We're getting a look at what House Democrats are proposing for "Electoral Reform". Apparently their idea of "reform" is to limit our choices even further than they are already limited by a two-party system that doesn't encourage coloring outside the corporate-drawn lines.
While most of us are complaining about how weak and ineffectual the Democratic Party leadership have shown themselves to be, the folks who toil inside those Congressional offices have come up with a further curb on the 'Marketplace of Ideas'. Their solution to the problem of galloping Republicanitis is to insure that any challenges to Republican control be limited to DNC-approved candidates. What we need is 'Fewer Choices' for voter consideration.
The Green Party has put out a press release detailing Democratic Party strategy for opening up political discussion (or, more accurately, political DIalogue). The Green Party press release follows:
Greens blast bill from Democrats that would bar
third parties in races for Congress.
Panic and retaliation among progressive Democrats
over Green challenges are behind HR 4694, say
Greens, citing the bill's prohibitive petition
requirements, ban on private contributions;
Greens call the bill patently unconstitutional.
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Green Party leaders called on
Congress to reject a House bill that combines
public funding of congressional campaigns with a
scheme to ban third party and independents from
such races.
HR 4694 ("Let the People Decide Clean Campaign
Act") would grant nominees of parties (i.e.,
Democrats and Republicans) that had averaged 25%
of the vote for House races in a given district
in the last two elections would get full public
funding.
All others (i.e., third party and independent
candidates) would be required to submit petitions
signed by 10% of the last vote cast for partial
funding, and 20% petitions for full funding.
Furthermore, candidates who don't qualify for
funding would be barred from spending any
privately raised money on their campaigns.
"10% and 20% in many districts represent
prohibitively large numbers of required
signatures," said Phil Huckelberry, co-chair of
the Illinois Green Party and co-chair of the
national Green Party's Ballot Access Committee.
"The goal behind HR 4694 is to use public
financing of campaigns -- itself a sorely needed
reform -- to eliminate third party challenges in
congressional races."
"In Missouri's 2nd congressional district, a
candidate with a party that won less than 25% of
the vote in the last two elections would need
nearly 70,000 signatures to qualify for the
public funding that her/his Democratic and
Republican opponents would get automatically, and
only signatures from the 2nd District would
count. Nearly 35,000 signatures would be
required in order to allow the candidate to spend
anything at all on the campaign." (St. Louis
Oracle, February 05, 2006
<http://stloracle.blogspot.com/2006/02/bill-would-ban-3rd-party-campaigns-for.html>)
The Green Party of the United States supports
public financing of campaigns as one of several
measures to remove the corrupting influence of
corporations on U.S. politics
<http://www.gp.org/platform/2004/democracy.html#316100>.
But Greens warned that HR 4694 uses public
financing of campaigns as a cover to destroy
democracy by reducing the field to two parties.
Greens called the bill patently unconstitutional
and, if passed, unlikely to survive a court
challenge. But Greens said that the bill is
significant because of the line-up of Congress
members supporting it.
The bill's eight sponsors include liberal
Democrats: David Obey (Wis.), Rosa DeLauro
(Conn.), Barney Frank and James McGovern (Mass.),
Henry Waxman and Bob Filner (Calif.), Steve
Israel (N.Y.), and Tim Ryan (Ohio). Mr. Obey,
Ms. DeLauro, and Mr. Israel faced Green
competition (Mike Miles, Ralph Ferrucci, and John
Keenan, respectively) in recent elections,
suggesting that their sponsorship is retaliatory.
Mr. Miles is seeking the House seat again in
2006 (Wisconsin, District 7); Mr. Ferrucci is
running for the U.S. Senate (Connecticut).
"The Democrats behind this bill have as little
regard for democracy and open elections as
Republicans who have use altered district lines
and other methods to fix elections," said D.C.
Statehood Green Party activist T.E. Smith.
"Hiding this strategem in a bill for public
financing of campaigns makes it doubly shameful."
"An obvious motivation behind HR 4694 is panic
over a Green insurgency. Voters have realized
that the Democratic Party has given President
Bush and the GOP a pass on various abuses of
power and radical actions, such as the invasion
of Iraq and the confirmation of Judge Samuel
Alito, which most Democrats declined to
filibuster. The time is ripe for a noncorporate
independent third party, and many Democrats are
worried," added Mr. Smith.
MORE INFORMATION
Green Party of the United States
http://www.gp.org
1700 Connecticut Avenue NW, Suite 404
Washington, DC 20009.
202-319-7191, 866-41GREEN
Fax 202-319-7193
Text of HR 4694
http://thomas.loc.gov/...
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