rights. There are people without clean water in 2022 in PA. That’s pretty pathetic,” she said. “I think third parties give people the option of something else, and I really think it’s necessary for getting our political party system straightened out.”

DiGiulio said that regardless of their electoral success, she hopes the Green Party can bring important issues to the forefront that aren’t normally talked about during elections. “If (Green politics) start to become part of the political conversation, I think that’s successful.”

CANDIDATE FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR: MICHAEL BAGDES-CANNING

Joining DiGiulio in her run for Harrisburg is Bagdes-Canning, mayor of Cherry Valley Borough in Butler County and a former vice president of the Grove City Education Association. Bagdes-Canning, also a co-founder of the Better Path Coalition, lost his previous attempt to run as a Green Party candidate for state representative in the 64th legislative district. Unlike DiGiulio, Bagdes-Canning has been involved in politics for decades. He started out on the Cherry Valley Borough Council in 1989 after one local council member died in a car accident. And more recently, he took over the role as mayor following the previous mayor dying due to COVID-19 complications. And having worked with DiGiulio in the past, he said he’s thrilled to campaign with her now.

He said his time in local politics revealed how many people avoid talking about difficult issues. “When a community can talk about silly or mundane stuff, but can’t talk about someone's voice … that tells me something about the state of our communities.” He added that local government plays an important role that’s often overlooked by the media, and that his focus would be on issues affecting people’s bottom line.

“That’s a sad thing … local governments are drying up, and even we have a tough time having enough people for a quorum,” he said. “The issues close to home don’t get enough attention.”

CANDIDATE FOR U.S. SENATE: RICHARD L. WEISS, ESQ

Richard L. Weiss is a lawyer from Allegheny County who previously ran unsuccessful Green campaigns for attorney general and the Court of Common Pleas in 2020 and 2021, respectively. In the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas special election, he received more than 41,000 votes but failed to pick up one of the 11 open seats. As an attorney, he says he supports criminal justice reforms such as ending cash bail, decriminalizing drug use and sex work, and establishing citizens’ police review boards.

WHAT’S NEXT

With the Green Party’s statewide slate set, candidates are looking to ensure their spot as minor political party nominees in November. . . . Their work is cut out for them to meet signature requirements to get on the ballot. In order to secure a spot on the ballot in the general election, each candidate must obtain 5,000 valid signatures by August 1. read more...

 

 

 

 

PA Green News

Edited by Chris Robinson

 

Look at What Happens to Mothers in PA

 By Christina "PK"� DiGiulio, Green Party candidate for PA Governor

For women, it may seem as though our society is becoming more regressive and undemocratic. Because women have never had an equitable role in decision making, we have had to deal with the patriarchy. Now, more than ever, is time for women to step into our power.

The experience of being a woman is unique, and our voices must be heard while running for office. Women need things which are not being talked about from a feminine perspective in Harrisburg: universal healthcare -- including reproductive rights; equal pay for equal work; quality education for children; and freedom from fear of poverty, homelessness and hunger. I know that there are a lot of us who are well aware of how the patriarchy and the duopoly have treated us inequitably.

Healthy communities require healthy families.

Just look at what happens to mothers in PA. Right now, women are afraid for their children. Will children be safe at school; will they be safe from the pandemic; will they be safe from violence on the streets? Family work is important and should be paid adequately to achieve economic equity.

We need more women in office, who will say "No" to the fossil fuel companies which are polluting our air, land and water. Right now, Harrisburg is ignoring data about our health. Mothers would never do that!

I am running for Governor of PA to say "No" to the pollution which adversely affects childhood development and fetal health. "No" to contamination which harms our children's education ability. We need more women in office calling for research that improves health -- not research into making harmful corporations more profitable ...read more

PA Climate Convergence Day of Action


 

Chair Doug Mason, Centre County Green Party, told GREEN STAR, “I was one of ten protesters in the PA House of Representatives chamber in Harrisburg on 6/13. Two tried to unfurl a 20 foot by 30 foot banner that read, ‘You Take Bribes, The World Dies,’ while we all loudly chanted the same slogan repeatedly. Green Party candidate for PA Governor, Christine “PK” DiGiulio, was one of those with the banner during the House session. Me and two others showered the legislators with 203 one-dollar bills (one for each Representative) from the visitors gallery as well. Each bill had a message in marker, such as ‘Climate Action Now’ or ‘Pass the Gift Ban.’ Two were arrested and charged with criminal trespass, while the other eight, including me, were tossed out of the Capitol building and threatened with trespassing charges if we returned to the area. This was the first of a series of actions planned by the newly formed PAC (Pennsylvania Action on Climate). Ten others were arrested for occupying rabidly anti-environmental PA Sen. Gene Yaw’s office, including Green Party candidate for PA Lt Governor Michael Bagdes-Canning.” 

 

 

Stop Banking the Bomb

 

Green Party of Allegheny County Facebook page says, “The weather is always good when you are outside trying to rid the world of nuclear weapons. Yesterday (6/4) we were in Wilkinsburg, PA. We will not end this campaign until PNC Stops Banking the Bomb! ...read more

 

 

Campaign Updates

 

Only Time Will Tell If We Stand The Test of Time

By Chris Robinson

 

Well, friends, we are down to the wire. I remember when Van Halen sang (1985), "Only time will tell if we stand the test of time." That is exactly where you and the Green Party are right now. Will you help our candidates get on the 2022 General Election ballot? Or will you close the door on them and pretend you cannot hear their cries for help? 

We have three activist candidates running state-wide this year, and they need your help. Please down-load a Green Party nomination paper and ask your friends to sign, https://www.gpofpa.org/2022_petition 
It is now or never, so please do it NOW ! !

Then return the nomination paper to your county Green Party or to GPPA Green Wave, P.O. Box 59524, Philadelphia, PA 19102. 

 

 

 ‌National ‌Green‌ ‌News

Edited by Noah Alter

 

Green Party Calls for Real Systemic Solutions to Violence in Wake of Uvalde Mass Shooting

 

 

It is the time that we, as a nation, regardless of political affiliation, come to terms with the fact that we have a serious problem with gun violence. Furthermore, it is time that we realize that thoughts & prayers do not deliver. This may come as a surprise to many, namely those who are unwilling to wake up to reality, but the U.S. ranks second on the list of countries with the highest number of gun deaths. In 2021, 45,011 Americans alone died of gunshot wounds with a total of 692 mass shootings.

 

"It is necessary to implement strategies guided by research on risk factors that contribute to violence, easy access to healthcare, and community-based programs to support families such as developing and evaluating programs and settings in schools, workplaces, prisons, neighborhoods, clinics, and other relevant contexts to prevent violence," said Green Party of the United States Steering Committee Co-Chair Margaret Elisabeth (Washington). . . .

  

Unfortunately, under our two-party system, we have become immune to the nightly breaking news, presenting the daily round of gun violence. It is as if we accept this caliber of death as a normal daily occurrence. Sadly, NRA-backed politicians firmly believe that putting more guns on the streets by equipping teachers with a Glock is somehow going to solve the problem, specifically school shootings. Rather, we must heavily fund mental health programs; focus on equipping teachers with highlighters, pencils, and notebooks rather than a Glock; and enforce common sense gun laws. It’s time that we, as a nation, come together to combat needless gun violence.

 

The Green Party implores all of you to mobilize your friends and neighbors and hold legislators accountable for their unwillingness to prioritize the health and well-being of their constituents. Together, we will prioritize people over profit! ...read here

 

 

 

Global Green News

Edited by Hal Brown

 

U.N. warns of catastrophic food crises due to war and “climate shocks”

For a fourth consecutive year, East Africa has seen very little rainfall causing severe disruption in food supplies. In this region Somalia is a country that has faced war and poverty for decades, and has reported 448 deaths from malnutrition so far this year.

“Somalia is in danger of entering an unprecedented fifth consecutive failed rainy season, meaning hundreds of thousands of people face the risk of famine. Famine cost the lives of 260,000 Somalis in 2010-2011. This cannot be allowed to happen again in 2022,” said Adam Abdelmoula, Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General, Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator. ...read more

 

 

35th European Green Party Council to address security, climate and social crises

The Greens gathering in Latvia finished with the election of the next party committee. Benedetta de Marte was the newly-elected secretary general of the EGP. De Marte closed with a speech that was crucial to understand her purposes for the future: “Our mission in Europe is to fight against the climate crisis, for feminism, transforming the economy and protecting the law . . . . We have big challenges ahead. We need to listen to them, stay united, and take advantage of the great successes our Greens in government are achieving.” ...read more

 

 

G7 countries reach agreement on phase out of coal

On May 26 and 27, the G7 Climate, Energy and Environment Ministers held a meeting in Berlin. . . . The meeting was led by the German Federal Minister for the Environment and Consumer Protection, Steffi Lemke, and the German Federal Minister for the Economy and Climate Protection, Robert Habeck (Green Party). . . . Ministers have demanded that the World Bank and other international investors commit to stop financing coal. Moreover they agreed to end financing for any foreign fossil fuel projects at the end of this year.

The declaration also included provisions on transport. The high degree of decarbonization of the road sector will mean, among other things, that sales of electric cars will increase by the end of the decade. However, it was emphasized that the key to substantial change is sustainable transport, i.e. based on a significant and increased role of public transport. ...read more

 

GPPA Meeting Dates:

All State Web Conferences will be 12 Noon to 4:00pm

  • Sunday, September 11, 2022
  • Sunday, November 13, 2022

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Green Party of Pennsylvania Communications Team Issue Credits

 

EDITORS: Noah Alter, Hal Brown and Chris Robinson
CONTRIBUTORS: Michael Bagdes-Canning, Christina "PK" DiGiulio, Doug Mason, and Eddie Van Halen 
LAYOUT: Hal Brown, Sheri Miller and David Ochmanowicz
GRAPHIC ARTS: Kevin Richardson

 

GL_Med_.JPG

 

      Everything we do is based on our Four Pillars and Ten Key Values. If you find that you share these ideals, come and join the movement.

      You can support the Green Party in many ways; however, a monthly sustaining donation helps to fund a solid infrastructure to help local chapters coordinate candidates and provide resources to make their campaigns successful. As little as $3 per month can have a significant impact!

Sustaining Donation Single Donation Purchase Green Merchandise

      Join us and help bring about a future where people and planet are valued over profits. We have a new, tiered membership structure that allows you to determine your level of commitment and support. And if you want to get more directly involved, consider joining an action team. Work with other committed progressives and activists in activities such as planning events, developing media content, or helping with campaigns. Let's join together to make 2021 the year of progressives!

The GREEN STAR is an official publication of the Green Party of Pennsylvania Communications Team * 2022.
GP_Logo_w_kv.JPG

Green Party of Pennsylvania, http://www.gpofpa.org/

 


Nonviolent Direct Action to Stop Climate Change

On the weekend of June 11-13, the PA Climate Convergence demonstrated outside the PA Capitol in Harrisburg. Representatives of 77 organizations called for urgent legislative and administrative action on climate. They wanted a path to climate justice which includes the phase out of greenhouse gas production and a just transition to clean, renewable energy for those most affected by the exploitative fossil fuel and petrochemical economy.
On Monday, June 13, demonstrators presented the PA Governor and General Assembly with a petition signed by 6,000 citizens demanding that the government
STOP:
  • Denying climate change;
  • Subsidizing fossil fuel production;
  • Ignoring hazards to communities from fossil fuel production;
  • Prioritizing jobs in a dying industry rather than training for a new generation of jobs in clean, renewable energy; and
  • Talking about cutting greenhouse gas emissions while ramping up fracked-gas extraction, production and pipelines.

While those concerned citizens were lobbying for their environmental rights, which are guaranteed by the PA Constitution, a smaller group concerned about the environment and government corruption took direct action to impress the PA General Assembly with the need for urgent attention to the climate. Below is the account of one of the ten demonstrators who were arrested because -- rather than hear the truth -- the PA Legislature chose to arrest people.

 
By Michael Bagdes-Canning, Green Party Candidate for PA Lieutenant Governor
 
Monday began with training at 10 am, a healthy mix of the principles of nonviolent direct action and rehearsing the scenarios. The first action team headed out at 12:55 pm, followed by the non-arrestable team at 1 pm. The first team headed to the office of Senator Gene Yaw (R-District 23).

Our issue with Yaw was his conflict of interests. Yaw is handsomely paid as a FULL TIME legislator, but more to the point, Yaw is chair of the Senate Environmental Resources and Energy Committee. In that role, he oversees legislation that impacts the oil and gas industry. Unfittingly, Yaw is also a lawyer with a firm in Williamsport which says on its website, “With top-to-bottom knowledge of the energy industry, our attorneys work with the gas companies to advise on all legal aspects of development and operation.” Moreover, Yaw's top ten donors to his campaign include eight oil and gas related entities. Because PA allows gifts to legislators and most of those gifts go unreported, we have no idea how much money Yaw is raking in from the oil and gas industry.

The police recognized members of the first action team, but the team was able to get up to Senator Gene Yaw's office. When the eight of us went inside this office, we were told that the Senator wasn't in, that he was already at work in the Senate. But . . . but . . . but . . . our people on the outside saw him SPRINTING out of the office when he found out we were there to see him. Better still, his staff insisted that outside jobs, campaign contributions, and gifts weren't bribes -- and then they called to have us arrested.
     
Funny fact: If we had offered to buy those policemen a cup of coffee and if they had accepted, they could have been fired because that is corruption. Yaw, however, can rake in the money, and -- because our corrupt PA legislature says it is legal -- it's not bribery, it's all okay. Everybody got out of police custody within an hour and received summary citations for criminal trespass. These are the equivalent of traffic tickets.

Our second action team left at 2 pm. They planned to leave at 1:05 pm, but the PA House kept going back into recess and caucusing. The team was kept in limbo until the House finally came into session around 4 pm.
     
As it turned out, the second action had 11 people willing to risk arrest while visiting the House chambers. The plan was to “bribe” the legislators and drop a banner. The money droppers tossed money over the side, but the banner droppers were unable to unfurl the banner because of a very quick police response. One of the banner droppers was Christina “PK” DiGiulio, the Green Party Candidate for PA Governor. The “bribers” rained down $203 of real money ($1 for each PA Representative) which had "BRIBE" or another appropriate message written on it. Their banner read “You Take Bribes, The Planet Dies.” Unfortunately, the Capitol Police ripped the banner out of the teams hands before it fully unfurled. Only two of the 11 were arrested, issued summary citations, and then released fairly quickly, while the police issued a simple warning to the other nine to not come back again within 24 hours.

I would be remiss if I didn't mention that another, allied group acted boldly throughout the weekend. Our spirits were lifted with the fruits of their bold action -- banners were hung from bridges, billboards and fences. They, too, were giving voice to the urgency of the moment and, in the end, many of them joined us for the actions described above. Coupled with the powerful panels, art, marches, projections, and training that made up the PA Climate Convergence, a powerful message was sent.
     
There are many tools in the activist toolbox. Nonviolent direct action is an essential one. This was a beautiful example of moral-fusion organizing, and together with our allies we brought out 50 people on a Monday to a nonviolent direct action. United under the banner of a new group, Pennsylvanians for Action on Climate (PAC), they promise to come back again and again until our demands for climate action and an end to corruption are met.
     
We put a spotlight on the intersection of fossil-fueled climate catastrophe and the catastrophic consequences of money corrupting our politics. Participating with us were
  • Beyond Extreme Energy,
  • Green Party of Pennsylvania,
  • Marcellus Outreach Butler,
  • March On Harrisburg,
  • Occupy Biden,
  • Ohio Valley Environmental Resistance,
  • Veterans For Peace,
  • XR Philly,
  • XR Delaware, and others.
We successfully made some very corrupt people think about their corruption, and we also made some of our friends inside the Capitol feel emboldened.
Overall, I believe this was a great success. Well done, everybody!
If you would like to join Michael Bagdes-Canning’s campaign for PA Lt. Governor, please contact [email protected] 

Look at What Happens to Mothers in PA

Christina “PK” DiGiulio
For
Governor of PA

For Release, Thursday, June 2, 2022

For information or interviews, please contact
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570, [email protected]

Look at What Happens to Mothers in PA

-- By Christina "PK" DiGiulio, Green Party candidate for PA Governor.

For women, it may seem as though our society is becoming more regressive and undemocratic. Because women have never had an equitable role in decision making, we have had to deal with the patriarchy. Now, more than ever, is time for women to step into our power.

The experience of being a woman is unique, and our voices must be heard while running for office. Women need things which are not being talked about from a feminine perspective in Harrisburg: universal healthcare -- including reproductive rights; equal pay for equal work; quality education for children; and freedom from fear of poverty, homelessness and hunger. I know that there are a lot of us who are well aware of how the patriarchy and the duopoly have treated us inequitably.

 

Healthy communities require healthy families.

Just look at what happens to mothers in Pennsylvania. Right now, women are afraid for their children. Will children be safe at school; will they be safe from the pandemic; will they be safe from violence on the streets? Family work is important and should be paid adequately to achieve economic equity.

We need more women in office, who will say "No" to the fossil fuel companies which are polluting our air, land and water. Right now, Harrisburg is ignoring data about our health. Mothers would never do that!

I am running for Governor of Pennsylvania to say "No" to the pollution which adversely affects childhood development and fetal health. "No" to contamination which harms our children's education ability. We need more women in office calling for research that improves health -- not research into making harmful corporations more profitable.

Society may seem to be going backward at times. In reality, what we are living through is the backlash of those in power who resent the progress in recognition of the rights of women, people of color, disabled people, and children. They fear that our empowerment is their demise when the truth is that with the rising tide, all of our ships are secured.

We need women in office who will make society's foundations stronger by outlawing pollution and making polluters pay for their crimes. This change must bring about an end to the personal attacks on female officials.

I am running for Governor of PA to educate people about what is really going on within the duopoly. We do not need to fight and play their games. We just need to educate people about what is really happening in front of us. It is time for us to rise into our power.

Let's validate voters' experience and ask them to VOTE GREEN PARTY!

 

Christina “PK” DiGiulio needs your help to get on the ballot for the 2022 General Election. To volunteer, please email [email protected] or telephone (717)-839-2395. You may follow her campaign for Governor of PA on Twitter, @PKforPA; and
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/PKforPA.

 

For more information:

"Since the beginning of what we call civilization, when men's dominance over women was firmly established, until the present day, our history has been marred with oppression of and brutality to women. The Green Party deplores this system of male domination, known as patriarchy, in all its forms, both subtle and overt -- from oppression, inequality, and discrimination to all forms of violence against women and girls including rape, trafficking, forced sex which is also rape, slavery, prostitution and violence against women within marriage and relationships and in all institutions. The change the world is crying for cannot occur unless women's voices are heard." Green Party Platform, II. Social Justice, A. Civil Rights and Equal Rights, 1.Women's Rights, https://www.gp.org/social_justice#womens-rights   

"We call for social policies to focus on protecting families. The young -- our citizens of tomorrow -- are increasingly at risk. Programs must ensure that children, who are among the most vulnerable members of society, receive basic nutritional, educational, and medical necessities." Green Party Platform, I. Democracy, B. Community, 1. Families and Children, https://www.gp.org/democracy#dem_families

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This Unjust System Cannot Survive the Storm

By Michael Bagdes-Canning, Green Party Candidate for PA Lieutenant Governor

I think our justice system is unjust. Worse, even the injustice is applied unjustly. The poor and disenfranchised are unlikely to get a fair shake.


Michael Bagdes-Canning for PA Lieutenant Governor

For Immediate Release
Monday, April 23, 2022

Contact:
Michael Bagdes-Canning, [email protected]


Moral philosopher John Rawls wrote in his Theory of Justice (1971), "Justice is the first virtue of social institutions, as truth is of systems of thought. A theory however elegant and economical must be rejected or revised if it is untrue; likewise laws and institutions no matter how efficient and well-arranged must be reformed or abolished if they are unjust. Each person possesses an inviolability founded on justice that even the welfare of society as a whole cannot override. For this reason justice denies that the loss of freedom for some is made right by a greater good shared by others."

Recently, I had the opportunity to sit in a courtroom, where injustice was prevalent. I was there to support a friend who had participated in an action around an environmental issue. However, before we got to her case, we sat through several others. In every instance, the people on trial were poor, addicted, black, or a combination. In each case, the defendants were victims of a system that is stacked against them, that treats them as less, that had criminalized poverty. A woman in prison, unable to pay a fine imposed when she was deep in her addiction, a young unemployed man incapable of paying even a small amount required to set up a payment plan. What kind of justice is it to further impoverish the already impoverished, to kick an addict rather than treat them?

Our courts are packed with people accused of crimes of poverty -- crimes that people commit because they are impoverished. I’m in no way praising our injustice system, but I will note that the judge did treat the defendants with some dignity. He also showed some compassion for them. Not enough, but some.

My friend is not impoverished in a way that is easily recognized; she is a woman of perceived privilege. Make no mistake, though, she, like most of us, will not have the privilege of escaping the ravages of catastrophic climate change, her generation and ones that follow will deal with the dire consequences of our criminal neglect of this issue. She is already facing an uncertain future, one far less predictable, and less prosperous, than the one that I grew up in.

She was in court because she had been charged with harassment -- she hung a scary Halloween zombie ghost on the fence of a corporate executive of an ecocidal fossil fuel company. Oh my! The executive of a company, which is harassing present and future generations with the prospect of extinction, felt threatened by a zombie ghost. Shades of Ebenezer Scrooge! The Ghost of Christmas Present: "Will you decide what men shall live, what men shall die?"

Harassment is a silly charge. How about measured self-defense?

She, too, was a victim of our injustice system. Because she dared speak out against an eco-criminal, she had to appear in court, take off time from work, and travel to court. She was required to be there by 1:30. If she missed her court date, she would be guilty by default and fined. Not that her trial started at 1:30.

Defendants are expected to be there, but the court will get to you when it gets to you. In my experience, defendants like my friends are often last. I once sat in a courtroom all afternoon only to be told at the end of the day that I was “no papered,” – meaning there was no paperwork – the prosecutor either lost or, more likely, had no intention of arguing my case. Yet, I spent the entire afternoon in a courtroom, assured my case was coming up “soon.”

Around 2:30, my friend was the only defendant left in the courtroom. She was called to the bench and informed that the officer who was to testify against her was not going to make it. In a just system, she would have been innocent by default -- her accuser didn’t even bother to show up. But, no, her trial would be rescheduled. Another missed day of work, another commute to the courthouse, and more time sitting. Again, I have seen this over and over. I once traveled all the way to Harrisburg only to have the police come up missing. Last autumn, I drove over six hours to Wilmington, DE, where I had to book a room -- only to have the trial rescheduled because the police could not make it. These are not accidents!

In our system, we are told that we are presumed to be innocent until convicted. Yet, we are “fined”ťif we choose to fight against injustice. My friend missed work (and pay), she had costs associated with travel, and she gave up precious life energy. Yet, she still awaits her day in court, her chance at justice. And she will be fined, yet again. Even if she is found innocent, our justice system is unjust.

The Green Party seeks a just system, and as the next Lieutenant Governor of PA, I plan to work for the necessary reforms. As Matthew Stover writes in Shatterpoint (2004), "Jedi fight for civilization, because only civilization creates peace. We fight for justice because justice is the fundamental bedrock of civilization: an unjust civilization is built upon sand. It does not long survive a storm.”

If you would like to join Michael Bagdes-Canning’s campaign for PA Lt. Governor, please contact [email protected].


Green Party Enlisting PA Volunteers

Green Party of Pennsylvania

News Release

For release: Thursday, April 28, 2022

 

For more information please contact 

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570, [email protected]

Green Party Enlisting PA Volunteers

Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) Co-Chair Beth Scroggin told voters at the end of March, “The Green Party has an excellent slate of candidates running for office this year, but we need your help to get them on the ballot.  Whether you’re a seasoned petitioner or have never carried a clipboard before, we would be so grateful for you to join us this year in helping our candidates achieve ballot access and get into office, where they can start making the changes we so desperately need!”

Scroggin was talking about Richard L. Weiss, Esq. (Allegheny County) who is running for U.S. Senate from PA, Christina “PK” DiGiulio (Chester County) who is making a bid for PA Governor, and Michael Bagdes-Canning (Butler County) who is campaigning to be PA Lt. Governor. These three activists support renewable energy, single-payer healthcare, a just transition to a new economy, and an end to corruption in Harrisburg. Plus, they are ready to take on all candidates from the two corporate parties, if they have your support. 

Chris Robinson (Philadelphia), leader of GPPA’s communication team, made a good point when he said, “Great candidates are only as good as their supporters. Interested voters, who are disgusted with the two corporate parties, will have to volunteer if they want an alternative on the ballot. This will not happen by magic! It will take hundreds of volunteers petitioning in every city and borough to have Green Party candidates nominated for the November 2022 General Election.”

“Right now, gathering signatures on the Green Party petitions to nominate state-wide candidates is a great opportunity for new activists,” said GPPA Steering Committee Member Beth Schongar (Allegheny County).  

“First, it will give them a great opening to talk to people about the Green Party and progressive politics,” said Schongar. “Volunteers will be asking voters to help us get candidates on the ballot and increase everyone’s choices on Election Day. Most voters are glad to help and interested to find out that the Green Party is real and active. It can lead to interesting conversations and recruit new members.”

“Second,” continued Schongar, “getting enough nomination signatures to put us on the ballot will give Green Party candidates the opportunity to join debates, particularly with the League of Women Voters. It will also allow our candidates to issue news releases and join other forums to share Green Party views. When our candidates present Green Party policies, it helps people realize that the Green Party is the future. Petitioning and campaigning are our opportunities to make our views known and increase participation. Let’s make the best of it by getting out and collecting signatures on the Green Party’s nominating petitions!” 

