1. Green parties: effective or irritants?

I have been asked what I think of both the American and the British Green Parties. Normally, this would not be an appropriate blog to talk about party politics, but I was interested in the question, mainly because the existing political parties are in such a mess, bought by special interests, that one has to wonder why the Greens don’t do better. So this is a brief run-down on the situation.

It seems that the reason why the Greens stay sidelined is that they are split between those who want to gain power the conventional way, and those who are more radical and “community-based”, reluctant to raise money from the usual suspects. The Greens in the United States are split between GPUSA (Green Party of the USA) and GPUS (Green Party US):

GPUSA is a membership-based organization where the membership pays for running expenses by paying annual dues, focusing on environmental and social justice issues. They believe that elections are one of many forms of political activity, which include educational programs, demonstrations, street theater, civil disobedience and direct action campaigns around environmental, social, and economic justice issues. Having an independent dues-paying membership base is deemed essential to prevent Greens from compromising themselves to corporate funding. GPUS, however, operates more like existing political parties, concentrating on electoral campaigns and running Green Party candidates, and often getting heat from GPUSA members, who think they are compromising their values.

Members of the GPUS are like the pragmatists in the German Green Party. They believe that elections should be the single defining characteristic of a political party. They oppose individual memberships and dues and want a United States Green Party structured much the same as the two dominant US parties. Both organizations do, more or less, agree on the Ten Key Green Values:

1. GRASSROOTS DEMOCRACY
2. SOCIAL JUSTICE AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
3. ECOLOGICAL WISDOM
4. NON-VIOLENCE
5. DECENTRALIZATION
6. COMMUNITY-BASED ECONOMICS AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE
7. FEMINISM AND GENDER EQUITY
8. RESPECT FOR DIVERSITY
9. PERSONAL AND GLOBAL RESPONSIBILITY
10. SUSTAINABILITY

I quote part of a GPUSA commentary on the split between the radicals and the pragmatists: “The division between Greens exists in many countries. But in most countries, both tendencies have been able to co-exist in a Green Party which encourages a range of views. In the US, where elections are designed to exclude minority parties from participation in government (and where even if you “win” an election that election may be stolen, as was the case in the Presidential election of 2000), Greens win very, very few partisan elections (those where candidates are identified by party). The frustration of wanting to change the world through participation in government and yet being locked out of formulation of government policy has created a growing push to “mainstream” the Greens, and to keep out Greens who are more radical”. Radical doesn’t work in the USA.

All this is very sad, because the mainstream America parties have become little more than shills for corporate donors. Fewer people are voting for them because they are seen as caring only for policies dictated to them by lobbyists. They tug the forelock in return for money. A viable political party that was seen as honest and wanting to do things for people should walk over both Republicans and Democrats.

Epicureans would like to see the two Green factions, now weak to the point of invisibility, sink their differences and work together. Sometimes it is leaders who are divisive, wanting their own little fiefdoms. If this is the case (I don’t know), then in the interests of the movement they should sink their differences and work together. It is the Epicurean way.

Tomorrow – the British Greens.

6 Comments

  1. Thank you so much, I had no idea that these two factions existed. As a European, it seems very strange why so many Americans are happy with the two-party system that gives very little voice to more radical parties, especially as the two parties are not particularly good ones.

  2. On the contrary, thoughtful Americans are very, very unhappy with the two parties, with Congress and the establishment. Most just tune out, unable to have any effect; others try, but get increasingly disillusioned. While business, Wall Street , the gun manufacturers, the huge military-industrial complex and a bought media, get what they want there will be no change. America is a corporatocracy, not a democracy. Don’t be fooled. Sorry to sound cynical – I know it is unattractive, but I can only say it is also both disappointing and realistic.

  3. In a country of 300 million people there are bound to be some people who know the truth. But if American democracy is as corporate as you suggest, why is there not a proper party of the left? (Sorry the Democrats don’t really count.) Apart from a few people at Occupy Wall Street, I can’t think of any mass movement. In contrast, the free market Tea Party seems to enjoy between 20-30% support, depending on which poll you read.

  4. I think you have to look for an answer to that in the myths that have grown up (actually, not hundred per cent mythical – it is still possible to go from rags to riches with a good idea). Kids are brought up believing in the American Dream and standing resolutely on your own feet without help from the government. It is very deeply rooted, although less and less attainable at present. For a hundred years the Press, and latterly the modern media, have damned anything remotely resembling socialism. It took a cataclysm for Roosevelt to push through legislation to create a modest welnfare state, something the right wing is strenuously trying to undo. Giving health insurance opportunity to the poorest Americans is called Socialism. Obama, right wing by some European standards, is dismissed as a socialist. Thus, the air is sucked out of the room. There is little appetite at the moment for helping the poor. In my opinion that will change and the US will look very different by mid-Century.

  5. Owen, gone are the sources of funding that had sustained U.S. groups who resisted the community-destroying aspects of industrialization. To win office one must campaign and that rigorous effort requires resources–media, transportation, literature, workers etc., etc..

    The Pendleton Act of 1883 touted as a civil service “reform” effectively shut-down the so-called “spoils system” which had funded services to the poor and middle class urban dwellers. That left business interests as the major source of funds for political activity. Oh, and the “spoils system” was “corrupt” but Gilded Age buying of the political system was virtuous.
    Unions were fiercely and often violently resisted. Ultimately they were destroyed or weakened as a source of funding for serious opposition to the business-state alliance. Public financing of political campaigns has been smothered.

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