Joining the Green Party effort is quick and easy, just leave your contact information via email [email protected] or telephone 717-839-2395. The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, ttps://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

 

For more information:
Announcing the Green Party of PA 2022 Candidates” by Co-chair Beth Scroggin, GPPA news release, March 21, 2022, https://www.gpofpa.org/announcing_the_green_party_of_pa_2022_candidates 

 

“Sign up here to receive instructions on securing a 2022 Green Party Nomination Petition,” GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org/2022_petition  

 

END ITEM              END ITEM            END ITEM 


Bagdes-Canning: Let's Expose the Rank Hypocrisy of the Two Corporate Parties

My whole political outlook has changed since 2014, when I was called by a distraught parent about a fracked-gas well on fire near Summit Elementary in the Butler School District. As it turns out, the well wasn't on fire, it was flaring. That was still alarming. Flaring wells are emitters of all sorts of toxins, and this one was dangerously close to the school.

I went around the neighborhood knocking on doors to find out what the neighbors thought, what they were saying. A woman standing by her mailbox told me, "I've lived here for 42 years. We all get along, but we don't talk about the tough things." After a few more minutes, I turned to walk away, and she called after me, "What can we do? They're so big, and we're so small.


Michael Bagdes-Canning for PA Lieutenant Governor

For Immediate Release
Monday, April 18, 2022

Contact Person:
Michael Bagdes-Canning, 724-431-8560, [email protected]


That neighborhood had lost all semblance of community. Neighbors knew each other. They waved to each other. They said hello, but they didn't talk about the tough things. So, when poisons were released from a gas well near the school -- putting children, teachers and staff in harm's way -- the neighbors didn't talk about it. We had lost our community.

This brings me to the current race for PA Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and U.S. Senator from PA. When I agreed to become a Green Party candidate, I was told that the plan was to build the Green Party base so that, moving into next year, we have more activists who can be a force in local races in places we haven't been before.

I am a politician, and I am campaigning to be Lt. Governor of PA. I am a retired teacher. I used to run a class of 20 students or less. They were delinquent boys. So that is like working with Democrats and Republicans, only my delinquents were more likable. I have held elected office since 1989. I am now the Mayor of a Cherry Valley Borough, but let's put that in context. There are 54 residents of Cherry Valley, and 39 registered voters.

My running mate for PA Governor, Christina "PK" DiGiulio, is a chemist who has never held elected office and who has certainly never run an organization approaching the size of the Commonwealth of PA. PK and I do not have experts sitting in the wings to coach us. What we have are proven ideas and people power.

Call me crazy, but I didn't sign up to be a real candidate. I signed up to be an unsettling force. The Green Party is not going to win in a system designed to make SURE we don't win. I have to embrace that. The Green Party has serious points to make, serious critiques of the political and economic system. I want to have fun doing that. I want to run a guerilla campaign -- playing to our strengths, avoiding fights we can't win. Using the resources we have and not getting bogged down trying to make do.

What you have in "PK" and me are disruptors. In our own ways, we are pretty good at shaking up the status quo. I'm not making a joke of the Green Party or of elections. I'm talking about exposing the rank hypocrisy of the two corporate parties and about how they betray working people. I'm also talking about acknowledging the obvious – this is not a campaign that is going to get the most votes. So let's have some fun. That's what I want to do.

Grassroots Democracy, one of the Green Party's 10 Key Values, means participation. None of us should be lifting more than their fair share. Our candidates are not "sages on the stages." They are the face of us! We should all be accountable, and we should all get our hands dirty. Personal and Global Responsibility is another Green Party Key Value. We, personally and as a party, need to reflect our commitment to making this Commonwealth a better place. If the Green Party is going to be a force, we have to build our community. We all need to play our role, to take ownership.

What can you do now to help us grow the Green Party infrastructure? Obviously, "PK" and I need your help in gathering voters' signatures on our nomination petitions. Also, if we are going to get the word out, we need places to go, people to talk with. We need social media. We need creative people to come up with disruptive things we can do. We need people to develop messaging. We need money. We need all sorts of things about which you can teach me.

The end of the story I started with is a testament to organizing. About three months after I had met with the distraught parent, I went to a Cherry Valley Township Supervisors meeting. They were considering a permit for a compressor station. The mother who had called me about the well fire had spent weeks organizing opposition. The meeting was packed with residents who opposed the compressor station. Many got up to speak. Toward the end, an elderly woman got up and "talked about the tough things." When she finished, she turned, looked at me, and nodded. The Supervisors rejected the permit application.

If you would like to join Michael Bagdes-Canning's campaign for PA Lt. Governor, please contact 724-431-8560, [email protected]

 

For more information:

"Our Ten Key Values," Green Party of the U.S.,
https://www.gp.org/ten_key_values

"'End the War on Drugs' says Green Party Candidate for PA Lt. Governor," Michael Bagdes-Canning news release, April 2, 2022,
https://www.gpofpa.org/_end_the_war_on_drugs_says_green_party_candidate_for_pa_lt_governor

"BREAKING: Green Party Candidate Announces Bid For PA Lieutenant Governor," Michael Bagdes-Canning news release, March 9, 2022,
https://www.gpofpa.org/michael_bagdes_canning_for_pa_lieutenant_governor


Christina "PK" DiGiulio for Governor of PA Interview - Green Star Live March, 2022

Join us for a brief interview and get to know Pennsylvania Native and Lock Haven University alumni, Christina "PK" DiGiulio. Learn about what made her get involve and what motivated her to public service. PK was interviewed by State Party Chair, Beth Scroggin in early March of 2022. 

Follow her on Twitter @PKforPA 

 

 

Help us secure ballot access in Pennsylvania  ... 

Sign a petition by starting here. 

https://www.gpofpa.org/2022_petition


Green Party Candidate for PA Governor says, “I agree, ‘Delay Means Death’”

Christina “PK” DiGiulio
For
Governor of PA

May be an image of 1 person, standing, footwear and outdoors

For Release, Monday, April 4, 2022

For information or interviews, please contact
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570, [email protected]

Green Party Candidate for PA Governor says, “I agree, ‘Delay Means Death’”
By Christina “PK” DiGiulio, Green Party candidate for Governor of PA
 
I was reading some of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, which was released by the United Nations on February 28, and I was alarmed to learn some new estimates of the effects of our refusal to stop using fossil fuels. I felt like I was standing next to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres when he said, “Delay means death.” 
 
The IPCC report says that climate change will have a horrendously compounded effect on today’s children. It says, “Today’s children and future generations are more likely to be exposed and vulnerable to climate change and related risks such as flooding, heat stress, water scarcity, poverty, and hunger. Children are amongst those suffering the most, as we see today. What is our children’s future going to look like, if we do not limit global warming to well below 2°C, preferably to 1.5°C, compared to pre-industrial temperature? Based on the . . . assessment, we know that global warming is already changing much of the world as we know it. Its impacts will intensify in the coming decades with profound implications for all aspects of human life around the world. Our food and water supplies, our cities, infrastructure and economies as well as our health and well-being will be affected.”
 
While people who are now 55 years old or older will continue to feel increasing shocks of climate change during the rest of their lives, children who are now ten years or younger will experience a four-fold increase in extreme events during their lives. These extreme events will include deadly heat stress, loss of coastal settlements, and water scarcity. As the report says, “Today’s young people and future generations will also witness stronger negative effects of climate change on food production and availability. The warmer it gets, the more difficult it will become to grow or produce, transport, distribute, buy, and store food – a trend that is projected to hit poor populations the hardest.” This chaotic environment which children will inherit will be the only world they ever know, if we do not treat climate change as the emergency which it is.   
 
Finally, the IPCC report explained to me that these results of climate change will work together. “In addition, we now know that multiple climate hazards will occur simultaneously more often in the future. They may reinforce each other and result in increased impacts and risks to nature and people that are more complex and more difficult to manage. For example, reductions in crop yields due to heat and drought, made worse by reduced productivity because of heat stress among farm workers, will increase food prices, reduce household incomes and lead to health risks from malnutrition, as well as climate-related deaths . . . .” 
 
I also learned that fortunately there is some good news in the report. “All these risks can be reduced substantially by taking urgent action to limit global warming and by strengthening our adaptation efforts -- for example by protecting and conserving nature, and by improving planning and management of our cities . . . . The youth movement, together with many non-governmental organizations, has led to a rising wave of public global awareness of climate change and its life-threatening impacts. To successfully secure our own future and the future of the coming generations, climate risks must be factored into each decision and planning. We have the knowledge and the tools. Now it is our choice to make.” 
 
When I am elected governor of Pennsylvania, I will declare a state of emergency to address climate change and introduce state-level elements of the Green New Deal policy. With a Green Party governor, PA will be able to stop our decline to the point of no return. Please join my campaign for governor of PA if you are as worried as I am about our children.
 
Christina “PK” Digiulio needs your help to get on the ballot for the 2022 General Election, please email [email protected] or telephone (717)-839-2395. You may follow her campaign for Governor of PA on Twitter, @PKforPA; and
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/PKforPA.  
 
For More Information: 
“How will climate change affect the lives of today’s children tomorrow, if no immediate action is taken?” IPCC Sixth Assessment Report,
https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg2/about/frequently-asked-questions/keyfaq3/
 
'Delay means death' - UN climate report urges immediate, drastic action,”  
 
“It’s Time for the Green New Deal,” Green Party of the U.S., https://www.gp.org/green_new_deal

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“End the War on Drugs” says Green Party Candidate for PA Lt. Governor

Michael Bagdes-Canning

for

PA Lieutenant Governor

 

For Immediate Release

Saturday, April 2, 2022

 

Contact Person: Michael Bagdes-Canning

724-431-8560, [email protected] 

 

Today, Michael Bagdes-Canning, the Green Party candidate for Lt. Governor of PA, has called for an end to the War On Drugs. In a conversation at his home in Cherry Valley, PA, Bagdes-Canning told voters:

 

The War on Drugs is more than 50 years old, and it is America’s longest war. Like other wars, it has diverted trillions of dollars from our communities, militarized our police departments, claimed thousands of lives, decimated communities, and, largely, been waged in poor and working-class neighborhoods.

 

Like other wars before it, the War on Drugs was built on a series of policy lies and decisions that perpetuated white supremacy, racism, and xenophobia. It was racist in intent and implementation.  As demonstrated in numerous studies, our criminal justice system has been weaponized against communities of color, with far reaching consequences for their residents. The War on Drugs has created suffering on an unimaginable scale, with no discernible benefit. Despite the trillions of dollars spent, drug overdose rates have exploded – from 6.1 per 100,000 in 1999 to 21.6 in 2021.

 

What would I advocate? Well, I like the recommendations found in the Green Party Platform:

 

First of all, PA should adopt a system of treatment rather than incarceration, similar to Portugal. We should redirect funds presently budgeted for the War on Drugs toward research, education, prevention, and treatment. Treatment and legalization have a track record which shows just how shameful the half-century long War on Drugs has been.

 

Second, PA should legalize possession, sale, and cultivation of cannabis/marijuana.

 

Third, PA should grant amnesty and release from confinement without any further parole or probation, those who have been incarcerated for the use, sale, or cultivation of marijuana, and who otherwise are without convictions for victim-oriented crimes. Provide the option for drug treatment to those leaving confinement. All felony charges related to convictions for marijuana possession should be stricken from a person’s record.

 

Fourth, Congress should amend the Controlled Substances Act to reflect that drug use, in itself, is not a crime, and that persons living in the U.S. who are arrested for using drugs should not be incarcerated with those who have committed victim-oriented crimes.

Fifth, PA should reform our criminal justice system, acknowledging that it has, for centuries, been used as a tool of oppression. Therefore, we should invest in the communities that have been ravaged in this unjust war.

 

If the War on Drugs were an actual armed conflict, the generals would have been fired and the war called off. The War on Drugs was misguided from its beginning. We’ve lost this war. It’s time to declare a peace, time to rebuild communities.

 

If you would like to join Michael Bagdes-Canning’s campaign for PA Lt. Governor, please contact 724-431-8560, [email protected]

 

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PA Greens Publish Free ebook “Eliminating Fossil Fuel Pipelines So We Have A Healthy Future”

 

Green Party of Pennsylvania

For release: Saturday, March 19, 2022

 

For more information please contact 

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570, [email protected]

 

Green Party of PA Publishes “Eliminating Fossil Fuel Pipelines So We Have A Healthy Future”

 

On March 19, the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) published a new monograph, “Eliminating Fossil Fuel Pipelines So We Have A Healthy Future” by Jocolyn Bowser-Bostic. This publication explores the various environmental problems associated with fossil fuel pipelines and the resulting health consequences. 

This free ebook offers a highly visual perspective, using photos from citizens affected by local pipelines and fracking sites in and around PA. You may read “Eliminating Fossil Fuel Pipelines So We Have A Healthy Future” by visiting, www.gpofpa.org/pipelines or https://www.gpofpa.org/an_essay_against_fossil_fuel_pipelines

Christina "PK" DiGiulio (Chester County), the GPPA candidate for Governor of PA, said, "As someone who lives in a community impacted by the petrochemical industry -- in particular the Mariner East Pipeline Project -- I am grateful for the Green Party and Jocolyn Bowser-Bostick for putting the work into and publishing this document. The photographs will be extremely useful for organizers who want to convince their neighbors of the harmful effects of pipelines.”

Green Party candidate for Lieutenant Governor of PA Michael Bagdes-Canning testified, “As someone who lives in the shale-fields of PA, where the gas that fills Mariner East Pipeline is extracted, I can’t thank Jocolyn Bowser-Bostick enough for this document. Neither the Republicans, who deny the science, nor the Democrats, who ignore the science, are fit to lead us into the future. There is no sane reason to frack, crack, transmit, ship, or burn methane.”

That is not the end of the methane madness. Arianne Elinich of Bucks County Concerned Citizens Against the Pipelines (a PA resident directly impacted by the Adelphia Gateway Pipeline Project) shares Bagdes-Canning’s concerns. “From the harmful health and well-water impacts of fracking to the perpetual public safety risks of pipeline infrastructure, fracked gas is a ‘Bridge Fuel to Nowhere,’” said Elinich. “Folks are beginning to understand that fossil fuels are old school and that it’s essential for our elected officials to prioritize the health, safety and welfare of the citizens of PA over any possible corporate interests, inferred or otherwise. With the ever-growing opposition towards greenfield pipeline projects like PennEast, corporations will continue to look towards the repurposing of infrastructure, as is the case with the Adelphia Gateway Pipeline Project. But these projects in all actuality may very well raise even more significant public safety and environmental concerns as a result of the age, repurposing of, and the new facilities being constructed for such pipeline projects. Moreover, it is clear from the recent defeat of the PennEast Pipeline, that the power of the people is a force that is growing stronger, more constructive and more cohesive with every challenge. Do not doubt that change is possible.”

“I think this will be a quick, easy read for folks looking to digest some information on the fracking problem and how important it is to stop drilling now,” said Co-chair David Ochmanowicz of the Green Party of Bucks County and steering committee member of GPPA. “We are grateful to have had photography contributions from Bucks County Concerned Citizens Against the Pipelines, Kim Fraczek, Christine Pontecorvo and Christina “PK” DiGiulio.” 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, ttps://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

 

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Click here to download a free copy

 

 


Green Party Co-sponsors PA Climate Convergence

Green Party of Pennsylvania

News Release

 

For release: Tuesday, March 15, 2022

 

For more information please contact 

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570, [email protected]  

 

Green Party Co-sponsors PA Climate Convergence

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) has become a co-sponsor of the PA Climate Convergence. Meeting virtually on March 13, Green Party delegates, elected by their county locals, voted unanimously to co-sponsor the event in Harrisburg, PA, on the weekend on June 11 – June 13.

GPPA Co-chair Beth Scroggin (Chester County) explained, “We support the Climate Convergence because climate change is the most important issue any of us are facing. If we continue to ignore it, none of the other issues we focus on will matter, because we will all cease to exist. The Green Party has always prioritized the environment, and because our candidates do not accept corporate donations, we are not forced to remain silent on the issue or minimize it."

Hundreds of grass-roots activists from environmental organizations will join together for a weekend of actions, aimed at changing the climate conversation. They are alarmed by the backward stance of the PA General Assembly. Green Party organizer Joe Murray (Berks County) said, “Our government is keeping PA from being part of the solution to our biggest crisis by denying climate change and subsidizing fossil fuel production.”

 

Green Party Co-chair Jay Ting Walker (Allegheny County) said, “I will be part of the Climate Convergence because the PA General Assembly has been ignoring hazards to communities from fossil fuel production and refusing to train a new generation for jobs in clean, renewable energy.”

 

Following the vote, Michael Bagdes-Canning, the Green Party candidate for Lieutenant Governor of PA, said, “I grew up shaped by the prophetic voice of Dr. King. On August 28, 1963, on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, Dr. King said, ‘We are faced with the fact that tomorrow is today. We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now. In this unfolding conundrum of life and history, there is such a thing as being too late. This is no time for apathy or complacency. This is a time for vigorous and positive action.’ I think it's almost like Dr. King was speaking to us today, because we are faced with an existential crisis. Climate change is serious, and the PA Climate Convergence is an opportunity for people to come together, to plan vigorous and positive action. The fierce urgency of this moment requires it.”

 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, ttps://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

For more information, please see: 

PA Climate Convergence, https://www.pennsylvaniaclimateconvergence.org/ 

Emergency Global Green New Deal, Global Climate Convergence,
https://globalclimateconvergence.org/about/what-we-are-calling-for/ 

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Michael Bagdes-Canning for PA Lieutenant Governor

Michael Bagdes-Canning

for

PA Lieutenant Governor

 

 

 

For Immediate Release

Wednesday, March 9, 2022

 

Contact Person: Michael Bagdes-Canning

724-431-8560, [email protected] 

 

BREAKING: Green Party Candidate Announces Bid For Lieutenant Governor

Michael Bagdes-Canning announced that he will seek the nomination of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) for the office of Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania.

Bagdes-Canning is a husband, father, and grandfather living in Cherry Valley Borough, Butler County, where he has held elected office for 33 years. He is currently Mayor. He is a retired teacher. Bagdes-Canning spent almost 36 years in the classroom, the last 29 teaching delinquent and dependent boys. He was a union member throughout his working life, serving as president, vice president, and building representative in his local. Since his retirement, Bagdes-Canning has been an organizer in the fracking / climate fight locally, statewide, and on the national level. He serves on the board of several community organizations and is a cofounder of Marcellus Outreach Butler (Butler County), a cofounder of the Better Path Coalition (PA), and works with Beyond Extreme Energy (national).

In the latest United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, scientists said the planet is overheating and that exceeding 1.5 degrees Celcius, which appears likely on the current trajectory, would have devastating effects, from harming food production to further intensifying wildfires.

“After reading the most recent IPCC Report and hearing the totally inadequate response from our local, state, and national leaders to its findings, I could no longer sit by. Using the invasion of Ukraine as a pretext for more drilling, more pipes, and more export facilities is madness,” said Bagdes-Canning. “We can’t afford that kind of misleadership.”

Bagdes-Canning is also running to end corruption. “Our political system isn’t broken. It functions exactly the way the two corporate parties and the 1% want it to. Our government is for sale to the highest bidder.”

Bagdes-Canning has called for a gift ban, an end to the per diem, and an end to partisan gerrymandering. “These are highly popular reforms, but neither party has acted on them. Why would they? Both parties collude with the 1% to run things. That’s why politicians serve the people who  bribe them and not the people who elect them.”

Bagdes-Canning said he will work with other Greens seeking office. “Our plans will reflect the interests of the poor and working class of Pennsylvania. I’m thrilled to be running with fighters. The people of Pennsylvania deserve a government that serves them, not the rich.”

 

If you would like to join Michael Bagdes-Canning’s campaign for PA Lt. Governor, please contact 724-431-8560, [email protected]

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Christina “PK” Digiulio For Governor of PA

Christina “PK” Digiulio
For
Governor of PA

For Release, Monday, March 7, 2022

For information or interviews, please contact
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570, [email protected]

BREAKING: Christina “PK” Digiulio Announces
Campaign for Governor of PA

Christina “PK” Digiulio is announcing her candidacy for Governor of PA. She was interviewed by Chris Robinson, leader of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) communication team.

 

Please tell me, Who are you?

Christina Digiulio: I am an avid lover of nature, a water protector and Pennsylvania resident near Marsh Creek Lake. I have a BA from Lock Haven University and am a former analytical chemist for the Department of Defense. I am a co-founder of the Watchdogs of SouthEastern Pennsylvania (WaSEPA) and the Better Path Coalition, and I have been actively opposed to Energy Transfer’s Mariner East pipeline system and the fossil fuel industry.

 

Why are you running for Governor of PA?

Christina Digiulio: I have been listening to the current batch of candidates, who have announced their campaigns from the two corporate parties. It is striking that none of them have mentioned their opposition to the way our constitutional rights are being violated. Under the Constitution of our Commonwealth, we have "a right to clean air, pure water, and to the preservation of the natural, scenic, historic and esthetic values of the environment." 

Currently, our rights are being ignored, and we need a governor who will not be a pushover for polluters and profits. Allegheny County needs clean air, the Poconos need clean water, and citizens living downwind from landfills, compressor stations, and nuclear power plants need an end to constant toxicity and low-level radiation. There are ongoing, adverse health impacts from all these types of pollution.

The culture of corruption has had a harmful impact on our ability to solve these health problems. When the other candidates for PA Governor accept money from corporations, it is not surprising that they then overlook what is happening in our neighborhoods.

The fossil fuel infrastructure in PA has become a hazard to human health and to the natural environment around us. It has become a sinister system, which is protected by venal politicians.

 

Why are you requesting the endorsement of the Green Party for your candidacy for Governor of PA?

Christina Digiulio: I agree with the Green Party’s Ten Key Values. I especially like that the Green Party first called for a ban on fracking for gas in 2008, when it was instituted by a Democratic Governor in PA. The Green Party provides a contrast with the gubernatorial candidates from the two corporate parties, who have remained silent about our fossil fuel problems.

 

I also agree with the Green Party’s stand on liberating people from the confines of heteronormativity, which impacts the LGBTQIA+ community and all of our society.    

I hope that my candidacy for Governor of PA will build the membership of the Green Party and assist other Green Party candidates to make their mark on the electoral globe.

For more information, please contact Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]

 

For more information, please see:

Constitution of the Commonwealth of PA, Paragraph 27, Natural Resources and the Public Estate, https://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/legis/LI/consCheck.cfm?txtType=HTM&ttl=00&div=0&chpt=1&sctn=27&subsctn=0 

Ten Key Values, Green Party of the U.S., https://www.gp.org/ten_key_values 

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* edited for accuracy 3/12/22 

 

Watch the interview 

  

 


Pennsylvania Greens say, “No War with Russia!”

Green Party of Pennsylvania
News Release
 
For release: Thursday, February 17, 2022
 
For more information please contact 
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570, [email protected]  
 
Pennsylvania Greens say, “No War with Russia!”
 
On February 12, the pre-Valentine’s Day crowd at Philadelphia’s Love Park was joined by 75 demonstrators who gathered for a rally to stop the U.S. escalation of tension with Russia. The protest called for an end to U.S. military and economic moves against Russia. Signs said, “Fight Racism, Not Russians!” and “Union Contracts, Not Military Contracts!”
 
“The drumbeat for war should be shown for what it is -- a distraction,” declared Hillary Kane (Cedar Park), a member of the Green Party of Philadelphia City Committee (GPOP, www.gpop.org). “It is a convenient distraction from all of the ills plaguing Biden domestically -- from the COVID pandemic to the housing crisis to the climate crisis. We need to focus our energies on those issues, not some trumped up conflict with Russia. This is 2022, not 1962."
 
Indigenous performers Kalpulli Kamaxtle Xiuhcóatl drummed and danced to raise demonstrators’ spirits. The rally had been endorsed by a coalition of groups including Black Alliance for Peace, Green Party of Philadelphia (GPOP), International Action Center Philadelphia, Party for Socialism and Liberation Philadelphia, Peace Action, Philadelphia Boricua Committee, Socialist Resurgence and Workers World Party Philadelphia. 
 
"I haven't been to any public gatherings, protests or demonstrations since the pandemic began,” confessed GPOP member Beverly Rolfsmeyer (Roxborough), “but sometimes you know when you need to be somewhere -- when a cause is so important that you put your concerns aside. Why are we still doing anti-war demonstrations?  I thought we were over that!  As a registered Green Party voter, I can't, in all consciousness, be part of a system where both Parties in power put militarism over improving our infrastructure, eliminating poverty, and putting all of our resources into reversing climate change."
 
“The U.S. is in a crisis of its own,” said GPOP member Georgie Georgeson (South Philadelphia). “I can think of far better uses for our tax dollars than to line the pockets of war profiteers and gamble with the lives of our youth and the lives of innocent Russians and Ukrainians. Biden should exercise diplomacy and focus instead on fulfilling his campaign promises and making tangible improvements in the lives of his constituents.” Georgeson is a past member of the GPOP City Committee.
 
“The Green Party is the Peace Party,” said Chris Robinson (Germantown) to the gathered crowd. “There is no way that the Green Party will support a war with Russia! We have demanded that the Pentagon budget be cut in half. Those wasted funds should be used instead for housing, universal healthcare, and transforming our fossil-fuel economy into a renewable-fuel economy. Right now, the Pentagon is spending $1.2 trillion ordered by Barack Obama for a complete rearmament of the Pentagon’s nuclear weapons. Those funds should be used, instead, to end world hunger and to end man-made climate change.” Robinson was a member of the GPOP City Committee and is now leader of the Green Party of Pennsylvania Communication Team (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org).
 
“The Green Party needs you to run for office to turn around our country,” urged Robinson. “We want to run environmental candidates, peace candidates, community-control-of-police candidates, and universal healthcare candidates. Please let us know if you are ready to do your part.”
 
The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, ttps://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA
For more information, please see:
Photos from 2/12/22 rally in Love Park by Rich Gardner, http://prawnworks.net/rlg/2022/Rally-Russia-Ukraine-220212.html
“In 2018 the Congressional Budget Office floated a figure of $1.2-trillion for a complete rearmament of our nuclear delivery system. All of this . . . is a continuation of an initiative begun under President Obama.” by James Hanink, New Oxford Review, Nuclear Rearmament, September 15, 2020, https://www.newoxfordreview.org/nuclear-rearmament/.
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Stop Banking the Bomb Promoted by PA Green Party

 

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Friday, February , 2022

 

CONTACT:

GPPA Communication Team

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]

Stop Banking the Bomb Promoted by PA Green Party 

Stop Banking The Bomb (SBTB) is a Pittsburgh-based campaign targeting PNC Bank for its illegal investment in nuclear weapons. In total, PNC has invested 1.6 billion dollars ($1,600,000,000!) in eight nuclear weapon manufacturers. Nuclear weapons have been banned under international law since January 2021.

 

The SBTB coalition has more than two dozen organizations as members, including the Green Party of Allegheny County and the Green Party of Butler/Venango Counties. SBTB demands that PNC Bank immediately sell all of its assets invested in nuclear weapon manufacturers and make a binding commitment to never again invest in weapons of mass destruction (WMD).

 

"Our SBTB movement to reduce the threat of nuclear war by targeting PNC's billions invested in nukes was never about any particular activist group or political affiliation,” explained lead SBTB organizer Rev. Fr. Paul Dordal, co-director of the Christian Alliance for Peace. “We always saw this life or death issue as a means to join all people of goodwill to struggle together for humanity, for our environment, for our planet's very existence. That is why over twenty-five groups in Pittsburgh and nationally have dropped their differences and banded together to make peace a real possibility."

 

“The Green Party has been a proud member of SBTB,” said Chris Robinson, leader of the Green Party’s communication team, “because PNC Bank’s investment in nuclear weapons is evil. Green Party members stand for nonviolence as one of our Four Green Pillars, and we do not want our savings deposits used as an investment in death and destruction.”  

 

Stop Banking The Bomb regularly has rallies, die-ins, marches, and other events to put public pressure on PNC Bank. They held a recent teach-in on January 25 to educate people about their movement, the role and history of nuclear weapons, what PNC Bank does as a company, and the international treaties banning nuclear weapons. For information about their next event, please contact them at [email protected] or visit the SBTB Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/StopBankingtheBomb.  

 

This report was written by Vice Chair Riley Mahon, Green Party of Allegheny County (GPAOC, https://www.alleghenygreens.org/). The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

 

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Some Allegheny County residents say Health Department hasn't taken enough steps to improve air quality

As the Allegheny County Health Department attempts to improve the county's air quality, environmentalists say enough isn't being done and communication between them and the department is lacking.

"While we have made some progress, Allegheny County residents still suffer unhealthy air quality far too often for officials to take a victory lap," Patrick Campbell, the executive director for the Group Against Smog and Pollution, said during the Board of Health meeting last Wednesday.


Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
January 10, 2022
By Hallie Lauer


During that meeting, Health Department Director Dr. Debra Bogen briefly addressed the newly enacted Mon Valley Air Pollution Episode Rule, an addition to the county's air pollution control regulations, to note that all 16 regulated facilities had submitted their air pollution mitigation plans.

The rule was officially approved in September by the Board of Health and Allegheny County Council. The 16 facilities had 90 days — until Dec. 26 — to submit their plans that outlined what mitigation strategies they would take on days where the county was under an air quality watch or warning. Although those plans became effective upon their submission, members of the Health Department's air quality team are still reviewing the plans and some of them may require changes, Dr. Bogen said.

But for many residents who tuned into the meeting, this step hasn't been enough.

"The regulations that Allegheny County Health Department has brought forth so far are improvements, but they're just small improvements," Matthew Nemeth [North Hills Coordinator for the Green Party of Allegheny County] told the board during public comment. "We need a lot more."

Mr. Nemeth went on to say that he has recently been apartment hunting and has intentionally avoided certain areas of the county because they are known to have worse air quality than others.

"When I looked up the address and saw that it was in West Mifflin, that immediately set off a red flag in my mind … and I know that those neighborhoods are completely polluted with terrible air quality from a lot of the industrial facilities, most notably Clairton Coke Works," Mr. Nemeth said.

Between Jan. 3 and Jan. 8, the SmellPGH app, designed by the Carnegie Mellon CREATE Lab to crowdsource reports from residents, received over 100 reports from residents of "foul odors" in the county.

Many of the reports included comments that described the air as smelling like "rotten eggs" or sulfur. The rotten egg smell is caused by an excess of hydrogen sulfide in the air, an issue the Health Department previously has cited U.S. Steel for at the Clairton Coke Works.

Most recently, the Clairton Coke Works facility was fined $5,500 on Dec. 15 for a leak caused by an equipment breakdown that occurred in August, which released an excess of hydrogen sulfide, along with four other types of pollutants.

"The current way that coke ovens are regulated, by allowing a certain percentage of leaking equipment and allowable seconds of visible emissions, is insufficient to protect public health," Jay Ting Walker, an organizer from Clean Air Council [and co-chair of the Green Party of Pennsylvania], said during Wednesday's meeting. "The Allegheny County Health Department must do much more to adequately address the environmental injustices resulting from allowing preventable air pollution that burdens the health of nearby residents."

The Health Department has issued nine violations to U.S. Steel over the past two years, according to the notice of violation sent in December. Health Department spokesperson Chris Togneri said that the department has been "extremely aggressive" with regard to enforcement and legal action. The Liberty air quality monitor, which is about 2 miles from the coke works, is often cited when people refer to air quality issues, but fine particulate pollution has decreased by 32% over the last 10 years at that monitor, which are "some of the largest decreases in fine particulate pollution anywhere in the country," Mr. Togneri said.

"We are extremely proud that last year, every single air quality monitor in Allegheny County met federal air quality standards for fine particulate pollution for the first time since that monitoring began," Mr. Togneri said. "We have made tremendous progress and have met those standards a year ahead of when modeling predicted that we would because of our proactive approach."

Even with the most recent citation, environmental advocates are looking for more information about the enforcement of regulations and the prevention of these issues.

"There's been no communication about what's causing the exceedances or what's being done to stem them," Mr. Campbell said at Wednesday's meeting. Mr. Campbell then asked the board members to "do all that you can to provide more frequent and substantive updates" about what the Health Department is doing to enforce these regulations and reduce air pollution.

"We are not stopping efforts to improve our air quality, and we are not satisfied," Mr. Togneri said. "We also recognize that we cannot do this alone, as we have said continuously. The Health Department will continue to engage elected officials at the local, state and federal level to ensure comprehensive and workable solutions are advanced for improving air quality in the region. "We will continue to recommend and assist in the development of policy solutions to provide additional tools to the department. We will continue to use the tools that we have, exploring new and innovative ideas that can allow the department to go further in addressing air quality and all of the other myriad of issues that they have been charged by state and federal government to address," he said.

Part of the newly enacted Mon Valley Episode Rule requires the Health Department to alert residents when the county is experiencing bad air quality days. The Health Department awarded nine "mini-grants" to community-based organizations to help residents sign up for the Allegheny Alerts system, where they can receive emails, text messages or calls about the Air Quality Action Days — but some think that isn't enough.

"More widespread and reliable notification for adverse air quality events to the public would greatly help families and at-risk individuals make informed decisions to protect themselves and loved ones on dangerous days," county resident [and Green Party member] Alex Downing said during public comment.

Mr. Downing also noted that even though hydrogen sulfide exceedances don't always trigger an Air Quality Action alert, they "can still be dangerous," and the public should be notified.


Emissions from the Clairton Coke Works rise above the City of Clairton on the evening of Sept. 3, 2021. (Photo by Quinn Glabicki / PublicSource)


Greens holding elected office, US as November 2021 elections

Greens holding elected office, U.S as November 2021 elections
Report by Mike Feinstein
Elections Database Manager, GPUS
January 20, 2022

At least 133 Greens hold elected office in 18 states as of November 2, 2021 elections
 
 
The list below includes 123 Greens currently serving in elected office, who were elected to those offices https://www.gpelections.org/greens-in-office/.  Another six have been appointed to elected office,. Four more joined the Green Party after being elected.
 
Of Greens currently holding elected office, 42 are serving on city councils and 34 on school boards. 
 
Of the 106 Greens who ran for municipal and county office in 2021, 52 won their races (49.1%). Nineteen of 25 Green incumbents were re-elected in 2021, including six of ten city councilmembers.
 
Among them were ten for city council, 12 for school board, as well as a mayor and community college board member. Seven more were elected to fire protection districts (2), library boards (2), and a water board (1), sewer board (1) and health district (1).  Another sitting township supervisor in Pennsylvania who wasn’t Green when elected in 2019, joined the Green Party in August 21 while in office. 
A 2021 Green Party 2021 end-of-the-year election report will be coming out soon in Green Pages and forwarded here.
 
Social media links to share of this report 
 
 
-------------------------------------

Greens holding elected office, U.S. November 2, 2021
At least 133 Greens hold elected office in 18 states
 
California (24) 
 
Mayor (1)
Bruce Delgado, Mayor, Marina (Monterey County) term through Nov 2022
City Council (3)
Sylvia Chavez, City Council, Calipatria (Imperial County) term through Nov 2024
Dave Grover, City Council, Trinidad (Humboldt County) term through Nov 2024
Quincy McCourt, City Council, Susanville (Lassen County) term through March 2024
School Districts (6)
David Clark, Governing Board Member, Cardiff School District, Cardiff-By-The-Sea (San Diego County) term though Nov 2022
Jacob Coan, Governing Board Member, South Bay Union School District, Eureka (Humboldt County) term through Nov 2022
Carolyn Dixon, Governing Board Member, Wright Elementary School District, Santa Rosa (Sonoma County) term through Nov 2022
Mark Dyken, Governing Board Member, Vallecito Union School District (Calaveras County) term through Nov 2022
Laura Esperanza Surls, Canyon School Board, Canyon Township (Contra Costa County) term through Nov 2022
Dana Silvernale, Governing Boardmember, North Humboldt Union High School (Humboldt County) term through Nov 2022
Fire Districts (1)
John Abraham Powell, Board of Directors, Montecito Fire District, Montecito (Santa Barbara County) term through Nov 2024
Water Districts (4)
Jane Jarlsberg, Joshua Basin Water District (San Bernardino County) term through Nov 2024 
Randy Marx, Board of Directors, Fair Oaks Water District, Division 4 (Sacramento County) term through Nov 2024 
William Stokem, Board of Directors. Mendocino County Waterworks District II Granite Bay (Mendocino County) term through June 2024
Robert “Bob” Patrick Wichert, Director, Sacramento Suburban Water District; Division 3 (Sacramento County) term through Nov 2022
Community Service Districts (2)
Matthew Clark, Board of Directors, Grenada Community Services District (San Mateo County) term through Nov 2024 
Sharron Parra, Hyampom Community Service District (Trinity County)  term through Nov 2024
Neighborhood Councils (7) all terms through spring 2023
Kyle Cadman, West Area At-Large Representative, Olympic Park Neighborhood Council,  Los Angeles (Los Angeles County) term through Spring 2023
Sam Evans, At-Large Representative, Woodland Hills-Warner Center Neighborhood Council (Los Angeles County) term through Spring 2023
Matthew Glaser, Little Tokyo At-Large Business Owner, Emp, Non-Profit Rep, Arts District & Little Tokyo Neighborhood Council, Los Angeles (Los Angeles County) term through Spring 2023
Hugh Moore, Area 2 Resident Representative – Seat 2 (Group B), United Neighborhoods of the Historic Arlington Heights, West Adams and Jefferson Park Community Neighborhood Council, Los Angeles (Los Angeles County) term through Spring 2023
Mireira Alejandra Moran , Renter Representative Pacoima Neighborhood Council Los Angeles (Los Angeles County) term through Spring 2023
Carl Petersen, Resident Boardmember, Northridge East Neighborhood Council, Los Angeles (Los Angeles County) term through Spring 2023
Alexander Robinson, Resident Boardmember, Westlake South Neighborhood Council, Los Angeles (Los Angeles County) term through Spring 2023
 
-------------------------------------
 
Colorado (2)
 
Timothy Barnes, City Council, Lafayette (Boulder County) term through November 2023
Matt Keefauver, City Council, Cortez (Montezuma County) term through April 2022 (appointed June 2021)
 
-------------------------------------
Connecticut (8)
 
Dagmar Noll, Town Council, Willimantic (Windham County) term through Nov 2023
Hugh Birdsall, Zoning Board of Appeals, Clinton (Middlesex County) term through Nov 2025
Emery Ng, Zoning Board of Appeals Alternate, Windham (Windham County) term through Nov 2025
Michael Westerfield, Board of Assessment Appeals, Windham (Windham County) term through Nov 2023
Charlie Krich, At-large, Willimantic Taxing District Board of Directors, Windham (Windham County) term through Nov 2025
Cassandra Martineau, At-large, Willimantic Taxing District Board of Directors, Windham (Windham County) term through Nov 2025
Leif Smith, Constable, Redding (Fairfield County) term through Nov 2023
Rob Derry, Police Commission, Clinton (Middlesex County) term through Nov 2023
 
-------------------------------------
 
Delaware (1)
 
Adriana Bohm, Boardmember, Election District A, Red Clay School District (New Castle) term through May 2023 
 
-------------------------------------
lllinois (4)
 
Peter Schwartzman, Mayor, Galesburg, 5 term through April 2025
Don Crawford, Board of Trustees, St. Elmo Public Library District (Fayette County) term through April 2023
Sandy Lezon, Library Board of Trustees, Warrenville Public Library District, Warrenville, term through April 2025
Steve De La Rosa, Library Board of Trustees, Villa Park (Dupage County) term through April 2025
 
-------------------------------------
Maine (48)
 
Anna Trevorrow, City Council, District 1, Portland (Cumberland County) term through Nov 2024
Scott Harriman, City Council, District 2, Lewiston (Oxford County) term through Nov 2024
Ross Lawrence, City Council, Eastport (Washington County) term through November 2023
Jeff Manter, Town Council, Veazie (Penobscot County) term through July 2023
Scott Avery, Selectboard Member, Casco (Cumberland County), term through June 2024
Jordan Barnett-Parker, Selectboard Member, Lincolnville (Waldo County) term through June 2022
Jennifer Billings, Selectboard Member, West Paris (Oxford County) term through June 2024
Ronald Deegan, Selectboard Member, Bryant Pond (Woodstock) (Oxford County) term ends March 2022
Glenn Dochtermann, Selectboard Member, Alfred (York County) term through June 2022
Jason Dolloff, Selectboard Member, Peru (Oxford County) term through July 2023
Daniel Frye, Select Board Member, Carmel (Penobscot County) term through March 2023
Gerald Hoag, Select Board Member, Beaver Cove (Penobscot County) term through May 2023 (appointed May 2021)
Wayne ‘Chip’ Johnson, Select Board Member, Solon (Somerset County) term through March 2024
Daniel Monahan, Select Board Member, Trenton (Hancock County) term ends May 2023
Jeremy Petty, Selectboard Member, Sabattus (Androscoggin County) term through November 2023
Kevin Rogers, Selected Board Member, Naples (Cumberland County) term through May 2024
Chris Parker, Select Board, Sabago (Somerset County) term through 2022
Desiree Scorcia, Selectboard Member, Boothbay (Lincoln County) term through June 2022
Timothy McCarthy, Chairman of the Board of Trustees, Frye Island (Cumberland County) term though August 2023  (joined Green Party on September 14, 2021 after elected on September 1, 2021)
John Neptune, Tribal Council, Indian Island, Penobscot Nation (Penobscot County), term through September 2024
Desiree Bailey, School Boardmember, Wiscasett School Department (Lincoln County) term ends June 2024
Jodi Brasslett, School Board Member, Regional School Unit (RSA) #31, Stetson (Penobscot County) term through March 2023
Vanessa Bryant, School Boardmember, Maine School Administrative District 51, North Yarmouth  representative (Cumberland County), term through June 2024 (appointed July 2021)
Ashlee Chaine, School Boardmember, Maine School Administrative District 72, Fryeburg co-representative (Oxford County) term through June 2022 (appointed August 2020)
Maureen Chipullo, School Boardmember, RSU District 19, Corinna (Penobscot County) term through March 2024
Danielle Gray, Sangerville representative, Maine School Administrative District  #4 (Piscataquis County) term through April 2024
Adam Harkins, School Boardmember, Southport Central School District (Lincoln County) term through April 2024
Stephanie Hagenbuch, School Boardmember, Lebanon seat, School Administrative District 60, Lebanon (York County) term ends July 2023
Rebecca Hennessy, Boardmember School Committee, Northfield (Washington County) term through June 2022
Ann Ingersoll, School Boardmember, Maine School Administrative District  #134 (Somerset County) term through March 2024
Danny Jackson, School Boardmember,  RSU District 49 School Board (Lincoln County) term through June 2022
Robert Lindblom, School Boardmember, Solon representative, Maine School Administrative District 74 (MSAD) (Somerset County) term through May 2024
Patrick Milligan, School Boardmember, Spruce Mountain School District, Livermore Falls representative (Androscoggin County) term through June 2023
Jessica Smith, School Boardmember,  RSU District 16 School Board (Androscoggin County)  term through Nov 2022 (appointed August 2021)
Megan Parks, School Committee, Lewiston Public Schools (Androscoggin County) term through Nov 2023
Patricia Patnaude, School Boardmembrer, Maine School Administrative District 72 (MSAD), Stow (Oxford County) term through June 2023
Sam Pfeiffle,  School Boardmember, Maine School Administrative District (MSAD 15), Gray/New Gloucester (Cumberland County) term through June 2025
Kevin Souza, Embden representative, Regional School Unit (RSU) #74 (Somerset County) term through March 2022
Nicole Springer, Passadumkeag representative, Maine School Administrative District (MSAD) #31 (Penobscot County) term ends June 2023
Ivy Turner, School Board member, Perry School Department, Perry (Washington County) term ends August 2022
Diane Whalen, Regional School Unit 24 #4 Director, Sabattus (Androscoggin County) term through Nov 2024
Ryan Whitehouse, School Boardmember, East Millinocket Schools, East Millinocket (Penobscot County) term through November 2024
Deron Whittemore, School Boardmember, Solon representative, Maine School Administrative District 74 (MSAD) (Somerset County) term through March 2022
Larry Whittington,  School Boardmember, RSU District 56, Dixfield representative (Oxford County) term through June 2024
Jacqueline Wolinski, School Boardmember, RSU District 54, Skowhegan representative (Somerset County) term through June 2023 (appointed August 2021)
Christopher Henderson, Board of Directors, Hampden Water Board, Hampden (Penobscot County) term through November 2023
Jessica Tremblay, Board of Directors, Alfred Water Board, Alfred (York County) terms through June 2024
Adam Morse, Board of Directors,  Freeport Sewer Board, Freeport (Cumberland County) term through November 2024
 
-------------------------------------
Massachusetts (8)
 
Bryan Moss, Town Meeting Seat, Precinct 8, Shrewsbury (Worcester County) term through May 2024
Sharon Moss, Town Meeting Representative, Shrewsbury (Worcester County) term through May 2023 
Edward Tar Larner, Housing Board, Concord (Middlesex County) term through March 2024
Matthew Moncreaff, Board of Selectman, Princeton (Worcester County) term through May 2022
Michael Lavery, Board of Selectman, Becket (Berkshire County) term through June 2023 (joined Green Party in February 2021 after elected in June 2020)
Joyce Palmer-Fortune, Select Board, Whately (Franklin County) term though May 2023 
Nat Fortune, Town Moderator, Whately (Franklin County) term though May 2023  
David Spanagel,  Lancaster Library Trustee, term through May 2024
 
-------------------------------------
 
Michigan (3)
 
Kat Bruner James, City Council, Ferndale (Oakland County) term though Nov 2023
Cliff Yankovich, City Council, Lowell (Kent County) term though Nov 2023
Evelyn Pridemore, Redford Union School District, Redford (Wayne County) term though Nov 2022
 
-------------------------------------
Missouri (1)
Ed Williamson, Texas County Health Board (Texas County) term through May 2023
-------------------------------------
Minnesota (2)
Samantha Pree-Stinson, Board of Estimates and Taxation, Minneapolis (Hennepin County) term though Nov 2025
Audrey Thayer, City Council, Ward 1, Bemidji (Beltrami County) term though Nov 2024
-------------------------------------
New York (4)
Jamie Cooney, Village Trustee, South Corning Village (Steuben County) term through September 2024 
Anthony Del Plato, Village Trustee, Village of Interlaken (Seneca County) term through March 2025
Daniel Welsh, Town Board, Lewisboro (Westchester County) term through Nov 2023
Joseph Wetmore, Town Board, Lansing (Tompkins County) term through Nov 2021
-------------------------------------
Ohio (1)
 
Rick Duff, Township Fiscal Officer, Mifflin (Ashland County) term though Nov 2023
 
-------------------------------------
 
Oregon (9)
 
Josiah Dean, City Council, Dufur (Wasco County) term through Nov 2024
Shauleen Higgin, City Council, Lakeside (Coos County) term through November 2022 (joined Green Party in 2020 after elected in 2018)
Abe Currin, Board of Directors, Zone 6, Blue Mountain Community College (Umatilla County) term ends May 2025
Michael Sonnleitner, Board of Directors, Zone 3, Portland Community College, Portland (Multnomah County) term through May 2023
Michael Clary, Coos Soil and Water Conservation District, Zone 4 (Coos County) term though November 2024
Alex Polikoff, Corvallis Rural Fire Protection District (Benton County) term through May 2024
Brian Powers,  Position 5, Hubbard Rural Fire Protection District, Hubbard (Marion County) term ends May 2025
Chloe Flora, Pine Eagle Health District , Position 1 (Baker County) term through May 2025
Matt Donahue, Circuit Court Judge (Benton County) term though May 2026
 
-------------------------------------
Pennsylvania (10)
 
Tara Yaney, Borough Council, Edgewood (Allegheny County) term through Nov 2023
Michael Bagdes-Canning, Borough Council, Cherry Valley Borough (Butler County) term through Nov 2023
Laura Dininni, Township Supervisor, Ferguson Township (Centre County) term through Nov 2023 (joined Green Party in August 2021 after elected WHEN)
Matthew Reitenauer, School Board, Brandywine Heights, Topton (Berks County) term through Nov 2025
Jay Sweeney, Auditor, Falls Township (Wyoming County) term through Nov 2025
Abigail Hunter, Judge of Elections Ward 7, Precinct 8, Pittsburgh (Allegheny County) term through Nov 2025
Andrew Moses Yanez Oliva, Judge of Elections, Ward 15, District 6, Reading (Berks County) term through Nov 2025
William Pilkonis, Judge of Elections, W-10 P-01, Scranton (Lackawanna County) term through Nov 2021
Jay Ting Walker, Inspector of Elections, Ward 7, District 6, Pittsburgh (Allegheny County) term through Nov 2023
Bert Schultz, Inspector of Elections, Ward 9, Division 6, Philadelphia  term through Nov 2023
 
-------------------------------------
South Carolina (1)
 
Michael Stewart, Soil and Water Commission (Greenville County) term through Nov 2022
 
-------------------------------------
 
Virginia (2)
 
Thomas Adams, Soil & Water Conservation Board, Skyline District (Montgomery County) term through Nov 2023
Ira Richards III, Soil & Water Conservation Board, Lord Fairfax District (Warren County) term through Nov 2023
 
-------------------------------------
 
West Virginia (2)
 
John W. Farrell, Supervisor, Southern Conservation District, West Virginia Conservation Agency term through May 2024 
Daniel Lutz, Eastern Panhandle Conservation District, District 19 (Jefferson County) term through May 2024
 
-------------------------------------
Wisconsin (3)
 
Bob Gifford, County Board of Supervisors, District 10 (Portage County) term through Apr 2022
Brian Benford, Common Council, District 6 (Dane County) term through April 2023
Barbara Dahlgren, District 11, Wisconsin Conservation Congress delegate (Milwaukee County) term through April 2023

PA Green Party Elects 2022 Steering Committee

Green Party of Pennsylvania
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, January 14, 2022
 
CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]
PA Green Party Elects 2022 Steering Committee
 
The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, https://www.gpofpa.org/) is one of our Commonwealth’s most active minor political parties with 9,000 members. Those members are organized into county Green Parties, which elect the GPPA steering committee. On January 9, delegates from ten counties elected a dynamic steering committee to lead the Green Party during 2022.
 
GPPA has two co-chairs who serve for staggered two-year terms. The delegates elected Co-chair Jay Ting Walker (Allegheny County) as leader until the end of 2023. Walker has been a member at large of the GPPA steering committee and an elected member of the Green Party of Allegheny County (GPOAC, https://www.alleghenygreens.org/) steering committee since 2017. Walker has also run twice for election as the GPPA candidate for PA House District 23.
 
Incumbent Co-chair Beth Scroggin (Chester County) said, “I am so grateful to Jay Ting Walker for joining me as co-chair! His energy, enthusiasm, and ideas are just what the Green Party needs to move forward this year.” Referring to other new members of the GPPA steering committee, Scroggin continued, “David Ochmanowicz (Bucks County) brings more than a decade of experience with the Green Party as well as his seasoning as an elected Green official. Beth Schongar and Claire Cohen are both accomplished, passionate women who will bring fresh perspectives to our steering committee. Overall, we will have a great team of people!”
 
Asked for his political forecast, Walker said, “I predict that 2022 will be a dazzling year for the Green Party. We have justice, climate science, the people, and even the PA Constitution on our side. Our only obstacles are the corporations and the politicians they have in their pockets. The Green Party will be in the streets and on the ballot, fighting for the future of every citizen of PA.”
 
In looking at the Green Party’s prospects, Scroggin predicted, “In 2022, I think that recruiting diverse electoral candidates for office, both at the state and local level should be our top priority. In order to recruit those candidates, we will need to build diverse memberships at the local level. Because the Green Party is entirely funded by individuals, and not corporations, we are looking for candidates who can represent the interests of people in their communities. They need not be seasoned politicians, just people hoping to bring positive change for the environment, for peace, and for socioeconomic justice via grassroots democracy.”
 
Asked about his plans, newly-elected Steering Committee Member at Large David Ochmanowicz said, “I am looking forward to returning to the life of an active state-wide Green after serving my community locally these last four years as elected School Director. I'd like to concentrate some of our resources on providing local Greens the opportunity to build by getting groups meeting in new counties. GPPA can provide insight, structure, education, and resources to help local grassroots leadership work cohesively with neighboring counties to thrive.”
 
“Young EcoSolialist (YES) Greens and a re-launch of the Campus Greens here in PA,” continued Ochmanowicz, “would go a long way toward building political awareness in the next generation of voters. Young people largely seem in line with Green Party values and our mission: to elect responsible progressive, uncorrupted politicians to serve our great Commonwealth. We will elect Green Party members to office because they will be for the people, and not for special-interest corporate donors and political parties which have little respect for a free and fair democracy.”
 
Newly-elected Steering Committee Member at Large Beth Schongar (Allegheny County) sees her new job similarly, "My personal goal is to help the Green Party to communicate and involve registered Greens, who have not been involved in the party except for registering and voting. I think that broader involvement of party members is needed in order to have a broader, more diverse pool of electoral candidates and campaign workers."
 
Walker agreed, saying, “I am putting out the call to long-time Greens who have not been active for five years or more. Please contact your friends and ask them to register Green, right now! Our strong organizers from the past, who have not been active recently, should join us in building the Green Party. I ask each of them to contact me!  We should all work together now to forge a stronger Green Party!”
 
To volunteer with the Green Party (as a candidate for office or as a campaign worker), please email to [email protected] or leave a telephone message at 717-839-2395. The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party which stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA
 
For more information please see:
 
“Introducing the New Leaders of PA’s Green Party” by Beth Scroggin and Tina Olson. GPPA News Release, January 19, 2021, https://www.gpofpa.org/introducing_the_new_leaders_of_pa_s_green_party 
 
PA Green Party Elects New Co-chair,” GPPA News Release, January 20, 2019, https://www.gpofpa.org/pa_green_party_elects_new_co_chair 
 
END ITEM      ***      END ITEM      ***      END ITEM

GREEN PARTY OF PHILADELPHIA DENOUNCES CORRUPTION OF LOCAL ELECTED OFFICIALS

GREEN PARTY OF PHILADELPHIA DENOUNCES CORRUPTION OF LOCAL ELECTED OFFICIALS

The Greens offer different priorities
 
By Jarrett Anderson. 
 
      Philadelphia City Councilmember Bobby Henon joined the long list of local elected officials who have been convicted of corruption. In 2015, Councilmember Henon was in discussions about renewing an agreement between Comcast and the City of Philadelphia. The agreement would, among other things, increase internet access for low-income Philadelphia residents and students.
      One might assume that a City Councilmember would view themselves as a civil servant, but the federal jury’s recent decision in Henon’s case suggests otherwise. Audio and text exchanges revealed that Councilmember Henon had gone to bat, not for his constituents, but for his powerful labor leader friend and campaign donor John Dougherty.

      Recently, the following local Democratic elected officials have gone to jail:
  • City Treasurer (2005),
  • PA State Senator (2014),
  • PA Representatives from Districts 198, 191, and 192 (2015),
  • U.S. Congressman (2016),
  • PA Representative from District 197 (2016),
  • Philadelphia District Attorney (2017),
  • PA Representative from District 190 (2018),
  • another PA Representative from District 190 (2019), and
  • Philadelphia Sheriff (2019). 
      Philadelphia has seen so many examples of political corruption in recent years that we wonder if local politicians remember that they are not supposed to work to enrich themselves and their campaign donors—they are supposed to work to advocate for and protect us.
Sadly, corruption is endemic to corporate political parties and political systems that prioritize profit before people.
      Councilmember Henon will likely not be the last corporate politician to use his connections and political leverage to benefit his own career and that of the powerful entities that fund his campaign. History shows us that corporate Democrats and Republicans are beholden to their corporate sponsors, not to the people they are meant to represent. The Philadelphia Democratic Party dominates local politics, and yet their elected officials frequently fail to live up to their stated democratic values. Councilmember Henon is just the latest example.
 
      “I am seldom surprised at the rampant corruption within the Philadelphia Democratic Party since the 1970 Abscam investigation sent three Democrats on City Council and two Democrats in the U.S. Congress to jail,” said Chris Robinson, a Green Party member from Ward 59 (Germantown).
“Of course, many questions from the Henon/Dougherty conviction remain open,” Robinson said. “Green Party members would like to know what measures Mayor Jim Kenney (Democrat) will propose to plug the leaks in our city’s ethics laws, and what ethics proposals will appear in the platform of any of the eight Philadelphia Democrats who are often spoken of as candidates for Mayor in 2023? They have all been quite silent.”
 
      Democrats and Republicans have a business-as-usual culture that manifests in their policies, party structure, and how their elected officials conduct themselves in the workplace. Hence, corrupt Henon funnels money to his donors and considers it good economic policy.
      In contrast, the Green Party has a grassroots culture that manifests in our policies, party structure, and culture. Green Party policies include campaign finance reform to make elections more fair and democratic, a locally administered universal health care system, and local and regional initiatives in sustainable economic development. Our national party is largely managed, not by untouchable bureaucrats, but by delegates from our state parties that are elected at the state level.
 
      You don’t see Green Party officials indicted for corruption scandals. All this to say, the Green Party is a viable alternative to the two dominant parties.
      The Green Party of Philadelphia recently requested that Mayor Kenney nominate our endorsed candidate, Richard Garella, to fill the open position as the minor political party member of the Philadelphia City Commissioners. Garella is eminently qualified and is a champion of election integrity, proven by his involvement in the Election Verification Network and his role as co-founder of Protect Our Vote Philly. Local organizations joined the Greens in our request that Mayor Kenney choose a progressive candidate; instead, he chose a Republican.
 
      Recent local elections point to Philadelphians’ desire to see truly progressive answers to our city’s problems. The Green Party of Philadelphia and many of our endorsed candidates for local office have proposed a variety of solutions to solve inequality and corruption.
      We have advocated for a democratically elected civilian review board of the police. We denounced and miliated against the construction of the SEPTA fracked gas power plant in Nicetown. We have proposed community-based land trusts of currently vacant homes to combat housing insecurity. And we joined and supported advocates for housing justice at the James Talib Dean camp in 2020. These examples speak to the Green Party’s priorities.
      We invite our neighbors to reject the political corruption of the corporate duopoly and demand that local officials be the type of civil servants our communities need.
 
Jarrett Anderson is a member of the City Committee of the Green Party of Philadelphia. The Green Party is on Twitter @GreenPartyofPHL and Facebook @GreenPartyOfPhiladelphia.
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Green Party Opposes Fossil Fuel Pipelines in PA

 

 Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday, January 4, 2022

 

CONTACT:

GPPA Communication Team

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]

Green Party Opposes Fossil Fuel Pipelines in PA

Since 1971, the following passage has been in the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania:

"The people have a right to clean air, pure water, and to the preservation of the natural, scenic, historic, and esthetic values of the environment. Pennsylvania's public natural resources are the common property of all the people, including generations yet to come. As trustee of these resources, the Commonwealth shall conserve and maintain them for the benefit of all the people."  

 

Jocolyn Bowser-Bostick (Delaware County), a former member of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) steering committee, pointed out, “These sane and wise words, however, might as well not exist because too many of our elected and appointed government officials refuse to enforce them. As I like to point out, there are numerous examples of how pipeline companies have been allowed to grossly pollute the environment without meaningful consequences, which therefore betray the above passage’s promise to current and future generations. There are many patterns of behavior we need to stop and many actions we need to take to make sure we will have a healthy, safe and beautiful environment in which we, our future children, and our precious wildlife can thrive, and the Green Party with its 10 Key Values makes sure these goals remain central to our purpose.”�

 

The Governor’s Pipeline Infrastructure Taskforce Report says, “Pennsylvania already has more than 12,000 miles of large-diameter oil and gas pipelines in the ground, but now, according to . . . a presentation made . . . by The Nature Conservancy, the miles of natural gas gathering lines alone will at least quadruple by 2030. The footprint of just that [new] expansion is larger than the cumulative area impacted by all other Marcellus gas infrastructure combined, and could exceed 300,000 acres, or 1 percent of the state’s land area. The movement of natural gas will also require compressor stations, estimated to number in the hundreds, to be built along the anticipated pipeline miles. All told, this pipeline infrastructure build-out will impact communities and the environment in every county in Pennsylvania.”

 

All of these buried pipelines are more dangerous than landmines when you consider their incendiary/explosive power and the fact that leaks in them may make it hard or impossible to breathe as well as cause other physical problems. Bowser-Bostick warned, “There is so much evidence on how dangerous these pipelines can be. In 2019, according to the U.S. Dept of Transportation’s Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration for all types of pipelines combined, there were 614 reported accidents which resulted in 10 people dying; 35 injuries; 2,113 evacuees; 86 fires; 28 explosions and $259 million in damages. The grim statistics of 2019 are actually slightly better than what was typical in each of the 9 preceding years. From 1/1/2010 through 12/31/2019 there were a combined 6,298 pipeline accidents which caused 140 fatalities; 656 injuries; 35,992 people to be evacuated from dangerous conditions caused by pipelines; 922 fires; 329 explosions; and $5,356,744,191 in damages.” 

 

There are many actions we can take to mitigate the dangers of these fossil fuel pipelines and put us on a faster path to a healthier and safer future that is free of fossil fuels. For example, all pipelines should have regular and comprehensive inspections by experts that are unaffiliated with the company that built the pipeline.

Bowser-Bostick explained, “Many people who have worked or lived near the gas drilling and fracking operations in the Marcellus Shale region and other U.S. areas have experienced noise pollution, smog, poisoned drinking water wells, skin rashes, constant headaches and body aches, respiratory problems, cancers, other health problems, physical injuries and deaths. Wildlife, livestock, and domesticated animals have also been seriously sickened or killed by these fracking and drilling operations. Profits and wages for a few do not justify this torment, and it seems more ridiculous to continue powering our societies with these dirty and dangerous forms of energy when we can satisfy all our energy needs through the combined use of improved energy efficiency, wind power, solar power, small scale hydropower and geothermal power that impose no health hazards on anyone.”

 

“My point of view,” she continued, “and that of the Green Party of PA is that there is no sane reason to be maintaining or adding to the pipeline infrastructure that we have in PA. In fact, on November 14, 2021, the assembled delegates of the Green Party of Pennsylvania voted unanimously to oppose any proposed or under construction fossil fuel pipelines in PA and to favor the dismantling of in-use fossil fuel pipelines as soon as possible, which will be able to happen as we adopt more clean energy infrastructure.”

“For the benefits of stopping the deterioration and improving the health of the public, animal species, and the environment and mitigating climate change,”� Bowser-Bostick concluded, “we must stop extracting oil and natural gas, not build any new fossil fuel pipelines, discontinue the building of unfinished pipelines, and stop our reliance on fossil fuel pipelines currently in use as soon as possible.”�

 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/;
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

 

For more information please see:

 

“Our Ten Key Values,” Green Party of the U.S., https://www.gp.org/ten_key_values 

 

Constitution of the Commonwealth of PA, § 27. Natural resources and the public estate,

https://www.legis.state.pa.us/WU01/LI/LI/CT/HTM/00/00.HTM

Governor’s Pipeline Infrastructure Task Force (PITF) Report, February 2016, https://files.dep.state.pa.us/ProgramIntegration/PITF/PITF%20Report%20Final.pdf

7 major pipeline projects in Pennsylvania by Candy Woodall, updated May 22, 2019, Penn Live, https://www.pennlive.com/midstate/2015/10/7_major_pipeline_projects_in_p.html 

 

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Your 2022 New Year’s Resolution

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Saturday, December 18, 2021

 

CONTACT:

GPPA Communication Team

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]

 

Your 2022 New Year’s Resolution

by GPPA Co-Chair Beth Scroggin.

Happy New Year, everyone!  With 2021 now behind us, January is the perfect time to look ahead and create the metaphorical trellis upon which the rest of this year will grow vines.  With your help, those vines can bear the fruit of Greens in elected offices across the Commonwealth. In 2022, Pennsylvanians will elect a new Governor, a new U.S. Senator, 18 members of the U.S. House of Representatives, as well as 25 PA Senators and 203 members of the PA House of Representatives.  Now more than ever, the Green Party of PA (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) needs Green candidates who will stand for people, not for corporations.

A few weeks ago, a Democratic Party candidate for Governor, Josh Shapiro, visited West Chester, the county seat of Chester County, where I live. Stumping for Shapiro was the current Governor Tom Wolf.  A group of people from the Uwchlan Safety Coalition, www.uwchlansafetycoalition.org, organized a demonstration of residents to ask Governor Wolf, in person, to pull the construction permits for the Mariner East II pipeline. This pipeline threatens residents in a variety of ways, including the chance for a spontaneous explosion or poisoning the water supply. Pennsylvanians of all political affiliations have been protesting this pipeline for years, because – while it threatens our safety on a daily basis – it provides no benefit to anyone but Sunoco. 

While we protested, chanting "Pull the permits now!" and holding signs, both Wolf and Shapiro noticed us but did not acknowledge our presence. They were too busy patting themselves on the back for not being Donald Trump, and giving speeches devoid of plans for meaningful change. The experience exemplified for me how politicians in the U.S. operate. They blatantly ignore voters' pleas for change that will literally save lives, while quietly catering to corporations and congratulating themselves for being "better than the other Party."

Now more than ever, we need Green solutions to the problems plaguing us all. Climate change has already been causing violent storms in many parts of the world, droughts and wildfires in other parts. A lack of nationalized health care has caused many to die needlessly because they can't afford the care they need. Hospitals are understaffed and their workers are exhausted and underpaid. Similarly, lack of funding for education has led to staff shortages so severe that it's a wonder our schools can operate on a day-to-day basis. It's been more than a decade since Occupy Wall Street, yet wealth inequality continues to grow by the day. Mainstream politicians continue to ignore these issues. They will continue to ignore these issues because corporations benefit from the status quo, and those same corporations fund electoral campaigns of the two corporate parties. The Green Party is the ONLY party that does not accept corporate funding, and as a result, you can count on Green candidates to represent YOUR interests!

The Green Party is calling for YOUR help in 2022!
If you care about promoting our four pillars of nonviolence, social justice, grassroots democracy, and ecological wisdom, please join us! Whether you're new to politics, have plenty of experience but have taken a break, or have been fighting the system for decades, we will welcome you and find something important for you to do. We need candidates for all elected offices, as well as people who will help those candidates run their campaigns. Make one of your New Year's resolutions to get in touch with your local Green Party, or start one of your own!

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/;
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

Beth Scroggin is co-chair of GPPA. She has also served as secretary of GPPA and as chair of the Green Party of Chester County.

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It was a good run . . . but the race is far from over.

 

 

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Wednesday, December 8, 2021

 

CONTACT:

GPPA Communication Team

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]

 

It was a good run . . . but the race is far from over.

David Ochmanowicz has been a Green Party activist since 2011. During 2017, he ran for and won a seat as Director of the Quakertown Community School Board in Bucks County. Ochmanowicz did not run for re-election this year, and he has offered some thoughts about his presence as School Director.

-- By David Ochmanowicz.

As my 4 years as School Director conclude, who would have thought I would have so many mixed feelings over these last few months. What a privilege it has been to be the voice of a (my) community. What a responsibility it has been to be trusted to serve.

It's an end to something; an ending I chose with my eyes wide open. You might think that would make my transition into a more normal life much easier. But it doesn’t. Knowing I'll have literally dozens of hours every month to myself and with my family; being at home on Thursdays before 11; not having to check the calendar for Saturday workshops and School Board meetings -- all seem like things to look forward to. At least, that’s what people keep telling me.

But these are not really the joys that consume my thoughts. I cleverly, yet inadvertently, used the word “concludes” before, no doubt for some small, self-indulging illusion. Possibly some Jedi mind trick to make me believe that everything I thought was important has been concluded. Of course, it’s not.

Some of my successes have had a conclusion no doubt. A referendum regarding civics education in the classroom, a new Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service program, hundreds of votes on meaningful programs and day-to-day functions which allowed our students to access the best education we could provide, improving transparency, my 4 years at the Tech School, and many more are the joys I can carry away. For sure!

Yet – so many undertakings are still an ongoing process. I need to trust that those elected to serve in my absence will keep their eye on the prize; that prize is the public good, the common good.

Sometimes I shared in the voice of a majority, and often it was a time of unanimity. Many times, however, I was the voice of a not-so majority. Sometimes I stood with one or two other members of the Board on important issues where the not-so majority deserved a voice too.

I am worried about who will be left to speak for them now. As I “leave by choice” in my words, who else will keep up the good fight? Who will be fighting for the not-so majority? That is the hard truth.

What will happen next is still unwritten. “We the People” must pay attention, get involved, and participate. Otherwise, the pages of time will be written by private lawyers funded by corporate interests. You should support people who choose to fight for the public good, for the common good.

You should become a person who chooses to fight for the public good, for the common good.

David Ochmanowicz has been an elected delegate to the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) from Bucks County. He has also served as secretary of the GPPA and chair of the Green Party of Bucks County.

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

 

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Green Party Candidates Reflect On 2021 PA Election

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday, November 30, 2021

 

CONTACT:

GPPA Communication Team

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]

 

Green Party Candidates Reflect On 2021 PA Election 

 

In the 2021 General Election, the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) had 12 candidates on the ballot and several write-ins. When the smoke cleared, the Green Party had seven candidates win election. Several Green Party candidates offered their thoughts on the 2021 campaign. Those thoughts are collected here to help future candidates, especially those who are running for office in 2022.

 

On Running for Office in 2022

Andrew Moses Yanez Oliva (Elected Judge of Elections, Berks County) said: "The advice I would offer Greens who plan to run for office in 2022 is this: start as early as possible. There were so many inevitable "hiccups" which I had not anticipated and felt pressured to navigate well under constrained circumstances; be they temporal or procedural. The more time you have, the better you will be able to anticipate issues and appropriately address them." 

Matthew Reitenauer (Elected School Director, Berks County) said: "The advice I would offer to any Green Party candidates that are running in 2022 would be to focus on the local issues, like clean water, saving farmland, and pesticides." 

Jay Sweeney (Elected Borough Auditor, Wyoming County) said: "I would advise Greens to seek offices that have no challenger or no candidate." [For some PA electoral offices, the Democratic and/or Republican Parties nominate no candidate.]  

Richard L. Weiss (Ran for Common Pleas Court Judge, Allegheny County) said: "Ground work is the most effective. Going door to door works but requires many people." 

 

On Mail in Voting

Jay Sweeney: "I am not opposed to mail in voting. Mail in voting is harder for third party candidates, unless, of course, ballot access is made easier."

Andrew Moses Yanez Oliva: "I think that more voters, in general, due to the pandemic, were made aware of the mail in option. I personally registered to receive a mail in ballot annually and automatically for convenience purposes."

Matthew Reitenauer: "I believe mail in voting is a great thing for Green Party members. It lets the people stay safe at home and vote. Mail in voting also makes it easier for people to vote for who they truly want instead of being persuaded elsewise by people working the polls. This process is also a safer, more convenient way for those who are handicapped to be able to vote. Those people's votes are very important too." 

Jay Sweeney: "Mail in voting deprives the voter a chance to meet a Green Party candidate and their volunteers who may be working the polls. I may have gotten 3% of the vote where I didn't have representation, while I got 20-30% or better in places where I or my volunteers worked the polls."

Richard L. Weiss: "Hopefully more people will vote and will see the Green Party on the ballot. Campaigning has to be early in order to reach mail in voters.”  

 

On Elections in General

Jay Sweeney: "Democracy demands a choice and the voters deserve one. I am proud to be a Green. I saw the way the Democrats gloated over winning a vote in the House of Representatives and the ugliness of the Republicans in denouncing it. However, I don't see progress until we can build a coalition big enough to tackle the two corporate parties."  

Andrew Moses Yanez Oliva: "I would like to invest more effort in winning local elections and cultivating a grassroots democracy culture and ethos in my community. The whole idea of running for Judge of Election in my precinct was to gain crucial and integral political skills to run for office in the future." 

Richard L. Weiss: "If the current PA Attorney General Josh Shapiro is elected PA Governor in 2022, there may be a special election for PA Attorney General. In that case, I would make myself available to run if the Green Party of PA will endorse me." 

 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/;
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

 

For more information, please see:

 

“2021 November Election Results,” GPUS News Release, November 2021, https://www.gp.org/2021_november_election_results  

 

“Reflections on 2020 Election by Green Party Candidate Michael Bagdes-Canning,” GPPA News Release, December 11, 2020, https://www.gpofpa.org/reflection_on_the_2020_election_by_pa_green_party_candidate_michael_bagdes_canning 

 

“PA Green Party Candidates Reflect on 2019 Election,” GPPA News Release, November 15, 2019,
https://www.gpofpa.org/pa_green_party_candidates_reflect_on_2019_election  

 

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PA Green Party Endorses Shut Down of Berks County Detention Center

PA Green Party Endorses Shut Down of Berks County Detention Center

Meeting virtually on November 14, elected delegates to the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) unanimously endorsed the Shut Down Berks Coalition. The coalition is a group of organizations and individuals demanding the closure of the Berks County Family Detention Center (BCRC) in PA and an end to the practice of imprisoning immigrant families in the U.S.

The endorsement was requested by Jay Walker (Allegheny County), a member of the GPPA Steering Committee.

 


Black Star News
November 28, 2021


Henry Conoly (Montgomery County), who is seeking GPPA endorsement for U.S. Congress District 1, said, "The inhumane and destructive detention and separation of children from their families must be stopped. These detention centers are known for their horrid conditions which leave children and families at risk of contracting disease, suffering from malnourishment, and potentially loss of life. We must close these facilities, and begin to bring these families back together while giving them access to our country."

"Detention is not a deterrent, and we have seen countless studies and statistics to that effect," explained Secretary Jes Potts of the Green Party of Berks County. "Citizens of Berks County do not want to have this backwards and unethical system perpetuated when there is so much good that can be done with the property. The best use of this facility would be to convert it into a treatment center to combat the continually rising tide of the addiction epidemic, to provide long term solutions to people who need a foundation from which to change their lives and grow into happy, prosperous and productive citizens. What Berks County and this society needs is more behavioral health resources, not more cages."

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party's Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org.


Democrats Throw Meatballs in the 2021 Election

Green Party of Pennsylvania
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, November 17, 2021
 
CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]
 
Democrats Throw Meatballs in the 2021 Election
-- By Co-Chair Tina Olson, Green Party of PA. 
 
The results of the 2021 elections aren’t looking great for progress in the next season. The spreadsheet from this year’s results shows many easy misses and many hard-ball truths. The Democratic Party continues to spread itself too thin while boasting that their big tent can represent both Centrists and Leftists. Certainly from the bullpen, the Blue Sox appear to appeal to a large number of spectators. From the national league, you have rookie Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in left field striking out with Democratic Socialists by putting Medicare for All back into the batting cage. While they also have seasoned-player Kyrsten Sinema playing short-stop on raising the minimum wage. These broad swaths of ideology should give them a hometown advantage, but when a conservative batter charges the mound, there simply is no solidarity, no nine-on-one fight. 
 
This is where the four pillars of the Green Party give our pitchers better guidance. Green Party elected officials from school boards to mayors have fundamental shared beliefs in Peace, Ecological Wisdom, Social Justice, and Democracy, https://www.gp.org/the_four_pillars
 
The penalty for the Blue Sox’s MVP Joe Biden's trajectory towards right field was especially shocking to many since his election. Even when the pitch towards progress appears right down the pike, he surprises us with new levels of disappointment. This renowned switch-pitcher cares more for those sitting in their box seats as high-paying patrons, rather than most of us sitting in the nosebleed seats trying to catch a fly-ball, just once.
 
It appears that the Democrats need to work on some basic teamwork, instead of pointing fingers from right to center field. Their in-field in-fighting and failure to pass their own basic platform initiatives -- even with the stats stacked in their favor -- continues to disenfranchise the entire franchise.  They really should have been watching the Republicans who were busy stealing home plate by winning disproportionately in 2021, from local judges in PA to the shocking results in the VA. As Democrats kick sand at each other, the fans have grown bored with their antics. Ticket-holders are looking for some easy wins, or at the very least shying away from the mixed signals that catcher Jaime Harrison and his DNC are sending. 
 
So, Blue Sox, do you want to “Defund the Umpires,” “Reform the Umpires,” or raise their wages and hire more Umpires? The latter appears to be one of the many screwballs angering activists, many of whom played a major role in electing Joe Biden. In this example, the Green Party sends a very straight-forward cutter as the focus must be on hyper local, grassroots democracy that carries over into redefining the roles of umpires in our communities: More justice, less crime, https://www.gp.org/social_justice#criminal-justice-reform
 
In PA, the Blue Sox aren’t even playing ball. While their opponents are filling up the bases, Democrats are busy at the concession stand, selling merchandise for whatever clever social buzzwords and hashtags they can put on a team jersey. Which is not to say that supporting social causes via merchandise is bad, but when that money is being funneled and held by the team owners, that’s a problem. By the way, the Green Party does also have merchandise, but the money you spend on our cool items goes right back into building a league of our own. Check it out here, https://www.gpofpa.org/merchandise
 
The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.
 
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Green Party Supports Divest Philadelphia from the War Machine

GREEN PARTY OF PHILADELPHIA
News Release
 
For release: Saturday, October 30, 2021
 
For more information please contact 
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570, [email protected] 
 
Green Party Supports Divest Philadelphia from the War Machine
The Green Party of Philadelphia City Committee (GPOP, www.gpop.org) continued its support for Divest Philly from the War Machine by calling on people to join a campaign to divest the Philadelphia Board of Pensions from the nuclear weapon industry.
Divest Philly is a coalition of 27 local organizations which desire a cut in the Pentagon budget and greater investment in public services. At the present time, the managers of Philadelphia’s pensions have more than $11 billion invested in the nuclear weapon industry. Divest Philly would like the pension board to screen Philadelphia’s funds to eliminate all investments in the nuclear weapon industry. The leaders of Divest Philly from the War Machine have been in negotiations with members of Philadelphia City Council to enlist sponsors for their proposed bill.
GPOP City Committee Member Olivia Faison from Ward 60 (Garden Court) explained, "The United Nations Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons that was entered into force in January 2021, made nuclear weapons illegal. The Philadelphia City Council has already unanimously passed a resolution calling on the U.S. Government to comply with the treaty. This fills me with hope that our City Council has shown some common-sense leadership on this economic and moral issue. The Green Party platform has long called for the U.S. to ‘end the research, testing and stockpiling of all nuclear weapons of any size.' Philadelphia is in the unprecedented position to uphold the integrity of the UN treaty, and of our own city, by supporting this courageous display towards nuclear disarmament and world peace by passing this bill proposed by Divest Philly from the War Machine."
The public sector at all levels of government has historically invested resources in military technology and not civilian technology," said one GPOP member. "So many of our scarce resources -- land, labor, and capital -- are allocated to unproductive or harmful activities like rents, pollution, speculation, and war.  (Re-)Allocating our resources to meaningful production -- for example, creating jobs for regenerative agriculture, education, civilian R&D, and green infrastructure, utilities and manufacturing -- is impossible without first divesting resources that are currently dedicated to unproductive pursuits like nuclear weapons."
"We have to put our money where our mouth is," said GPOP Treasurer Hillary Kane from Ward 46 (Cedar Park). "It's not enough for us to take a stand as a City in words only; we must also back that sentiment up with clear action. Divestment is an important way to do this in the language that corporations and markets speak -- the language of money."
“Since Philadelphia is the poorest large city in the U.S., we should divest our funds from (often failed) military efforts of any kind,” said Chris Robinson, a GPOP member from Ward 59 (Germantown). “Instead, we should invest in affordable housing, economic development, safe public schools, city infrastructure, sanitation, or any of the countless dire needs facing us right now.”  
Volunteers who wish to join Divest Philly from the War Machine may register right here, https://docs.google.com/forms/d/15cAI8Y48IxLjragHw7N5egsOywiiAhJDy5IoJx5oC9A/. Community organizations which would like to endorse this Divest campaign may sign up right here, https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScGq6N4-1BUJv_tfmw5xiySlKvYQgpRwXM8TXaKNcdjxlyeHw/viewform.
The Green Party of Philadelphia (GPOP, www.gpop.org) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPOP candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPOP, please follow GPOP on social
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From the PA Chair: Become a Rising Star in the Green Party

 

 Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Sunday, October 24, 2021

 

CONTACT:

GPPA Communication Team

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]

 

Become a Rising Star in the Green Party

 

By Co-chair Beth Scroggin, Green Party of PA. 

 

October marked five years since I joined the Green Party.  After having worked on the Bernie Sanders campaign for nearly a year and seeing my efforts undermined by the Democratic Party, I knew that I needed to invest my future efforts into a party that represented my values AND had the courage and integrity to support grassroots efforts.  My involvement with the Green Party escalated quickly after the leaders of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) informed me that my county had no local chapter.  Shortly thereafter, I became the co-founder and co-chair of the Chester County Green Party.  A local couple allowed us to hold meetings in their home, and always made sure we were well equipped with office supplies, snacks, tea, and the occasional adult beverage. Our first meeting truly changed my life forever, as it is where I met my current significant other as well as some other very dear friends.  

 

Despite my natural need for structure and tendencies toward planning and organization, the decision to become a Green Party leader was one fueled by passion, and I had no particular plan in mind.  I simply held regular meetings, contacted interested people on a list provided to me by the state leaders, and made outreach efforts by attending meetings of other local progressive groups. Through those efforts, my county was able to find a candidate interested in running for mayor of one of our larger boroughs.  We supported his campaign, and gained a great deal of knowledge and experience in local politics, as well as helping him secure ten percent of the vote. As you may know, ten percent for a first-time candidate running with a third party is truly outstanding.

 

I tell you of this because the Green Party of Pennsylvania is currently looking for new leaders.  In 2022, we will have several open positions on our Steering Committee, as well as open spots for national delegates to the Green Party of the U.S. and its many sub-committees.  Additionally, we are always delighted to see people start a new local chapter in PA.  If you live in Pennsylvania and have a passion for our Four Pillars (Ecological Wisdom, Social Justice, Grassroots Democracy, and Nonviolence), I urge you to email me at [email protected]

 

Our next state meeting will take place on Sunday, November 14, and I hope you will take that opportunity to nominate yourself for a leadership position in the Green Party.  If you don’t already know us, I can promise that we are a friendly, welcoming, knowledgeable group who will support you in your efforts to become a leader in the only party which does not accept corporate contributions and which seeks to represent the people.  If you do already know the Green Party, you know that we love to see rising stars in our party, and that it doesn’t take long to jump into a leadership position and start enacting real change.

 

As you consider taking on a leadership role in the Green Party, I will leave you with a quote from one of my personal heroes, subject of the book Into the Wild, “Don’t hesitate or make excuses. Just get out and do it. You will be very, very glad that you did.” 

 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/;
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

 

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Green Party Supports Reparations Movement

GREEN PARTY OF PHILADELPHIA

News Release

 

For release: Monday, October 18, 2021

 

For more information please contact 

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570, [email protected] 

 

Green Party Supports Reparations Movement

The Green Party of Philadelphia (GPOP, www.gpop.org) endorsed the March for Reparations on October 16 in Clark Park, University City, Philadelphia. This was not a difficult endorsement because the Green Party holds that the national problem of white supremacy can only be resolved through reparations.

From the Green Party point of view, reparations should be offered for three types of white supremacy: the forced slavery of kidnapped Africans beginning in the colonial era; the resulting violence and discrimination against citizens of color since the formal end of chattel slavery in 1865; and the continuing punishment of people of color by “the ideology of white supremacy which permeates our institutions today.” Those institutions include healthcare, housing, education, finances, law enforcement, employment and food distribution. As a result, the Green Party in 2018 endorsed the call for a National Commission to Study and Develop Reparation Proposals for African-Americans (HR 40).

The March for Reparations on October 16 was sponsored nationally by the Uhuru Solidarity Movement, which held similar events in Oakland, CA; Saint Petersburg, FL; Saint Louis, MO; and Portland, OR. There were five demands made by the marchers: Philadelphia must provide housing for the homeless; Temple, Penn and Drexel Universities must pay reparations for their land-grabs from the community; Philadelphia must pay reparations for the 1985 bombing of Osage Avenue and the incarceration of the Move 9; the immediate release of Mumia Abu-Jamal; and Philadelphia must pay reparations for “mass incarceration, police murder, violence of poverty, hostile colonial schools, and a genocidal healthcare system.”

Chris Robinson, a member of the Green Party of Philadelphia from Ward 29 (Germantown) spoke at the rally following the march. Here is what Robinson said:

Uhuru! And thank you for inviting the Green Party to participate.

I was prepared to give the Green Party’s arguments in favor of reparations, but I believe that will not be necessary for your crowd. [Laughter]

Therefore, I will instead make a suggestion to you. Next year, the citizens of Philadelphia will elect 23 people to the PA House of Representatives. The Uhuru Solidarity Movement’s demand for reparations and the five local demands of today’s March for Reparations may all be found in the Green Party’s platform. Therefore, the Uhuru Solidarity Movement should consider asking the Green Party to nominate some of your members for State Representative on the Green Party ballot line. Just think of the publicity for both of our organizations if the mass media began to ask Democratic and Republican Party candidates for their statement about reparations!

Uhuru! 

The Green Party of Philadelphia (GPOP, www.gpop.org) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPOP candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPOP, please follow GPOP on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/GreenPartyOfPhiladelphia/
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/green_party_of_philadelphia/ and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPHL

 

For more information, please see: 

“March for Reparations, October 16, 2021,” Uhuru Solidarity Movement, https://uhurusolidarity.org/march-for-reparations-2021/;  

Green Party Platform; II. Social Justice; A. Civil Rights & Equal Rights; Reparations for U.S. Afrodescendants, https://www.gp.org/social_justice#Reparations; and  

“Green Party endorses U.S. House Resolution on Reparations for the descendants of Africans enslaved in the U.S.,” Green Party of the U.S., February 14, 2018, news release, https://www.gp.org/greens_endorse_reparations. 

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Kearni Warren: Election Day Poll Watching

Election day is quickly approaching us!

Kearni is in search of poll watchers for November 2nd to help ensure she has a campaign presence across the city.

Poll watchers will sign up for specific time slots and will be assigned one of the twenty polling places to cover.

While we cannot pay you for this service, Team Warren will provide free campaign t-shirts to all helpers!

Sign Up Here

 

Please reach out with any questions.

Thank you so much for your support this Fall - only a few more steps until this historic election!

 

Best,

David DeMarco
Campaign Manager
The People For Kearni
www.warren4chester.com
warren4chester.nationbuilder.com/donation


Lorianne Burgess for Mayor Of Ambridge, PA

Lorianne Burgess for Mayor Of Ambridge, PA

 

For Immediate Release

Thursday, October 7, 2021

For More Information, Please Contact:
Lorianne Burgess, [email protected]  

 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania endorsed Lorianne Burgess for Mayor of Ambridge Boro, PA. Lorianne Burgess has carried on an active campaign. She will be on the ballot in Beaver County for Mayor of Ambridge Boro on Tuesday, November 2. 

 

Here are the answers which Lorianne Burgess gave to some voter questions:

 

  1. -- How have you been involved in the Ambridge Boro community?
    A. Lorianne Burgess -- I am a widowed mother of two children, and I have lived in Ambridge my entire life. I graduated from Ambridge High School. I understand the struggles of the people in our community. I talk to so many of my fellow citizens every day, in my bakery and walking down the street. I believe that there is something beautiful on every single block of this amazing town. There are genuinely wonderful folks in every corner of this diverse, inspiring melting pot of a community that we have the supreme privilege to be a part of. I wouldn’t live anywhere else.

Following in the footsteps of my older family members, I have been involved in community groups, happily giving back to our town. I have been involved in Girl Scouts, CCBA, helping out when I’ve been able to. I own and run Stangl’s Bakery, which has been in my family for over 100 years. I have served as president of the Ambridge Area Chamber of Commerce, and I currently serve as president of Ambridge Crime Watch.

 

  1. -- Why are you running for Mayor of Ambridge Boro?
    A. Lorianne Burgess -- For quite a long time, there has been a lack of energy and community presence, in the office of Ambridge Mayor. I know quite a few people that have never met an Ambridge mayor, which is someone that should be out, meeting folks, and the face of a community.

 

  1. -- What sets you apart from the other candidates for Mayor?
  2. Lorianne Burgess -- I view myself as a very socially liberal person. I believe in equality. I pride myself in being a very caring person, without being naive. I have earned the trust of many of the pillars of the Ambridge community. I am approachable for young and old alike. I am always working on my conflict resolution skills, and I really want to bring “being neighborly” back!

 

  1. What is the largest challenge facing Ambridge, and how will you approach it?
    A. Lorianne Burgess -- I think we have two major issues that need to be worked on, both equally important. One is that we need to bridge the ˜trust gap” between the police department and the community. Some really good steps have been taken toward accomplishing this, but we still need to work on it. The officers need outlets to engage with youth and charitable organizations. The other issue that we must address is, of course, our drug epidemic, which goes hand in hand with the mental health epidemic. 

 

Q. -- What will be your top priorities as mayor?
A. Lorianne Burgess -- As mayor, I want to put a fresh face of hope on our town. I don’t think the town needs another get-off-my-lawn old white man, in the mayor’s office. As a business owner in Ambridge, I have seen some hard times. We have had to really hustle and be creative. I think that’s what Ambridge needs: creativity and determination. We have some positive momentum, and it needs to be fed. With the right energy Ambridge could definitely see more positive things happen in the years to come.

  1. -- Why are you running for Mayor as a Green Party Candidate?
    A. Lorianne Burgess -- The transparency is one of the best parts of the Green Party for me. The Green Party is the party with the most accountability. There are no string-pullers. I owe no favors. Should you vote for your party, or for what you believe in? I can do both with total confidence.

You may follow Lorianne Burgess’ campaign for Mayor of Ambridge Boro, PA, right here, https://www.facebook.com/Lorianne4Mayor/  


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SEIU Healthcare PA Endorses Kearni Warren for Chester City Council

For Immediate Release

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

For More Information, Please Contact:
David DeMarco, 610-809-6032 and [email protected] 

 

SEIU Healthcare PA Endorses Kearni Warren for Chester City Council 

 

On September 24, Service Employees International Union (SEIU) Healthcare Pennsylvania endorsed Green Party candidate Kearni Warren, who is running for Chester City Council. SEIU Healthcare PA said on Facebook, "Pennsylvania healthcare workers are proud to support Kearni Warren for Chester City Council At-Large. As a home care worker, union member, and leader in SEIU Healthcare Pennsylvania, Kearni will fight for caregivers, working families, and good union jobs." 

 

Cheryl Womack, home care worker and SEIU Healthcare Pennsylvania member, said, "I appreciate Kearni Warren and support her 100%! Her record of loyalty, dedication, sacrifice, and willingness to help others is impeccable. She is a phenomenal woman, and I know she will bring positive change to Chester."

 

As a candidate in the November 2 General Election, Kearni Warren has taken a strong stand for union rights and fighting for caregivers to be respected, protected, and paid what they deserve. 

 

Kearni Warren said, “Home care work has been ignored and shamed for many years. Domestic work including care work were left out of the early labor laws due to the workers being primarily women and those women were disproportionately women of color. Home care work has had bad stigmas attached to it. Many people look down upon caregivers because they have never had the honor of caring for someone who was unable to completely care for themselves and unless you care for someone, you don’t know the level of skill and the amount of mental and physical strength and stamina required to keep the people you care for alive. 

“This is why I believe Congress must pass the Better Care Better Jobs Act (Senate Bill 2210, House Bill 4131). The Better Care  Better Jobs Act will bring a long overdue and needed investment into the care economy.”  

In response to her endorsement by SEIU Healthcare PA, Kearni Warren said, "Thank you! I have been a home care worker for 20 years, and I have been a union member of SEIU Healthcare PA for seven years. SEIU has made my voice stronger. The union along with my union sisters and brothers gave me comfort and purpose last year during the onset of COVID and the racial reckoning that was taking place throughout the country as I was having a difficult time emotionally watching black bodies brutalized, murdered, and disabled by American police departments. Because of the support of SEIU, I became more involved and became a union leader and member lobbyist later moving into employee roles as a member political organizer and a member organizer. Fighting for the rights and dignity of caregivers is personal to me and I am grateful that SEIU Healthcare PA, Pennsylvania's largest and most powerful healthcare union has endorsed me."

Kearni Warren’s inclusion on the 2021 ballot marks the first time a Green Party candidate has challenged Chester’s Democratic Party. You can learn more about Kearni Warren’s Campaign at her website, www.warren4chester.com, or on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/kearniwarrenforchester

 

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Green Party Opposes Fracking Brine on Rural PA Roads

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

 

CONTACT:

GPPA Communication Team

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]

 

Green Party Opposes Fracking Brine on Rural PA Roads

The State Committee of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) has agreed to oppose the spread of fracking brine on rural PA roads. Meeting virtually on September 18, more than 20 elected delegates from county Green Parties achieved consensus on a letter to the PA Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) demanding a ban on use of such waste materials.

Falls Township Auditor Jay Sweeney of Wyoming County, had requested the Green Party to take such action. Sweeney said, “I submitted the request for GPPA to sign on to the letter demanding an end to the spread of radioactive frack wastewater on our PA roads because this industry continues to be the biggest threat to the environment of rural PA and worldwide. The Green Party holds environmental wisdom as one of its Four Green Pillars.”

 

“Fracking continues to be the biggest threat to the environment in my opinion,” continued Sweeney, “because it consumes vast quantities of water that cannot be returned to its natural state. It results in this dangerous radioactive wastewater that the fossil fuel industry cannot recycle or dispose of in a benign manner. They use dangerous disposal methods including deep well injection techniques to drive the water underground. This not only threatens our water table, but has also resulted in earthquakes. Using the wastewater for dust control and deicing of roads is another disposal method that introduces radiation and other dangerous elements into our environment. In addition, fracking results in the release of methane into the atmosphere, a major contributor to the greenhouse effect and climate change. Fracking needs to stop!” 

 

The letter to DEP had already been signed by more than 60 organizations which defend the environment. Sweeney said, “We must join with others who are taking a leadership role on these issues. I hope the Green Party establishes a relationship with these leaders so we can take more timely action with them when necessary.” 

“This new proposal to dispose of fracking waste products by spraying them all over PA's roads is just the latest outrageous step in the entirely unnecessary fracking process,” explained GPPA Co-chair Beth Scroggin of Chester County. “The Green Party has been against fracking since it was introduced by PA Governor Ed Rendell in 2008. Fracking is unsafe for the environment, people, and animals alike. There is absolutely no need for anyone to be devising new ways to use fossil fuels at this point. There are all sorts of ways in which the process of fracking can malfunction, causing chemicals to leak into the groundwater or pollute the air. Additionally, it needlessly depletes our supply of freshwater. The fracking industry has already taken a devastating toll on neighborhoods across PA, so that corporations can make more money.”

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/;
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

 

For more information, please see:

 

Sign the letter to DEP re: Road Spreading of Brine,” https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfywuN-6wKXEOW2Zwqy5dHmhIt2XtwlHxJ2AgiQaA8KRPk8yQ/viewform

 

“PA Greens Push for an End to Fracking” by Matt Nemeth, Green Party of PA News Release, October 4, 2020, https://www.gp.org/pa_greens_push_for_an_end_to_fracking; and 

 

“Pennsylvania and Fracking,” Global Energy Monitor, April 30, 2021, https://www.gem.wiki/Pennsylvania_and_fracking

 

 

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Running for Election as a Green Party Candidate

  • By Co-chair Beth Scroggin, Green Party of PA

PHILADELPHIA – Welcome to October, a month when our Pennsylvania fall foliage can astound us with its beauty, and when our Green Party electoral campaigns are in full swing! The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is proud to be running ten candidates in local elections and is eagerly anticipating running a full slate of candidates for state-wide positions next year. My fondest memories of my work in the Green Party are from when I have worked for local campaigns: collecting nomination signatures, introducing candidates to potential voters at fall festivals, and knocking on doors to hand out literature and talk to voters about their concerns.


Green Party of Pennsylvania
www.gpofpa.org

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, September 13, 2021

CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, [email protected]


The Green Party of Allegheny County (GPOAC) is running five candidates, including Ward Allebach (Bradford Woods Borough Council), Connor Mulvaney (Pittsburgh City Council District 4), Steven Martinez (Dormont Borough Council), Jay T. Walker (Judge of Elections Ward 7, District 6, Pittsburgh), and Abigail “Abi” Hunter (Judge of Elections Ward 7, District 8, Pittsburgh). Ward Allebach recently shared with GPPA GREEN STAR, “I’ve been volunteering with the Bradford Woods Conservancy to make my community a better place since I moved to Bradford Woods 15 years ago. Running for Council seems like the next best step to continue this work.” Connor Mulvaney expressed his enthusiasm, saying, “Now we can dig in with our neighbors and outwork an incumbent who thinks elections can be bought and sold. I’m really excited to keep listening to my neighbors and keep building our movement for change in Pittsburgh City Council!"

In Beaver County, also in western PA, the Green Party has candidate Lorianne Burgess running for Mayor of Ambridge Borough. I applaud the energy and excitement in western Pennsylvania and wish all Green Party candidates the very best!

Berks County Green Party here in eastern PA where I live, has two candidates running for office, including Matthew Reitenauer (Brandywine Heights School Board) and Andrew Moses Yanez Oliva (Judge of Elections, Ward 15, District 6, City of Reading).

Former chair of GPPA and 2018 Green Party candidate for PA Auditor General, Jay Sweeney is running for re-election as Falls Township Auditor in Wyoming County.

Last, but certainly not least, the Green Party is proud to have Kearni Warren running for Chester City Council in Delaware County. On her campaign page, Kearni recently shared, “It is time to reclaim and reframe Chester, PA. We walk the same streets that MLK did. We share the same activism, fire and spirit because we know what greatness comes out of Chester. From the arts to business, Chester has some of the most amazing potential. I’m proud to say I’m Chester Made. And this is what I live and fight for. This is my passion, the community. You are my passion.”

The Green Party is truly fortunate to have candidates with such dedication and integrity running for office. If you find that one of our Green candidates is campaigning near you, and if you share their passion for the Green Party’s four pillars of ecological wisdom, social justice, grassroots democracy, and nonviolence, I encourage you to join their campaign and to relish the unique feeling of inspiration that comes from working for a candidate who represents your values.

If you would like to see Green Party values represented in your town, in our state, and in the conversation surrounding election season, we implore you to consider running for office as a Green Party candidate in 2022. You may run locally for the PA General Assembly or for a state-wide office, including Governor, Lieutenant Governor, or U.S. Senator. Running strong candidates is the most important work of the Green Party. I am grateful for all who have run with us and am eager for you to join us.

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter


Candidate for Congress in PA District 1, "Congress Must Act Now!"

 

 

Henry Conoly for Congress
www.facebook.com/henryc4ushouse

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, August 27

For More Information:
Henry Conoly, [email protected]

 

On Thursday, August 26, the Supreme Court voted 6-3 to overturn the Center for Disease Control's (CDC) eviction moratorium and put millions of people at risk of being forced to the streets. This is happening at a time when a surge in COVID cases is occurring, and people are still yearning for a thriving wage that doesn't require them to spend a majority of their time at their workplace. It is clear that the theatrics from the squad in sleeping on the steps of the capitol did nothing more than gather the spotlight of the media and a chance to generate energy behind reelection hopes. What is even clearer is that the U.S. House and Senate must immediately gather in their respective chambers and begin to ensure that millions don't end up on the streets.

In their Ecosocialist Green New Deal, 2020 Green Party Presidential Candidate Howie Hawkins and Vice Presidential Candidate Angela Walker laid out the grounds for ending homelessness in this nation. In their Green New Deal they called for both universal rent control and public housing in walkable communities. This plan is one which my campaign for U.S. House in PA's District 1 supports completely. In order for it to happen, we cannot have the largest homeless crisis in the history of our country come before it. That is why it is important that those currently in power act now.

Congress could reconvene and begin to work with the President to overturn and block the Supreme Court's ruling on the eviction moratorium. This would secure the homes that millions of people need during this dangerous moment in the pandemic. This is a moment that will require both the legislative and executive branches to put the people above their corporate donors, potentially damaging their re-election efforts but also protecting the most vulnerable in our nation.

If Congress fails to reconvene and begin working to ensure that millions don't end up on the streets, it should serve to the people of this nation as further proof of why we need new people, not beholden to corporate donors in Washington, DC. This failure, coupled with the many other notable failures of the oligarchy, serves as proof that the system is broken and not designed to help the people that elect those in power.

My campaign stands firm in our support for the worker, the renter, and those in this nation that want better. I said during the theatrics of sleeping on the capitol steps that if I was elected to the U.S. House I would have used my position to bully everyone back to Washington to take tangible action. I believe that being elected to office isn't about publicity but rather about risking everything to protect not only those that elected you but everyone else. I believe that being elected to office requires you to risk everything to help people you never met. I believe that housing is a human right, and I believe that any eviction is a violation of human rights. Evictions during a pandemic are even more egregious. Congress must take action now. 


There is a Cure for the Covid-19 Blues

By Co-chair Tina Olson, Green Party of Pennsylvania

Across Pennsylvania, this time of year begins a season for parents and teachers preparing for opening schools; dusting off iPads, lacing up new sneakers, and fulfilling the wishes of those toothless first-grader grins and whims. This year is the second year parents are faced with the uncertainty of COVID variants and supply lists for class requirements that can be economically overwhelming in this unprecedented time of scrimping and scraping. The online parent-portals are open, the animal crackers are packed, but the uncertainty of COVID variants looms over each of us as we prepare for the worst. We may be masked, but our common stressors are not hiding, our familiar struggles can not be sanitized.

"I'm gonna raise a fuss, I'm gonna raise a holler…"

What begs to be questioned is how do we go into this school year while the inequality of our different school districts continues to fail struggling families, but more importantly fails to recognize that in higher populated schools, the grim reality is overall unequal. Families with the means to adorn their kids with designer toddler-wear set a precedence of privilege that perpetuates the distinction of class struggle. Kids from rich school districts don't worry like the kids attending schools that barely keep the lights on and their lunch trays full.

It should come as no surprise that the bigger the school district the more likely parents feel they have no control. Enormous school districts like Philadelphia and Pittsburgh can't compete with school districts like Radnor, which are 70% white and naturally have smaller schools with more individual attention. We know that many variables contribute to whether or not a student thrives, yet society fails to reflect the solutions in its misguided votes.

"...About working all Summer, just a-trying to earn a dollar…"

Better representation means the likelihood of better communication and making tough decisions to close in-person learning if a particular area spikes in COVID cases, or the opposite in areas with fewer cases. This is what we should have learned nearly two years ago: blanket closings hurt the relationship between the government and its citizens, while remaining open where we ought not will increase the mortality rate.

There is no Blue or Red Team, and there are no Covidiots, just people trying to carve out a living with misinformation flowing in two directions into two Blue and Red color-coded coffers. We are only people looking for our representatives to be vigilant, to protect our livelihoods and the lives of those most vulnerable from morbid outcomes of COVID-19. Additionally, we are all just trying to navigate our way through a for-profit Democracy that puts a paycheck above the people who have hired them to just do the bare minimum of curating a fair system for survival.

The recent arguments in Harrisburg from abortion rights to auditing past elections, these dispassionate and self-absorbed distractions that our representatives have to offer, leave a blank chalkboard where solutions should be sketched out. The growing inequalities as a result of the pandemic economy are resonating within a majority of our residents; from tenant disputes and displaced workers trying to find new jobs that offer a livable wage, to kids growing up in a climate of dystopian reality of burning forests and flaming faucets as a result of fracking profiteers.

"Sometimes I wonder what Imma gonna do…"

We need our representatives to stay focused on a sustainable directive. Take this crisis in this new century and crumpling infrastructure as a sign that hierarchical and centralized wealth-down capitalism will not save us or our planet.

As an alternative, the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) calls for fully-funded schools at a hyper-local level. We believe that schools should remain democratic without the influence of private enterprise. What this means for the Age of COVID, is the increase of power over those who would rather choose to be reckless with our children's lives versus staying vigilant in the fight for better days during a continuing global pandemic.

In general, we know that class size and school size are crucial in a child's development, that better teacher-to-student ratios can strengthen the resolve, and that privatized alternatives have failed to fulfill the prime directive of educating kids moving towards a more complicated future. We simply need more time to teach students. This is why there should be no argument in expanding education to include an associate and baccalaureate education.

GPPA also demands that the minimum wage be no less than $15/hour while realistic wages should be $20/hour and more. We demand that healthcare be provided by public funds for all residents. If COVID-19 has taught us anything, it's that we need Healthcare for All and more incentives for students of all ages to enter the professional healthcare and teaching fields.

"There ain't no cure for the summertime blues."

This is why building the Green Party needs to focus on local elections. This year we have 10 candidates running for positions from mayor to school board members to city council who need your immediate support. Moving towards the 2022 elections, all of the PA Representatives and half of our State Senators are up for re-election. The Gubernatorial race is crucial in all of this. Collectively, the Green Party needs more members to build power in order to push the initiatives for a more equitable system. Please consider the advantage of running for office or becoming involved in local Green Party electoral campaigns. A win for Greens would be a win for so many lives of people you could affect.

While there ain't no cure for the summertime blues, there is a cure for the COVID-19 blues. Once again, the answer starts from within ourselves. The duty of each person is to recognize the need for fully-funded mutual aid and a fully-functioning representative democracy in every neighborhood, in every school district, and in every elected office in our country.

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party's Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook,  Instagram,  and Twitter.


Kearni Warren Makes History in Race for Chester City Council

None

For Immediate Release

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

For More Information, Please Contact:
David DeMarco, 610-809-6032 and [email protected] 

 

Kearni Warren Makes History in Race for Chester City Council

Chester’s First Green Party Challenger

Chester, PA – Chester resident, community activist, and union member Kearni Warren is officially on the ballot in this Fall’s showdown for Chester City Council. She is the first minor party candidate to ever challenge the Democratic regime.

“I am extremely excited to enter this race as the grassroots voice of our community,” Ms. Warren said. “Chester is my home, and it has been for generations. I grew up in the Ruth L. Bennett Homes with my mother, Rev. Bernice Warren, who instilled in me the values of a true Chester leader: respect, dignity, and most of all, truth. I am launching this campaign to restore Chester’s leadership to these values.”

Kearni Warren is a strong advocate for local education, herself graduating from Eastern University’s Business Administration program, which aided her first entrepreneurial venture as a consultant. When her grandfather fell ill in 2001, Ms. Warren returned home to Chester to work full-time as a family caregiver, which was the start of her 20 year commitment to caregiving.  During her time as a unionized caregiver, she has worked as a member political organizer and lobbyist for the Service Employees International Union Healthcare Pennsylvania (SEIUHCPA) and United Home Care Workers of Pennsylvania. She is an author, speaker, environmental and racial equity activist and is currently a member of the Emerge PA class of 2021.

In her platform, Kearni Warren takes aim at financial de-development, corruption, and environmental injustice. “For too long, Chester’s leadership has not been held accountable. For nearly all of the 20th Century, we had a Republican political machine that drained our city’s federal aid programs and invited waste industries to litter our waterfront.” Ms. Warren stated. “And now, in the 21st Century, we have a constant flow of Democratic council members who can’t even get the trash picked up on time, let alone address Chester’s severe social, environmental, and financial pitfalls.”

Kearni Warren shared one direct message to her neighbors: “Chester residents, Upon my election this Fall, I will work tirelessly to resolve the problems that face us day-to-day. I will focus on developing our waterfront for locally-owned businesses, revitalizing our infrastructure, and ending waste incineration in our city.”

Ms. Warren’s inclusion on the ballot this Fall marks the first time a Green Party candidate has challenged Chester’s Democratic Party. You can learn more about Kearni Warren’s Campaign at her website, www.warren4chester.com, or on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/kearniwarrenforchester

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Green Party Candidate for Congress, PA District 1, says, “End war and welcome refugees

   

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Wednesday, August 18, 2021

 

For More Information:

Henry Conoly

215-853-4875 and [email protected] 

Green Party Candidate for Congress, PA District 1, says, “End war and welcome refugees”

 

For 40 plus years, direct and indirect military action in Afghanistan has led to a destabilization of a country which once valued and respected human rights and liberties. The U.S. funding of and training of the Mujahideen, later known as the Taliban, created a situation where the need to care for refugees and victims of our military occupation would be inevitable. 

Our withdrawal from Afghanistan was long overdue and should have been done 20 years ago. It is now the responsibility of the United States to provide safe refuge for all people seeking to flee Afghanistan. Providing a place of safety to those who are the victims of the destabilization of Afghanistan is not a partisan issue, it is a humanitarian issue. This humanitarian issue would have occurred following the Trump Administration’s May deadline or the Biden Administration’s deadline. 

 

This situation should also prove to us why we must end all U.S. foreign combat, close foreign bases and bring troops and U.S. military equipment back to the United States. My campaign for the US House in Pennsylvania’s 1st Congressional District is committed to working to make these needed actions a reality. 

 

Once we bring our troops and equipment home, we can begin to address the bloated size of our military. The Pentagon budget in the United States far exceeds what is needed to provide defense against attacks on our homeland. Funding clandestine operations in nations, such as the operations which armed and trained the Taliban, do not make our country or the world a safer place. I believe that diplomacy and coordination with our global community will ultimately do more to make the world a safer place than any recent US operation.

 

Lastly, Congress must immediately end the Authorization for Use of Military Force of 2001 (AUMF) that was authorized in response to 9/11. The AUMF has allowed four different presidents to control the power to wage war in direct violation of the Constitution's mandate on how war is authorized. We will only be able to end the disaster that has been the global war on terrorism when the AUMF is also struck down, not amended. 

 

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Green Party Calls for PA Election Reform

Green Party of Pennsylvania
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, August 11, 2021
 
CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]
 
Green Party Calls for PA Election Reform. 
-- By Garret Wassermann, Co-chair of Green Party of the U.S.  
Earlier this year, the Pennsylvania Republican Party proposed changes to the state’s 1938 Election Code. The bill, HB 1300, was ultimately vetoed by Governor Tom Wolf in June. However, Pennsylvania’s decades-old election code does need serious analysis and change, especially in light of lessons learned in 2020 while trying to hold elections during a global pandemic. The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) had previously submitted some ideas to the public, and I would like to revisit and expand on those ideas. 
Some of the reforms Greens called for in 2019, such as voter-verifiable paper ballots, were actually implemented last year.  Of course, the state only adopted paper ballots after a lawsuit brought by Jill Stein, the 2016 Green Party presidential nominee, and several GPPA  members. In the final settlement with Stein, PA agreed to adopt paper ballots in 2020 and have full vote auditing measures in place by 2022. While that was an important win for election integrity and transparency, many other changes are still needed to create a more representative electoral system and ensure truly free and fair elections.
The Green Party calls on elected officials of all levels of government to adopt the following policies for municipal, state, and federal elections:

Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission.
           

2021 is an important year for elections because the once-per-decade redistricting process has begun. Under PA’s current law, the state legislature draws and approves the new district maps. In practice, this means the political party which happens to be a majority at the Census can effectively draw the maps on their own, ignoring input from any other party. Districts can often be drawn in ways taking into account demographics that may benefit a particular political party or incumbent official, resulting in what’s known as “gerrymandering.” A citizens’ commission, independent of the legislature and made up of regular citizens instead of elected officials, should be formed to draw fair maps. This commission’s membership must equitably represent not just Democrats and Republicans but also minor parties and independent voters.

Ranked Choice Voting and Proportional Representation.

Ranked choice voting (RCV) has numerous benefits, including giving voters the opportunity to better express their preferences in candidates. RCV has often resulted in friendlier campaigns that talk more about policy instead of negative attacks, since candidates would rather be nice and try to earn your second-rank vote than turn people off with attacks.
           
Legislative bodies should be elected by proportional representation methods such as Single Transferable Vote (STV), a form of ranked choice voting that uses multi-winner districts – that is, each district elects multiple people at a time, to ensure that the resulting winners proportionally look like and represent their voters. Having multiple winners in each district also makes it much more difficult to gerrymander. While multi-winner districts for Congress are currently prohibited by federal law, there's nothing stopping PA from implementing it at the state and municipal levels. STV and other forms of proportional representation result in broader, more diverse legislative bodies which better reflect constituents.

Equitable Recognition of All Political Parties.


Minor parties should be able to maintain legal recognition with a small number of registered members, rather than needing to field candidates for statewide office every two years. This requirement forces minor parties to drain resources on more expensive statewide campaigns instead of being able to provide more support to their municipal candidates. One way to implement this was the Voters’ Choice Act, which was introduced by Senator Mike Fulmer (Lebanon County) before he retired. The Voter’s Choice Act would have given minor party status to any PA political party with membership of 0.05 percent of all registered voters.

Equitable Ballot Access.

Pennsylvania should immediately set real choice on every ballot as a priority goal. Legislation should set equitable ballot access rules and petitioning requirements, in part by lowering thresholds for all candidates for any level of office to the range of tens to hundreds of nomination signatures, rather than the hundreds and even thousands required today. These requirements should recognize the right of minor party and independent candidates to run in fair elections and therefore not be too difficult or expensive to file.
           
Prior to 2016, a run for statewide office, such as U.S. Senate, required more than 80,000 signatures. 2006 Green Party candidate for U.S. Senate Carl Romanelli won a ruling in court which lowered this amount to 5,000, still much more than most countries, but better than in PA history.

Publicly-Funded Elections.


By replacing the current model of private donations with a publicly-funded model, PA elections could become a true contest of ideas while eliminating negative, smear campaigns. One such model, proposed by groups like March on Harrisburg, is to use “democracy dollars,” in which voters may send their democracy dollars – sort of a voucher system – to the candidate(s) of their choice, who could then exchange the vouchers for campaign materials.

My friend GPPA Co-chair Beth Scroggin told me, “As the Green Party's placeholder candidate in PA for the 2020 Presidential Election, I experienced first hand the imbalance of power when it comes to fair elections.  The Democratic Party brought forth a lawsuit questioning the Green Party's paperwork in an attempt to keep us off the ballot.  When the court dismissed the case, the Democrats appealed. In order to continue fighting the Democrats in court, the Green Party needed to keep raising money. Because we are the only party that does not accept corporate contributions, we were at a disadvantage. The Democrats undoubtedly would have continued the appeals process until we ran out of money. Although we claim to live in a democracy, we in fact live in a society in which money buys power.” 

End Publicly-Funded Primaries.

Current PA election law allows the two corporate political parties to hold their primaries using publicly-funded election equipment, staffed by community members paid by public election funds. Meanwhile, other political parties are prohibited from using election equipment. They must hold their own primary/endorsement process at private expense, despite the fact that their members also pay taxes that fund the primaries. The Democratic and Republican Parties should be expected to foot the bill for their own primaries and endorsement process just like every other party.

Automatic Mail-In Ballots and Same Day Registration.


All voters should receive a copy of their ballot in the mail automatically, to allow time for voters to research all the candidates and questions on the ballot before voting. The ballot could be mailed in early or brought to a polling location on election day. Some states such as Oregon already use a completely mail-in ballot system that works well. Potential voters should be able to register on election day and immediately cast their ballots.
 
Garret Wasserman has been an active member of the Green Party of Allegheny County, PA, since 2016, serving as media coordinator in 2017 and then vice chair from 2018–2020. He was leader of the GPPA Green Wave Team during 2020, and he was elected co-chair of the Green Party of the U.S. in 2021. 
 
The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/;
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

For more information, please see:
Green Party Promotes Strong Democracy in PA,” Green Party of PA News Release, February 20, 2019, https://www.gpofpa.org/green_party_promotes_strong_democracy_in_pa;  
“PA Voter’s Choice Act SB 495,” PA Ballot Access Coalition, http://www.paballotaccess.org/voters--choice-act.html; 
“Democracy Dollars: How Does It Work?” by Nate Fisher, Common Cause, August 3, 2021, https://www.commoncause.org/illinois/democracy-wire/democracy-dollars-how-does-it-work/; 
“Democracy Dollars,” March on Harrisburg, https://www.mohpa.org/democracy-dollars; and  
“PA Green Party Will Not Be Silenced by Democrats,” Green Party of PA News Release, August 12, 2020, https://www.gpofpa.org/pa_green_party_will_not_be_silenced_by_democrats
 
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PA Greens to March for Medicare For All

PA Greens to March for Medicare For All

March For M4AM4ALL

 

The Steering Committee of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) is pleased to announce that it has endorsed the #M4M4ALL | Marches (https://m4m4all.org/) which will take place on Saturday, July 24. Many members of the Green Party will participate in this nationwide march to rally for the cause of universal health.

This grassroots organization and volunteer-run march will take place in more than 50 cities including Pittsburgh and Philadelphia. What started as a few Tweets became a new movement. The snowball effect has produced some very last-minute leaps of an effort to stand up and be heard by elected representatives, who have put this issue on the back burner. Well-known activists like Susan Sarandon, former presidential candidate Marrianne Williamson, and Chris Smalls (who famously took on Amazon) are among the many speakers who have been added across the country. Pennsylvania Greens Ed Grystar and Claire Cohen will be speaking in Pittsburgh. Barry Lawhorne (AKA Paleh0rse on Twitter) will be speaking in Philadelphia.

GPPA is mobilizing for single-payer healthcare in Pennsylvania. For more than 20 years, Greens have been active in our communities raising awareness of the tragedies of not having real access to medical care. Greens stand with our progressive neighbors, who know the best path forward is to fully fund real access to healthcare, provide decent wages for nurses, and erase medical debt.

For more details please visit: #M4M4ALL | Marches (https://m4m4all.org/). In Pittsburgh, https://www.mobilize.us/marchformedicareforallm4m4all-1/event/401956/, the march will begin at 10:00 AM at Schenley Plaza, 4100 Forbes Ave, Pittsburgh. In Philadelphia, https://www.mobilize.us/marchformedicareforallm4m4all-1/event/401966/, the march will begin at 4:00 PM at Philadelphia City Hall, 1400 John F Kennedy Blvd, Philadelphia.

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity.

For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:

Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/;

Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and

Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

For More Information:

PA Green Party Demands Single-Payer Healthcare By Carl J. Romanelli, Green Party of Pennsylvania news release, March 6, 2021, https://www.gpofpa.org/pa_green_party_demands_single_payer_healthcare;

Green Party of PA Platform, IV Single-Payer Universal Healthcare – No more, No less, https://www.gpofpa.org/platform;

Green Party of the U.S. Platform, II Social Justice, F Healthcare, https://www.gp.org/social_justice/#sjHealthCare; and

Medicare for All as a Community-Controlled National Health Service, Howie Hawkins Green for President, November 1, 2019, https://howiehawkins.us/the-hawkins-healthcare-plan-medicare-for-all-as-a-community-controlled-national-health-service/.

 

 

 

 

 


PA Green Reflects on Summer Travel

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Wednesday, July 21, 2021

 

CONTACT:

GPPA Communication Team

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]

 

PA Green Reflects on Summer Travel

By Beth Scroggin, Co-chair of Green Party of Pennsylvania. 

 

As we progress into August, I find myself reflecting on how this summer has brought awareness of political issues we face, and how the Green Party has always been on the right side of history.  Nearly every summer of my adult life, I have traveled to a different place in the U.S. or Canada and have sought to experience all that nature has to offer.  My travels have all reinforced my sense of urgency when it comes to protecting our environment, and have highlighted the importance of one of the Green Party’s four pillars:  Ecological Wisdom.  

 

In addition to drawing my attention to our environment, my travels this year have also made evident our collapsing economy.  While visiting Ocean City, MD, I was struck by how many stores were closed due to staff shortages.  While conservatives love to complain that “nobody wants to work anymore,” the reality is that fewer people are willing or able to work jobs with unreliable hours, no room for advancement, poverty wages, and inadequate or nonexistent benefits.  Now more than ever, we must also draw our attention to the Green Party’s pillar of Social Justice and run candidates who are willing to fight for it.  Although so many people had hoped that we could stop worrying about politics in 2021, we are all reaching a point at which our unstable environment and economy can no longer be ignored.

 

With absurdly high record-breaking temperatures this summer in the Pacific Northwest, a frighteningly lengthy and intense fire season on the West Coast, and increasing frequency of violent storms and odd conditions like the record wet-bulb temperature here in the East, we are all beginning to feel the impact of climate change.  The Green Party of the U.S. (www.gp.org) has called for President Biden to commit the U.S. to a 100% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, as well as to formally declare a climate emergency, embrace a robust carbon tax, and increase U.S. funding for the climate mitigation fund for developing countries.  

 

Unfortunately, but not surprisingly, the president’s climate goals fall far short of what is necessary.  Most of the President’s recent $579 billion infrastructure package expanded fossil fuel infrastructure, while omitting investments in green energy jobs, funds to combat the climate crisis, and programs to support energy efficiency for buildings.  In contrast, the Green Party has been calling for an Ecosocialist Green New Deal in the U.S. since 2010.  Recently, our Eco-Action Committee has called for Congress to pass a $4.1 trillion per year green economic stimulus for the next ten years to create 30 million jobs and to accelerate our transition to 100% renewable energy.

 

Both the media and employers alike have noticed the impact of our global worker shortage, and the resultant unpredictable shortages of certain products (currently, chicken wings).  Recent economic stimulus packages related to Covid-19 as well as expansion of unemployment benefits have caused workers to reconsider working jobs that do not compensate fairly.  In response, we can see fast food companies, grocery stores, and gas stations heavily advertising increased starting salaries and benefits.  The recently released Executive Paywatch reveals that the average S&P 500 company CEO-to-worker pay ratio is 299-to-1, with the worst offender, Amazon’s, ratio being 741-to-1.  

 

Unless legislation is passed to increase taxes on corporations and billionaires, we will never see workers being paid fairly.  Of course, with those corporations and billionaires funding politicians’ campaigns in the two major parties, we will never see such legislation passed if we continue to elect candidates from the corporate parties.  Because the Green Party does not accept corporate funding, our candidates are beholden only to the people they serve.  The Green Party Platform advocates for living wages for all workers, the reinvestment of military funding into family support, tax incentives for businesses paying living wages, and “income tax policies that restrict the accumulation of excessive individual wealth.”

 

This month, I encourage all readers to enjoy what remains of your summer and to look for ways you can support local Green Party candidates who will fight for the changes we need both economically and environmentally.

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/;
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

For More Information: 

“The Four Pillars,” Green Party of the U.S., https://www.gp.org/the_four_pillars

Green Party Decries Biden’s Retreat on Climate in Infrastructure Stimulus, Line 3 Pipeline,” Green Party of the U.S., news release on June 29, 2021, https://www.gp.org/green_party_decries_biden_retreat_on_climate_in_infrastructure_stimulus_line_3_pipeline

“June 2021 News from the EcoAction Committee,” Green Party of the U.S., June 21, 2021, https://www.gp.org/june_2021_news_from_the_ecoaction_committee; and 

“Executive Paywatch,” AFL-CIO, 2021, https://aflcio.org/executive-paywatch

 

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PA Green Party Remembers Mort Malkin (1932 - 2021)

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Monday, July 19, 2021

 

CONTACT:

GPPA Communication Team

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]

 

PA Green Party Remembers Mort Malkin (1932 -- 2021)

 

“As Co-Chair of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org), I was saddened to learn of Mort Malkin’s passing,” said Beth Scroggin (Chester). “Although I did not have the opportunity to meet Mort, I am grateful for the work that he had done over many years to ensure that the Green Party was available to me when I wanted to join. Mort spent his life working toward a better future for people and for the planet we inhabit. May his example inspire all of us to work today for people who have yet to join our cause.”

 

Beverly Beers, chair of Wayne County Green Party, said sorrowfully: "I received news that Mort Malkin of the Wayne County Greens passed away today, July 11. Mort was a peace activist, writer and fitness guru. He was the author of several books. His most recent was Homo Sapiens: A Violent Gene? (Pisgah Press LLC), in which he argued that human evolution and survival depended on cooperation and peace not violence and war. Mort was a mainstay of our Green Party. Members of the Green Party often lamented our lack of power in the face of the two behemoths which rule our political system. Mort never ever did."

 

"Mort approached every issue with the absolute conviction that our platform could be accomplished and that the world could live in peace," continued Beers. "He attended our June meeting and spoke of his concern about nuclear war. His main message was to get out info about the 800 U.S. military bases located around the world. Mort had recently written a letter-to-the-editor for The River Reporter on this issue. Mort wore his Green Party button with pride. He will be greatly missed."

__________

River Reporter, Letter to Editor, May 27, 2021
Nuclear weapons and military budgets

   The recent Green Party Presidential candidate, Howie Hawkins, recently sent a message to the American people. He urged us to join the 54 nations that signed and ratified the Treaty to Ban Nuclear, pledge no first use of nuclear weapons and reduce the U.S.’ military budget by 75 percent.

   Here are some other numbers: 32 nations, including the U.S., oppose the UN Treaty to Ban Nuclear Weapons. Currently, there are 13,400 nuclear weapons in arsenals. A great majority of Americans support the UN Treaty to Ban Nuclear Weapons. They also support a no-first-use pledge. Regarding the U.S.’ military budget, there are more than 800 U.S. military bases in other countries. The money to maintain them there is a significant part of the military budget.

   Let us write, email and call our elected Congress-people and tell them what we think.

Mort Malkin, Milanville, PA

__________

 

Jay Sweeney, GPPA 2018 candidate for PA Auditor General, also reminisced about Mort Malkin’s passing. "That is sad news! Mort was a retired doctor when I met him. He was a prolific writer. His interests were many and diverse. I am fortunate to have counted Mort as a friend. He taught me some of the mechanics of aerobic walking and offered to do one of his 100-mile walks in support of my campaign for PA State Senate.”

 

“Mort and I travelled to a Sierra Club meeting one time,” continued Sweeney. “He got the crowd up in arms by claiming that war is the biggest environmental threat. They didn’t agree. Mort also antagonized the Northeastern Sierra Club group when he used the term “global heating” about ten years ago. They thought his speech was too radical. Mort was brilliant and gifted beyond compare. His intellect and vision were astute. Mort will be sorely missed by his family, friends and community.”

________________ 

 

River Reporter, Poetry From Our Readers, April 15, 2020

Viruses

By Mort Malkin.

Very microscopic they are,
and barely a life form, but we
higher beings can’t match them for
virility. Homo sapien
does well though, large scale, as we’ve shown
at Hiroshima.  Then, we may
compete in the contagion game
with our entry:  ICBMs.
__________

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/;
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

For More Information: 

Homo Sapiens: A Violent Gene? by Mort Malkin, Pisgah Press, 2021, https://pisgahpress.com/product/homo-sapiens-a-violent-gene/.
Nuclear weapons and military budgets” by Mort Malkin, Letter to Editor, River Reporter, May 27, 2021, https://riverreporter.com/stories/nuclear-weapons-and-military-budgets-and-more,44560;
Viruses” by Mort Malkin, Poetry From Our Readers, River Reporter, April 15, 2020, https://riverreporter.com/stories/the-masks-we-wore-and-more,36941; and
“The Gadfly,” a column by Mort Malkin, River Reporter, https://riverreporter.com/the-gadfly/

 

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Pittsburgh Green Party joins Stop the Station

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

 

CONTACT:

GPPA Communication Team

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]

 

Pittsburgh Green Party joins Stop the Station

 

Stop the Station is a coalition of local activist groups fighting for police accountability in the city of Pittsburgh, PA. It was initially formed in the summer of 2020 to fight the relocation of the Zone 5 Police Station to East Liberty at a cost of $3 million. There was a backlash from the community to the project and to the city’s lying that the decision was by popular demand. Since then, Stop the Station has gained much support and momentum. The Green Party of Allegheny County (GPOAC, https://www.alleghenygreens.org/) is a member of Stop the Station’s Community Control Coalition. 

 

Riley Mahon, a Green Party activist, says, “Stop the Station has increased the scope of its demands, including an immediate halt to all police-related capital budget projects pending community review. It also supported the recent direct ballot initiatives in Pittsburgh to enforce Breonna’s Law and expand the power of the Civilian Police Review Board. Stop the Station now additionally pushes for a 50% decrease in police funding, which would essentially bring the police budget back to levels prior to the current city administration. The cut funding should be redirected towards democratically owned housing and social service.” For more information about Stop the Station, please visit https://stopthestationpgh.com/

 

Perhaps most notable is the recently launched Community Control of the Police campaign, another push for a direct ballot referendum. The referendum will be whether or not to implement a piece of legislation, written by Congressional candidate and law professor Jerry Dickinson and a group of his students, to replace the current appointed and toothless civilian police review board. This legislation would create a new, independent, democratically elected board with the power to hire, fire, subpoena and otherwise discipline the police as well as control their budget. Essentially, the new body would function very similarly to the school board, but for the police department.

 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/;
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

 

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Green Party Women Respond to PA Attack on Reproductive Rights

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

 

CONTACT:

GPPA Communication Team

Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]

or

Tina Olson, [email protected] 

 

Green Party Women Respond to PA Attack on Reproductive Rights

 

Since the beginning of Covid, the “Don’t Tread on Me” patriots have joked about masks, “Keep your laws off my body.” This bait-and-switch of a hijacked slogan took a turn for the worse on May 25 as a PA House committee passed three bills to legislate and incriminate people with uteruses. The offensive bills are, the Unborn Child Dignity Legislation (HB 118); the Heartbeat Bill (HB 904); and the Down Syndrome Protection Bill (HB 1500). Women of the Green Party responded in solidarity with protecting women’s right to choose.

 

Co-Chair of the Green Party of the U.S. Kristin Combs (Philadelphia) said, “I've grown to expect that even our most progressive state legislators only provide a levee between us and a dystopian future, but for three bills targeting reproductive rights to pass in one day is an extraordinarily reckless display of neglect.” 

 

Co-chair of the Green Party of PA (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) Tina Olson (Lehigh Valley) said, “The Green Party stands with a person’s right to choose whether or not to sustain a pregnancy. In fact, we encourage our representatives to push past the patriarchy and to fund free birth control which would reduce unintended pregnancies. Unintended pregnancies and medically harmful pregnancies should not be forced to term. Doing so increases maternal morbidity, the overall well-being and balance of self determination.”

 

“While all women deserve access to safe, healthy abortions regardless of reason, legislators who write and vote for bills such as these fail to account for the multitude of reasons why women choose, or in some cases require, abortions,” explained GPPA Co-chair Beth Scroggin (Chester). “They do not recognize the 14-year-old who is pregnant by her own father, the widowed mother of four who works day and night to support the children she already has and cannot accommodate another, or the woman who desperately wants a baby but has discovered her current pregnancy endangers her life.  Between one-in-three and one-in-four women has an abortion at some point in her life, each with her own reason.  Our politicians need to work for ALL of us.” 

 

While the media has been keen to keep us informed about the dickering between both major parties, they fail to use their power of sensational outrage when it comes to a true attempt to inhibit and prosecute people who become pregnant. Criminalizing medical procedures like terminating a pregnancy affects the health and welfare of an unfathomable amount of Pennsylvanians. 

 

“I think the anti-abortion bills are horrendous considering how the same people pushing for these bills aren't willing to support women after childbirth and also aren't willing to make family planning tools like contraceptives more accessible and affordable,” said GPPA member Whitney Mariah Turnbull-Huggins (Lancaster). “It also hurts women who don't actually want abortions, but need them due to medical emergencies.” 

 

Olivia Faison, Green Party 2020 candidate for PA Auditor General, pulled no punches on this topic, “What kind of governance have we foolishly voted for? Apparently, we have one that seizes the opportunity to kick its female population down even as we are all suffering with this pandemic.”

 

Olson agreed, saying, “The impact of Covid-19 on mothers and women has already negatively shifted our society’s progress towards a more equitable workforce. The disproportionate effect on people who are in their childbearing years and how this will play out in the future workforce is unknown. Mothers are still expected to be the primary caregivers and are often the secondary and lesser income earners. The expectations of having a successful career and being the perfect parent is only adding to pandemic maternal anxiety.” 

 

“Punish, Punish, Punish!!” continued Faison, “Is that the only remedy that the government has? Why on earth would an elected lawmaker want to pass legislation that would ruin the lives of a family, and punish a woman to a life sentence for deciding what she wishes to do with HER OWN BODY? What a miserable and hateful thing to propose.  Let's be fair and ask ourselves what would happen if that same life sentence were imposed on the men who wanted to have vasectomies on THEIR OWN BODIES?”

 

Olson concluded, “With both major parties in PA playing tit-for-tat -- like a never-ending game of table tennis where both sides are rewarded with millions of taxpayer dollars -- it’s increasingly difficult to be confident that any of our rights are safe. With mediocre responses by Democrats whose only solution is to fill their coffers at every turn while sliding further into the authoritarian and regressive policies that target the vulnerable among us, it’s become increasingly obvious that each of us needs to assess where we can affect change. If you are as worried as I am, please find a way to get involved. Moving forward, think about becoming a candidate, work on an electoral campaign, to flip our houses GREEN in 2022. 

 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:

Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/ and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

 

For more information please see:

House Bill 118, An Act providing for the final disposition of fetal remains; and imposing penalties.

House Bill 904, An Act amending Title 18 (Crimes and Offenses) of the Pennsylvania Consolidated Statutes, in abortion, further providing for legislative intent, providing for fetal heartbeat examination, further providing for medical consultation and judgment, for abortion on unborn child of 24 or more weeks gestational age and for reporting.

House Bill 1500, Known as the Down Syndrome Protection Bill.

“Planned Parenthood Keystone Joins 19 PA Organizations To Issue Statement on Anti-Abortion Bills, May 25, 2021, https://www.plannedparenthood.org/planned-parenthood-keystone/who-we-are/newsroom/pa-sexual-and-reproductive-health-advocates-statement-on-anti-abortion-bills

“COVID-19 recession is tougher on women,” U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, September 2020, https://www.bls.gov/opub/mlr/2020/beyond-bls/covid-19-recession-is-tougher-on-women.htm

Stress and Anxiety Levels in Pregnant and Postpartum Women during the COVID-19 Pandemic,” International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, December 17, 2020, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7766953/

 

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PA Green Party Denounces Israeli Violence

 Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Wednesday, May 19, 2021

 

CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]
or
Tina Olson, [email protected] 

 


PA Green Party Denounces Israeli Violence  

 

In response to the Israeli killing spree in the Gaza Strip, many Green Party activists came forward to stand with Palestinians in their continued struggle for the right to exist. Members of the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org)  joined in pro-Palestinian rallies that were held throughout the state on May 15. The Green Party joined other activist organizations such as Black Lives Matter; Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions (BDS) Coalition; Drexel Students for Justice in Palestine; New Afrikan Independence Party; Pittsburgh Anti-Imperialist League; and Jewish Voice for Peace, in solidarity to end the suffering of the Palestinian people.

 

Reports of Palestinian civilian casualties were flooding in from major media outlets and social media. The continuous bombing and arbitrary slaughter of civilians had been carried out by Israel since May 7. On the 73rd anniversary of Nakba Day, May 15, one such airstrike was aimed at the media itself, the high-rise building in Gaza housing the offices of the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), Associated Press (AP) and Al Jazeera. 

 

Chris Robinson, a  member of the Green Party of Philadelphia, attended the rally there and described the following scene, “Support for the liberation of Palestine was vigorous in Philadelphia. More than 800 people paraded from Rittenhouse Square, chanting militant slogans and singing liberation songs. People understand that Israeli apartheid has lasted too long. It is our job to explain this to the U.S. corporate duopoly.” 

 

“One of the Ten Key Values of the Green Party calls for nonviolent methods of resolving conflicts while respecting the right for people to defend themselves,” explained GPPA Co-chair Tina Olson (Hellertown). “In particular, the decades-long conflict in the Israeli-Palestine region has been unfairly financed and supported by countries like the U.S. From the Green Party Platform we learn, ‘Our Green values oblige us to support popular movements for peace and demilitarization in Israel-Palestine, especially those that reach across the lines of conflict to engage both Palestinians and Israelis of good will.’

 

Connor Mulvaney, 2021 Green Party candidate for Pittsburgh City Council, expressed his support for the Palestinian peoples’ plight, "An end to all hostilities is not possible until the oppressor-oppressed system the Israeli government uses to subjugate Palestinian Arabs ceases. Our campaign stands in solidarity with the Palestinian people and supports the movement for the U.S. to boycott, divest, and sanction the Israeli government." 

 

“As activists protest and petition against the inhumane treatment of Palestinians, the Biden Administration continues to evade confronting the cries for change in U.S. policy backing Israel’s criminal overreach,” continued Olson. “Additionally, it has not taken any measures to reverse the policies that former president Donald Trump enacted. The bloated funding for the Pentagon is astronomical. Then add another $3.8 billion in military aid to Israel, and it’s clear that the war hawks in DC are once again profiting from misery. There are no real divisions between the two corporate parties when it comes to the oppression of people for profit. Their lack of interest in helping to change the tide of the conflict by weighing the situation with some conscience also reminds us that when then-candidate Joe Biden said, ‘Nothing will fundamentally change,’ he meant it.”

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/,
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/ and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

 

For more information please see:

“We Stand in Solidarity with the Palestinian People,” news release, Green Party of California, May 16, 2021, https://www.gp.org/solidarity_with_the_people_of_palestine

“One Secular, Democratic State for Palestinians and Israelis,” Green Party of the U.S. Platform, March 28, 2019, https://www.gp.org/israel_palestine

“Why Does the Green Party in the U.S. Support the Palestinians’ Right of Return?” Green Party of the U.S. International Committee, undated, https://gpus.org/why-does-the-green-party-in-the-u-s-support-palestinians-right-of-return/

 

In the photo: Emily De Ferrari, Green Party of Allegheny County, speaks during the Solidarity with Palestine rally in Pittsburgh on May 15. Photo credit: Matt Nemeth, Allegheny Greens. 

 

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PA Green Party Immigrant Rights Update

 Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Sunday, May 16, 2021

CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]
or
Tina Olson, [email protected] 

 

PA Green Party Immigrant Rights Update

By Jenny Isaacs

Since 2019, the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) has been on record calling for the closing of the Berks County Detention Center. Many people were shocked to learn that Berks had been housing immigrant families (including children) since 2014. They were unaware that family detention and mass deportation as tools of immigration enforcement did not originate with the Trump administration.

As of February 27, there are no more families and children being detained at Berks. HURRAY!!! Unfortunately, Berks County Commissioners are not being very transparent about whether or not their contract with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) will continue. On March 26, Make the Road PA and the Sheller Center for Social Justice at Temple University Law School filed suit against the commissioners demanding that they publicly explain and discuss their negotiations with ICE and share relevant materials with the public. This would not stop Berks County from contracting again with ICE. So the fight continues to end reliance on detention and deportation as tools of immigration enforcement.  

The statewide fight for driver's licenses for undocumented immigrants is building power in 2021.  A bill in Harrisburg, HB 279, would allow all PA residents to secure a standard driver's license and ensure data privacy for all drivers in the commonwealth.  For more information on this crucial fight for workers and for the human right to mobility contact Driving PA Forward. Please contact your state Representative and urge their support. 

 

Shut Down Berks recently joined a national newly-founded coalition, the Family Liberation Abolitionist Network, calling for a permanent end to all family detention.  With Detention Watch and many other organizations across the country, they celebrated on April 29 when Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) and Senator Jeff Merkley (D-OR) introduced the Freedom for Families Act (HR 53) into Congress to ensure "that no child or family is threatened by detention, separation, or emotional trauma because they are seeking safety in America."

 

Concerned citizens may help by urging their Congressional representatives to co-sponsor and support the Freedom for Families Act (HR 53), and if they want to help "Melt ICE in PA" they may contact Shut Down Berks.  

 

I am proud to announce that Immigrant Rights Action, the grassroots group I helped found in Doylestown in 2017, received Department of Justice recognition in May 2021 as a recognized nonprofit legal immigration services provider. We are the first and only provider in Bucks County. This will be an important expansion of our ability to uphold the rights of all immigrants regardless of status.

Jenny Isaacs was chair of Bucks County Green Party and leader of the Green Party of Pennsylvania Green Wave Team (2017—2019). 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/,
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/ and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA

 

For more information please see:

“Berks detention center is now empty, but will it stay that way?” by Jeff Gammage, Philadelphia Inquirer, March 2, 2021, https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/berks-detention-center-is-now-empty-but-will-it-stay-that-way/ar-BB1e9ZK5;

“PA Green Party Says, ‘Shut Down Berks Detention Center, NOW !’” Green Party of Pennsylvania News Release, June 11, 2019, https://www.gp.org/shut_down_berks_detention_center;

Driving PA Forward, http://drivingpaforward.org/;

Shut Down Berks Coalition, http://paimmigrant.org/campaign-to-shut-down-berks/. To join their email list, https://www.facebook.com/ShutDownBerksCoalition/app/100265896690345/ and

Immigrant Rights Action of Doylestown, https://immigrantrightsaction.org/

 

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Walk For Our Grandchildren and Mother Earth, June 20 to June 28

Green Party of Pennsylvania 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Thursday, May 13, 2021

 

CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]
or
Tina Olson, [email protected] 

 

Walk For Our Grandchildren and Mother Earth, June 20 -- June 28

By Michael Bagdes-Canning.        

 

Like you and all my Green friends, I know that climate change is endangering all future generations, and I am part of a team organizing a major action in June to challenge this outcome, the Walk For Our Grandchildren and Mother Earth.  I hope you will consider walking with us. This isn’t just any stroll. We aim to pressure President Biden and his administration to do everything in their power to end fossil fuel extraction and burning, the making of nerdles for the dead-end plastic industry. We want them to transition immediately to renewables, especially wind and solar, energy efficiency and battery storage. We aim to take the fight directly to Biden – the march will start in Scranton, PA, the birthplace of “Scrappy Joe” and end in Wilmington, DE, where he has made his adult home. But “Uncle Joe” is not our only target.

 

This fight is personal to me. I live in the shalefields of western PA, and the last 10+ years of my life have been consumed by fighting fracking and climate change. This walk will take us from the shalefields of northeastern PA, past fracking waste disposal sites, through many pipeline fights, into environmental justice zones, and then into the corporate wasteland of Wilmington – corporate home to frackers, pipeliners, trash burners, and the dirty banks that fund them (and so much else). And, if you know me, that won’t be the end. 

 

As we all know, President Biden has proposed policies to accomplish these goals. But his Jobs Act is not sufficient. Much bolder action is needed. Our goal can be summarized by the proposal for a Thrive Act, which would invest one trillion dollars per year for the next ten years to build a jobs-creating, justice-based, renewable-energy economy. In the process, we intend to demonstrate that ongoing fossil fuel projects like Dakota Access Pipeline, Line 3 in Minnesota, Mountain Valley Pipeline, and similar projects presently permitted, financed and under construction, must be terminated immediately.

  

Vaccinated people of all ages are invited to participate and walk with us (those ineligible for vaccination are welcome). On the Summer Solstice and Fathers’ Day, June 20, we will gather and rally in Scranton, PA, where Biden was born and raised. Over the next eight days we will walk and drive to Wilmington, DE, Biden’s long-time residence. Along the way we will meet activists fighting environmental assaults and injustices like the Marcus Hook refinery in Philadelphia, the Gibbstown LNG export facility on the Delaware River in NJ, and a toxic trash incinerator in Chester, PA. On June 28, in Wilmington, we will challenge financing by Chase Bank, the largest U.S. funder of fossil fuels.

 

Please feel free to contact me so I can share my excitement about this great event and answer any questions you may have,
Thanks, Michael, 724-431-8560, [email protected].  

 

Michael Bagdes-Canning was the 2020 Green Party candidate for PA House District 64. Please follow Michael on Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/mike4pa64/; Twitter, https://mobile.twitter.com/bagdescanning; Facebook, https://m.facebook.com/mikebagdescanning; and his website, https://www.mikeforpa64.com/

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/,
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/ and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

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Green Party of Pennsylvania embraces workers' rights on May Day

By Beth Scroggin, chair of the Green Party of Chester County and co-chair of the Green Party of PA

Green Party of Pennsylvania
www.gpofpa.org

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, April 14, 2021

CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, [email protected]
Tina Olson, [email protected]

 

PHILADELPHIA – Happy May Day! Celebrated in various ways throughout hundreds of years, May Day joyfully welcomes the change of season. My inner child looks forward to the May Day celebration at my daughter’s Waldorf School, which includes maypole dancing and a wooden boat race. My activist side, however, observes the significance and necessity of the coinciding International Workers’ Day. 

Started during the Industrial Revolution in response to deplorable (and at times, deadly) working conditions and long hours, International Workers’ Day continues to serve as an opportunity for workers to organize and protect and fight for their rights. In 1884, the Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions (now called the American Federation of Labor) held a convention and declared that eight hours shall constitute a legal work day. The Knights of Labor supported this declaration and encouraged workers to demonstrate and strike as necessary to fight for this right. May Day demonstrations have led to notable events such as the Haymarket Affair in Chicago in 1886, during which demonstrators and police officers clashed and a bomb of unidentified origin was thrown.

Then, the Pullman Strike in 1894 began as a strike at the Pullman Railroad Company but ended with a violent clash between striking workers and National Guardsmen. In response to the Pullman Strike, then-President Grover Cleveland declared Labor Day to be celebrated the first Monday in September. Some say that this move was an attempt to appease angry workers, while others believe Cleveland was trying to distract workers from International Workers’ Day and discourage potential radical activities. In 1958, Dwight Eisenhower continued the attempt to quell International Workers’ Day demonstrations by declaring May 1 to be Law Day, which would celebrate the existence of law and order. Clearly, the U.S. government has never been friendly toward or supportive of the American workers.

Now more than ever, workers must organize and fight for their rights. As a public school teacher, I have been a proud union member for the last 14 years. I am confident that I am part of an organization which works tirelessly to ensure that I am paid fairly and that my working hours and expectations are explicitly defined. Never have I been more grateful for my union, the Pennsylvania State Education Association (PSEA), than this past year. PSEA fought to ensure that teachers were paid during quarantine and that teachers received COVID vaccines as quickly as possible. The president of my own local union spoke with me over the phone for nearly an hour this past summer while I expressed my fears about the upcoming school year and contemplated my options. I imagined her having similar conversations with each of the other members and marveled at the ability of union leaders to take on the concerns of all workers and represent them in conversations with leadership. As one of my union representatives once said, “Sometimes people look at what union members have in terms of compensation, health care, and defined working hours and feel resentment toward us, when in fact, everyone deserves what we have.”

The Green Party has always stood for workers’ rights. We have supported strikes across the country throughout the years, as well as Fight for $15 protests. Green Party 2016 Vice Presidential candidate Ajamu Baraka has worked with the Green Party Power Project and has advocated for “reclaiming May Day as a day of resistance.” Most recently, the Green Party of Philadelphia (GPOP) attended a rally in support of Amazon workers attempting to unionize. In a speech addressing the rally attendees, GPOP City Committee member (and GPUS Treasurer) Hillary Kane pointed out that the Green Party’s own staff is unionized, and that by refusing to take corporate funding, our candidates will never be beholden to union-busting corporations. Working people need a political party who will fight for them and their rights, and whose elected candidates will serve them, and not corporate overlords. The Green Party will always choose people over profit

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.

For more information:

Green Party Power Project,
https://greenpartypower.com/;

Green Party Stands with #BAmazon Workers by Hillary Kane,
https://www.gp.org/gpofpa_stands_with_bamazon_workers; and

The Cost of Structural Violence by Alan Smith, GREEN STAR, May 2019,
https://www.gp.org/a_may_day_message.


Green Party Has Cure for Philadelphia Gun Violence

Green Party of Pennsylvania
 
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, April 19, 2021
 
CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]
or
Tina Olson, [email protected] 
 
Green Party Has Cure for Philadelphia Gun Violence
 
-- By Justin Bell. 
 
2021 is off to a bad start for Philadelphia. The murder rate is unnerving, and we are only three months in. The city is on its way to setting a new record that no city wants to hold.  A staggering murder rate. The shootings have begun to happen throughout the day rather than at night which used to be peak crime hours. Our local officials are baffled. They purpose the same old ideas: curfews, more police, etc. The tactics they propose would seem to show a complete misunderstanding of the cause. Do they really not get it or is this system they designed working?
 
“It is very revealing that the Democratic and Republican officials do not look at the statistics,” said Chris Robinson, a Green Party of Philadelphia member (GPOP, www.gpop.org).  “There is no secret to the cause of gun violence: our history of racism. A study published last year by Dr. Jessica H. Beard, assistant professor of surgery and director of trauma research at Temple University’s school of medicine, showed that gun violence in Philadelphia happens in the areas which were redlined following World War II. Because of our history of racist disinvestment in certain neighborhoods, gun violence has increased there.”
  
Fortunately, the Green Party has political proposals that will reverse that disinvestment and contribute to a massive lessening of gun violence.  The Green Party has called for reparations, a universal basic income, and single-payer health care for all. The Green Party program for a Green New Deal calls for an Economic Bill of Rights, which would employ everyone at a living wage. These measures address systemic problems that contribute to gun violence.
 
“The Green Party calls for an end to the violence and paints a clear road map to achieving this goal,” said Asantewaa Nkrumah-Ture, a member of GPOP and the Black Alliance for Peace. “Communities need these types of resources: jobs and job training; affordable, accessible health care; safe, quality public schools; accessible, culturally competent mental health services that must include anger management, trauma-informed care, etc. To stop gun violence, city officials must have the political will to support the proper funding of these types of community resources.”
 
In order to repair these areas which have been discriminated against for more than 70 years, the Green Party holds that it’s absolutely necessary to put everyone on a level playing field. One way to do that is through reparations. Evanston, Illinois, has just passed a tax on cannabis, which will benefit Black citizens. That is a great start, but unfortunately does not go far enough. Philadelphia could take a look at their framework and build on it.
 
Another important way is through universal basic income. This would provide communities with a sense of security. It’s often hard for young black and brown people to get a job due to systemic racism. A guaranteed income could keep young adults off the street and away from illegal sources of income. This would allow them to provide for their families or take the extra time to get an education, leading them to be more appealing to an employer. 
 
Last but not least, single-payer healthcare. How often do you hear the horror stories of Americans going broke due to medical bills? Pop in “Sicko” by Michael Moore, if you need a refresher. In America the sick get punished for being sick. Often times, being under-insured can cost just as much -- if not more -- than having no insurance. Not only are people going through diseases like cancer and COVID-19, but they are also losing their homes on top of it. 
 
The corporate duopoly understands the link between economic injustice and violence, and yet they kowtow to lobbyists and corporate donors.  They leave the vast majority of Americans to contend with a few trifling survival checks, all the while increasing police presence and enforcing stricter curfews. The Green Party is the only party that is prepared to enact economic justice through laws designed to lift people out of poverty and curb the violence overtaking our fair city. 
 
Justin Bell is a member of the Green Party of Philadelphia City Committee. 
The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/,
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/ and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA 
For more information: 

“In Philadelphia, firearm violence incidence has been empirically tied to poverty and structural place-based economic disinvestment.” Changes in Shooting Incidence in Philadelphia, PA, Between March and November 2020, JAMA Network Research Letter, February 10, 2021, https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2776537

Pandemic Has Exacerbated Issues Such as Poverty, Unemployment and Structural Racism That Are Empirically Tied to Violence in Philadelphia, Temple University Lewis Katz School of Medicine, February 10, 2021, https://medicine.temple.edu/news/temple-led-research-team-finds-covid-19-containment-measures-in-philadelphia-associated-with-increase-in-firearm-violence

Summary of the Green New Deal, Green Party of the U.S., https://gpus.org/organizing-tools/the-green-new-deal/
 
Green Party of U.S. Platform, II.Social Justice, A.Civil Rights & Equal Rights, 2.Reparations for U.S. Afrodescendants, https://www.gp.org/social_justice#Reparations
 
Green Party of U.S. Platform, IV.Economic Justice and Sustainability, D.Livable Income, https://www.gp.org/economic_justice_and_sustainability
 
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PA Greens: Allegheny County must pass paid sick leave, address air quality

Green Party of Pennsylvania
www.gpofpa.org

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, April 13, 2021

CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, [email protected]
Tina Olson, [email protected]

 

PHILADELPHIA – The following testimony was given by Vice-chair Jay Walker, Green Party of Allegheny County, before the Allegheny County Council on March 9.

My name is Jay Ting Walker, and I’m the vice chair of the Green Party of Allegheny County. I want to lend my voice of support for the paid sick days legislation that’s being considered by this council. During a global pandemic sick workers feeling like they’re stuck choosing between potentially infecting others with COVID or paying their bills is completely unacceptable. Let’s as a county put into place an ordinance that not only benefits the workers who run our society, but also our entire society as a whole. Paid sick leave legislation is a common sense policy that should be a no-brainer.

I'm also here to speak on another important health issue. As all of you are aware, our county has some of the worst air quality in the entire country -- the entire country! People die of air quality related issues every single day here, yet we don't seem to take the issue very seriously. This year we've already had multiple strings of particularly bad air quality days. Ever wonder why you feel sick in the morning? Unexplained headaches? Why you seem to wake up in the middle of the night for no reason? You can thank major local polluters and lack of enforcement for that.

There have been some promising steps taken by the Board of Health under new director Dr. Debra Bogen, but it's extremely premature to take a victory lap. You've likely seen the press release from our county, boasting about our new temporary air quality compliance. We might want to think twice about celebrating being the last part of the country to reach this bare minimum level. This is especially true when the improvements were largely due to a global pandemic grinding our economy to a halt. The no-PR-spin truth is that we've made only minor improvements and our residents continue to suffer from poor air quality on a daily basis.

Just like with today's sick leave ordinance, Allegheny County Council will soon be in position to pass more laws to better protect the health of our residents. Please support stronger air regulations so that our residents don't continue to get sick and die for the continued profits of wealthy executives. Proposed ordinances will be delivered to the County Council by the Allegheny County Health Department. Each of these will have received hundreds of public comments asking for them to be strengthened. They will also have received a handful of comments from polluting industries fighting for their continued permission to kill our fellow residents with minimal accountability. Speak with the attorneys and engineers in our region's air quality organizations about how these regulations can legally do more to protect the health of all residents across our county. More and more people are realizing how terrible our air quality continues to be. If we want to succeed as a region we'll need to be serious about tackling this issue.

Lastly, I'd like to ask our county council to increase air permit fees as recommended by the Allegheny County Health Department. All of the facilities in Allegheny County are paying outdated fee amounts while every other facility in Pennsylvania has already been paying the recommended fees. This increase would bring us in line with the rest of the commonwealth. It would also help properly fund the Health Department's regulatory oversight.

In closing, I'd like to ask County Council to:

  1. Vote in favor of paid sick leave legislation,
  2. Strengthen the proposed air quality regulations that will be eventually coming to you, and
  3. Vote in favor of increasing air permit fees to match those of facilities across the rest of the Commonwealth.

Use the powerful law-making tools at your disposal to protect the health and the lives of the 1,213,570 residents in our county. You all hold very important and powerful positions. A wise man once said, "With great power comes great responsibility." Please do the responsible things to protect us all!

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party's Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/; Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/; and Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

For more information:

Allegheny County Health Department: Unhealthy Air Quality Observed in the Mon Valley, CBS News KDKA, April 5, 2021,
https://pittsburgh.cbslocal.com/2021/04/05/allegheny-co-health-dept-unhealthy-air-quality-observed-in-the-mon-valley/;

Allegheny County Executive Vetoes Paid Sick Leave Act, CBS News KDKA, March 16, 2021,
https://pittsburgh.cbslocal.com/2021/03/16/allegheny-county-executive-rich-fitzgerald-vetoes-paid-sick-days-act/;

Report: Pittsburgh Ranked 8th Worst for Air Pollution among U.S. Cities by Hannah Lynn, Pittsburgh City Paper, April 22, 2020,
https://www.pghcitypaper.com/pittsburgh/report-pittsburgh-ranked-8th-worst-for-air-pollution-among-us-cities/;

Clean Air for Pittsburgh, PennEnvironment,
https://pennenvironment.org/programs/pae/clean-air-pittsburgh

Pittsburgh Air Pollution, Clean Air Council,
https://cleanair.org/public-health/pittsburgh-air-pollution/


PA Greens have electoral candidates in 6 counties

Green Party of Pennsylvania
https://www.gpofpa.org

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday, April 6, 2021

CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, [email protected]
Tina Olson, [email protected]

PHILADELPHIA – The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is proud to announce that it now has candidates now running for office in six PA Counties. Of course, the Green Party is still assembling prospective candidates for local office: school board, judge of elections, town auditor, etc.

GPPA Co-chair Beth Scroggin (Chester County) explained, “If you embrace the Green Party's values and have ever thought about running for office, this is your year! There is a wide variety of local positions available, and you can make decisions that will directly impact the lives of those in your community."

One of the most interesting electoral races is the Special Election for PA Senate District 22 in Lackawanna and Luzerne Counties. This Special Election will take place on May 18 as part of the Primary Election. GPPA will run Marlene Sebastianelli for this senate seat. As a seasoned Nursing Home Administrator (NHA), Marlene Sebastianelli has spent years ensuring elderly residents receive quality care. She has been a consultant for the State of Pennsylvania on regulatory compliance in nursing homes throughout the Covid-19 pandemic. Marlene Sebastianelli is also the owner of Case Quattro Winery in Peckville and co-owner of Intact Health & Wellness in Dunmore, PA.

As for the PA General Election, which will take place on November 2, the Green Party is running mobility advocate Connor Mulvaney for Pittsburgh City Council District 4. Mulvaney's campaign has earned the endorsements of No Cop Money PA and the Pittsburgh Democratic Socialists of America, in addition to GPPA and the Green Party of Allegheny County. Connor Mulvaney is focusing his run on equitable public transit, access to necessities and community resiliency.

PA has 2,562 municipalities (cities, townships and boroughs) which will all elect local officials this year. The Green Party already has additional candidates in Lackawanna, Luzerne, McKean, Montgomery, and Wyoming Counties, and it is planning to recruit more.

GPPA electoral campaigns are supported by its Green Wave Team, a group of activists who are ready to share their expertise with inexperienced candidates. Green Wave Co-leader Noel Antonio Rivera (Berks County) said, “We need representatives who will fight for their constituents instead of rolling over to power and money. We need candidates who are committed to green values. If this is you or if you know someone that fits this description, please feel free to join the Green Wave Team. The Green Wave Team is here to support Green Party candidates, potential candidates, or volunteers.”

New volunteers may join the Green Wave Team.  The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media: Facebook, Instagram,  and Twitter.

For more information:

Marlene Sebastianelli for PA Senate District 22,
https://marlene4senate.com/;

Connor Mulvaney for Pittsburgh City Council District 4,
https://www.connor4pgh.com/meet-connor;

Join the Green Wave of Pennsylvania,
https://www.greenwaveofpa.com/home

PA Greens Tracking Down New Candidates,” Green Party of Pennsylvania News Release, January 30, 2021,
https://www.gp.org/tracking_down_new_candidates


Green Party Stands with #BAmazon Workers

  

 Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Monday, March 22, 2021

 

CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]
or
Tina Olson, [email protected] 

 

Green Party Stands with #BAmazon Workers

 

[These remarks were given on March 20, by Hillary Kane, Green Party of Philadelphia (GPOP, www.gpop.org), at a rally in support of Amazon workers trying to unionize in Bessemer, AL. The event was endorsed by: Black Alliance for Peace, Black and Brown Coalition. Black Lives Matter Philly, Caucus of Working Educators, Coalition of Labor Union Women Philly, Green Party of Philadelphia, Our Revolution, Poor People's Economic Human Rights Campaign Poor People's Army, Philly Black Radical Collective, Philly Boricuas, Philadelphia Socialist Alternative, Philly Socialists, Party for Socialism and Liberation Philly, Socialist Resurgence, Socialist Revolution Philly, Teamsters Local 623, Temple Association of University Professionals (TAUP), UNITE HERE Local 274, and Workers World Party Philadelphia.]

by Hillary Kane. 

Thank you to the organizers of today’s march and rally for allowing me to speak.  I represent the Green Party, an independent political party.  The Green Party often co-sponsors rallies such as these, joining in the fight for better working conditions, but we rarely get invited to share the podium because of deep seated fears of independent politics.  Politics that doesn’t go along with the status quo, the two-party system or in this city -- let’s be real -- a one-party system.

You may know the Green Party as an environmental party, and we are.  But we are also a party rooted in social justice.  We were founded over 30 years ago to give political voice to people’s movements – like this one against corporate greed and corruption.  That same corporate greed is killing both the planet and the people. The Green Party links the ecological crisis with the economic crisis of people not having enough to provide basic necessities for themselves and their families. This is why we developed ideas like the Green New Deal – putting people and planet together over profit. Putting people to work, in living wage jobs – jobs that repair and restore our environment rather than use it up and spit it out. Howie Hawkins, our most recent Presidential candidate and himself a retired Teamster, was the first to run on the Green New Deal back in 2010. The real Green New Deal funded by deep cuts to the military.

The Green Party is an eco-socialist party.  For us, that means supporting things such as unions, worker-ownership, co-operatives, and other forms of economic democracy. We practice what we preach -- our own national party staff is unionized, and we are the only ballot-qualified party that refuses to take corporate money. Some other parties may talk a good talk (and let’s be real, they only talk that talk some of the time), but then they turn around and take millions of dollars in corporate contributions to fund their campaigns.  Don’t be fooled. You cannot stand for workers’ rights one day and then take money from union-busting corporations the next. How do you think those politicians will ultimately vote? For the people or for their funders? The Green Party will only ever stand for the people – because we are the people. We have no other choice.

As an environmental party, we are also one of the few voices who don’t believe in constant, unchecked economic growth. Development without redistribution will not lift all boats. And yet, only two short years ago, when Amazon promised jobs and development through it’s HQ2 competitions, our city led by a Democratic mayor and Democratic city council, happily bid to make Philadelphia the next home for Amazon. A bid that included tax breaks, free public infrastructure, and other corporate welfare simply to woo this company into our midst. 

This is why political independence matters. And the Green Party takes that seriously. We are one of the only political parties, and I think the only ballot-qualified party, that constantly and consistently challenges the two-party system at all levels of government from city hall to the state house to the White House.  The union movement needs allies in government. We need laws that protect workers and their right to organize. And we achieve that by electing our own into the halls of power. 

Power – that’s what this struggle is about. The power to demand dignity in the workplace and to one day achieve it.  #BAmazon Workers – the Green Party stands with you. 

Hillary Kane is a member of the Green Party of Philadelphia City Committee and a member of the Green Party of the U.S. Steering Committee. 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/,
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/ and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

For more information: 

North Carolina Green Party Supports Amazon Workers, March 8, 2021, https://www.gp.org/ncgp_supports_amazon_workers

 

Pictured above are rally organizer and Green Party of Philadelphia (GPOP) member Asantewaa Nkrumah-Ture (left) and GPOP City Committee Members Charles Sherrouse and Hillary Kane holding the banner at the rally..

 

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Pittsburgh City Council Candidate Connor Mulvaney Receives Two Key Endorsements

 

Connor Mulvaney
for Pittsburgh City Council

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Sunday, March 21, 2021

 

CONTACT:
Matt Nemeth,
Connor for Council Media Coordinator,
412-721-2002 and [email protected]


Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]  

 

Pittsburgh City Council Candidate Connor Mulvaney Receives Two Key Endorsements

 

Pittsburgh, PA -- Mobility activist Connor Mulvaney received two key endorsements this week in his run for Pittsburgh City Council District 4

 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) endorsed Connor on March 15 after a vote by their General Assembly, encompassing delegates representing all the local Green Parties in the state. “I’ve been following the start-up of Connor’s campaign with excitement as he brings great energy to both the GPPA and progressive Pittsburgh politics necessary for all of Pennsylvania. I very happily voted to endorse him,”� said GPPA Co-chair Tina Olson. 

 

The Democratic Socialists of America's Pittsburgh Chapter also voted to support Mulvaney. In a statement issued on social media after the March 16 meeting, DSA Pittsburgh said it believes Connor’s campaign is an opportunity “to build a Pittsburgh & Allegheny County for the many -- not the privileged few.”

 

The Brookline resident’s campaign is focused on issues around housing, mobility, environment and public health and is calling for a budget for District 4 that will put the community first. A union laborer, sustainable development organizer and mobility advocate, Connor is committed to working for Pittsburgh’s southern neighborhoods. He understands the challenges that the 21st Century poses to working people in Pittsburgh.

 

“We need to rebuild our infrastructure, economy and communities to be more resilient,” Connor said. “District 4 deserves a working-class representative who has a vision for the issues we face.”�

 

Connor is currently gathering nomination signatures. He lives with his partner Christine and their dogter, Lucy. When he’s not working, you might see him running, riding his bike or walking Lucy around District 4.

 

More information about Connor Mulvaney’s Campaign for Pittsburgh City Council can be found at https://www.connor4pgh.com. To volunteer for Mulvaney’s Campaign, please visit https://www.connor4pgh.com/get-involved. Follow Connor’s campaign on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/connorforpgh;
Twitter, https://twitter.com/ConnorMulvaney; or
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/connorforcouncil/

 

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Puff, Puff, Pass All of the Cannabis Bills in PA!

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Friday, March 19, 2021

 

CONTACT:
GPPA Communication Team
Chris Robinson, 267-977-0570 and [email protected]
or
Tina Olson, [email protected] 

 

Puff, Puff, Pass All of the Cannabis Bills in PA!

 

by Tina Olson. 

 

The 2021 Cannabis Fest in Kutztown, PA, will take  place on April 17 and 18. For years the Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA, www.gpofpa.org) has been proud to be a part of the growing movement to finally decriminalize growing, selling, buying, and using nature’s sweet leaf.As a much-welcomed outdoor event, many Greens have already committed to convening there. For years we have been proud to be a part of the growing movement to finally decriminalize growing, selling, buying, and using nature’s sweet leaf. Let’s take this opportunity to look at the timeline of cannabis use, the attitudes, and unjust racial implications of the war on weed. Plus, a glimpse at what is happening in both our state legislative houses.

 

From the not-so distant past, images of firing up a marijuana cigarette, a joint, a spliff, or a doobie meant an onslaught of images that revealed the dangers and temptations of the Devil’s Lettuce. Fearful visions of moral depravity were ingrained into our young minds as we hit tender milestones of development. If Reefer Madness had legs, it would have frog-marched our curious teen-selfs straight to the river Styx and fed us to Cerberus. If Nancy Regan was playing, many of us would have lost that DARE. 

 

Spoiler alert! As it turns out, simply smoking a doink did not lead most people to a road of ruin and river to the Underworld. That is, unless you were at an intersection due to your marginalized status, then you were three times as likely to end up demonized and incarcerated through racial profiling as the civil war-machine on drugs demolished entire generations of communities and families.  

 

Thankfully, we are collectively trying to leave the past mass incarceration where it belongs, but we need to be wary of which path to take. Legalization in Pennsylvania will ensure that we have one hand in the future and the other one stuck scraping a bowl with a pocket knife to conserve America’s sticky green gold. 

 

The Green Party stands for full decriminalization of cannabis. Decriminalization is the only path to ensure that everyone who needs access to the medical benefits and agricultural economic boosts are able to attain them. As it stands, for example, it can cost over $300 to get a medical marijuana card, but that’s not even the beginning of price-gouging market monopoly practices that PA and other states are engaging in. Here is another something: Grower/processors must first pay a non-refundable $10,000 application fee, then have a verifiable amount of no less than $2,000,000 in capital and $500,000 of that must be in a financial institution. To get the initial certificate to grow, you need to pay $200,000. Plus, every year you must pay a $10,000 renewal fee. In other words, to even get that hand in the future, you need to be holding a silver spoon and have more money than any local weed dealer, plus good credit and no criminal record. These restrictions and extremely limiting financial hurdles make the market impenetrable by the same people who have diligently worked towards legalization and those who have supplied a lot of us with our dank stash. 

 

Without decriminalization, the most famous and literal “grassroots'' movement becomes an industry for the elite to protect its hot-boxed frat boys from the ramifications of laws that have become inconvenient to the bourgeoisie. Without further development, not only is our prison system overrun with racist policies and broken promises, those same boys go on in life to getting kick backs in their retirement funds through marajuana stocks pumped up by ‘woke’ Wall Street. And those boys are first in line to pay the fees to grow the weed that swallowed the spider to catch the fly. 

 

Currently there are a few pieces of legislation being passed around in the PA General Assembly. One bill that gets close to meeting the many issues surrounding decriminalization is being reintroduced this year by Representative Jake Wheatey (D, District 19). The Criminal and Social Justice Reform Through a Legal Adult-Use Cannabis Marketplace or House Bill (HB) 2050, doesn’t meet all of our concerns, but it is a step forward. 

 

Another bill being carried over from the 2020 session is in the PA Senate co-sponsored by Senator Sharif Street (D, District 3). Senate Bill (SB) 233 calls for incremental decriminalization by lowering fines and penalties for possession. Senator Street is also working towards similar goals that HB 2050 proposes.

 

While important legislation is being written and reviewed a fundamental problem is growing. This all costs too much for a plant that even my grandmother grew on her patio in the 1980’s like some grandmothers raised chickens and sold eggs to their local grocers. The proceeds of this industry simply won’t go towards people who desperately need to supplement or build income. Nor will they aid cannabis users with one of the 17 recognized medical conditions that qualify you for a medical card. 

 

Another hold up in our state is coming from the representatives from both major parties trying to score wins in too many directions, but mostly wins for their own wallets. Both Democrats and Republicans are guilty of not seeing the big field and hiding behind a smoke-screen of corporate interest and old conservative views, as usual. This is something that is not true for Green Party candidates, who deny corporate funding and have the mission to fully realize the benefits to our society and social justice by decriminalizing all aspects of cannabis. They don’t call us the Green Party for nothing. And, you can put that in your pipe and smoke it!

 

The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/,
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/ and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

For more information, please see:

Pennsylvania 2021 Cannabis Festival, http://www.penncannafest.com/

 

PA Should Follow Oregon and Decriminalize Drug Use, GPPA News Release, December 9, 2020, https://www.gpofpa.org/pa_should_follow_oregon_and_decriminalize_drug_use

 

Adult-Use Cannabis, PA HB 2050, https://www.legis.state.pa.us/cfdocs/Legis/CSM/showMemoPublic.cfm?chamber=H&SPick=20210&cosponId=34520

 

Please sign Petition, “IT’S TIME TO LEGALIZE ADULT-USE CANNABIS IN PA,”  https://www.pahouse.com/Wheatley/TakeAction/?ac=145

 

Decriminalization of Cannabis, PA SB 233, https://www.legis.state.pa.us//cfdocs/Legis/CSM/showMemoPublic.cfm?chamber=S&SPick=20210&cosponId=33066

 

GPPA Petition Calling for Cannabis Decriminalization, April 2016, https://www.gpofpa.org/support_cannabis_decriminalization_in_pennsylvania

 

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PA Completes Election Audit Required by Jill Stein Settlement

Green Party of Pennsylvania

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Sunday, March 14, 2021

 

CONTACT:
Chris Robinson, Communication Team
267-977-0570 and [email protected]
or
Tina Olson, [email protected] 

 

PA Completes Election Audit Required by Jill Stein Settlement

-- By Emily Cook.  

Outgoing PA Secretary of State Kathy Bookvar announced on February 5, that the pilot audit of last year’s presidential election had been successfully completed. Bookvar did not acknowledge that the audit had been required by the settlement in U.S. Court with the Green Party’s candidate for president in 2016. The PA Department of State said, “The risk-limiting audit is a scientifically designed procedure using statistical methods to provide a high level of confidence and statistical verification that the outcome of an election is accurate and detect possible interference.”

“At best, this pilot provided evidence that [President Joe] Biden got more votes than [Donald] Trump in total in the counties that participated in the pilot,” said Philip Stark, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley who invented risk-limiting audits. Stark told SpotlightPA, “That’s different from showing that any equipment worked properly, that the count was accurate, or that Biden won [Pennsylvania].”

2016 Presidential Green Party candidate Jill Stein and the Green Party can be credited with spotlighting Pennsylvania’s shortcomings in voting machine functions, underscoring the need for true paper ballots due to the unverifiability of the vote. The settlement in U.S. Court has again placed auditing under national scrutiny due to the controversy over the 2020 presidential election outcome.  In that settlement, there was a directive that the PA Secretary of State must “direct each county to audit all unofficial election results using robust pre-certification audit methods to be determined based on the recommendations of a Work Group established by the Secretary.” It also required that the audit was to be implemented no later than 2022.

PA’s recently purchased and controversial ES&S ExpressVote XL voting systems (used in Cumberland, Northampton and Philadelphia Counties) still remain a problem. Rich Garella of Protect Our Vote Philly said, “Without a chain of custody for the ballots that are audited, and without full public transparency of the audit process, this pilot audit doesn’t prove or confirm anything to the public.  As a pilot, it is not intended to. Next year when it’s done for real it will mean something as long as it’s done right.”

Jill Stein reminded PA voters of the issues which remain with some voting machines, “In Pennsylvania the ballot marking devices voters use actually invalidate any true audit.” It should be noted that these recent audits were pilots and performed without transparency and did not include four counties in their sampling. Until the election code is corrected, these audits are limited in value.

Emily Cook is a former chair of the Green Party of Montgomery County, PA, and was a plaintiff in Jill Stein vs. Cortes.

 The Green Party of Pennsylvania (GPPA) is an independent political party that stands in opposition to the two corporate parties. GPPA candidates promote public policy based on the Green Party’s Four Pillars: grassroots democracy, nonviolence, ecological wisdom, and social justice/equal opportunity. For further information about GPPA, please visit www.gpofpa.org. Please follow GPPA on social media:
Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/gpofpa/,
Instagram, https://www.instagram.com/pagreenparty/ and
Twitter, https://twitter.com/GreenPartyofPA.

For further information:

PA Vote Confirms Biden Got More Votes than Trump by Marie Albiges, Spotlight PA, March 10, 2021, https://www.spotlightpa.org/news/2021/03/pa-election-biden-trump-risk-limiting-audit-limitations/;

Risk Limiting Audit Pilot of November 2020 Presidential Election Finds Strong Evidence of Accurate Count, Pennsylvania Pressroom, February 5, 2021, https://www.media.pa.gov/pages/State-details.aspx?newsid=453;

Year 2 Report, PA Post-Election Audit Work Group, PA Department of State, December 31, 2020,
https://www.votespa.com/About-Elections/Documents/PADOS-RLA-WG-Year-2-Report-12-31-2020.pdf

Judge Diamond’s Big Miscalculation by Emily Cook , Green Party of PA, May 19, 2020, https://www.gpofpa.org/judge_diamonds_big_miscalculation;

Settlement Agreement and Release, Stein vs. Cortes, U.S. District Court for Eastern PA, November 28, 2018, https://ecbawm.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Stein-v.-Cortes-Agreement-Signature-Pages-11-28-2018.pdf;

Protect Our Vote Philly, www.povphilly.org.  

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PA Green Calls for Eco-Socialism on 51st Earth Day

PA Green Calls for Eco-Socialism on 51st Earth Day

-- GPPA Communications Committee Contributor   

 

Beginning in 1970, the early years of Earth Day were political.  Participants made spider webs from yarn to revere the world’s interconnectedness.  After a few years, Earth Day became less about politics and more about activities such as cleaning up litter. We also stopped thinking like an ecosystem.

 

Not thinking like an ecosystem entails linear, reductionist, mechanistic thinking.  Reductionist-style thinking can be applied to any domain, though is limited in providing thorough explanations. The Newtonian paradigm of science is reductionist.  Newton’s first law of motion states a body’s motion will not change unless impinged upon by an outside force. In mainstream economics, similarly, economic crises are seen as anomalies.  

 

What is similar in both cases is the reductionist treatment of stasis (both a body’s motion staying the same unless impinged upon and economic equilibrium) as normal and desired. Both treat out-of-equilibrium states as anomalies and calamities.  While for reductionism, change is an anomaly in a static world, for non-reductionism or ecological thinking, stability is a special and transitory case in a contingent and constantly evolving world. Non-reductionism might treat things like economic crises as cyclically occurring events systematically inherent to the economy. Reductionist thinking, antithetical to how an ecosystem works, can be applied to all domains, not just science.

 

In Newtonian physics, time is a mere coordinate used for measurement. Times can be named “Time 1” and “Time 2” without any reference to phenomena occurring within those times. The divorce of temporality from phenomena in Newtonian physics mirrors capitalist production, wherein, for example, factory workers (1) tend to be divorced from their goods and services they produce and (2) get paid by the time they spend laboring. Thus, in capitalism, workers sell their time, regardless of and indifferent to what occurs during that time. Reductionism here plagues not just methods of doing science but economic methods of production. 

 

Non-reductionist thinking, or thinking like an ecosystem, affirms eco-socialism, which the Green Party (www.gp.org) names as its ideology. Eco-socialism, unlike capitalism, exhibits the characteristics of an organic ecosystem such as sustainability, localism, decentralization, diversity, self-organization, and more.  Eco-socialism has the ability to welcome diversity and freely adapt to local conditions as to, for example, permit a plurality of methods of exchange. Thus, a robust gift economy can exist, and corrective local markets can emerge anytime there is a failure in the gift economy.  

 

This is opposed to capitalism, which totalizes production and exchange by limiting the possibility of alternative methods through the state rewarding unproductive and unjust activities and distorting how risks are distributed. These activities subsidize a single mode of production and exchange while restricting competing methods of production and exchange. Capitalism lives and dies according to markets (and supplemented state intervention and state-owned enterprises, which are not good alternatives to markets, carry some of the same constraints as markets, and often have worse outcomes). 

 

Eco-socialism embraces, per acting like a well-functioning ecosystem, simple rules that, from local interactions of self-organized and heterogeneous actors, yield self-sustainability in macro. Thus, may Earth Day henceforward be ecological and political, as recommended by Greens, eco-socialists, and ecological thinkers.

 

For additional information, please see:

 

“Earth Day, Birthday: The Conception of a New World” by Alan Smith, April 14, 2020, https://www.gp.org/conception_of_a_new_world

 

Pennsylvania Greens organize for 50th anniversary of Earth Day,” Green Party of Pennsylvania, news release, March 27, 2020, https://www.gp.org/50th_anniversary_of_earth_day

 

“Respecting and Celebrating the Earth” by Alan Smith, GREEN STAR, April 2019, https://www.gpofpa.org/green_star_april_2019

 

“The First Earth Day” by Neal Gale, April 19, 2018, https://www.gp.org/first_earth_day

 

“Green Party of PA on Earth Day,” GREEN STAR, April 2015, page 8, https://www.gpofpa.org/gppa_green_star_april_2015

 

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