Tuesday June 16
An interesting article on the Maine Green Party in Down East
RECOVERED HISTORY
SOME NEW DEAL PROJECTS AROUND
From the Portland Press Herald
Acadia National Park (1933-42): Civilian Conservation Corps built roads, trails and Blackwoods and Seawall campgrounds.
Appalachian Trail (1935-39): CCC built a 276-mile mountainous footpath through
Portland Observatory (1939): WPA provided $6,000 to restore the tower, replacing beams, walls, ceilings and exterior shingles.
Portland Municipal Jetport (1940): WPA built the airport’s first real terminal, a brick structure that’s now the general aviation terminal.
THE
John Rensenbrink & Jacqui Deveneau - There had been a snowstorm the day before and the roads were perilous. But 18 people came to a small church on
Philbrook and Rensenbrink had worked together on two campaigns to close Maine Yankee Nuclear Power Plant. Several more in the group of 18 had also been part of those campaigns. Some of the others had been active in local Democratic Party activity, some were Independents, and several were staunch back-to-the landers.
After the excitement of the first few months and the successful creation of a set of guiding principles, the group foundered as it headed into the spring of 1985. Those intent on growing a Green movement and those equally intent on growing a Green Party could not see eye to eye and both dropped out. At the scheduled July 1985 meeting, again at the church on
In early 1990, Nancy Allen, the Chair of the Hancock County Democratic Party, called a press conference to announce her resignation from the Democratic Party and that she was forming a local Green Party organization. This was a strong shot in the arm for the fledgling new Party.
By 1992, a renewed statewide group found a strong candidate for Congress in
Jonathan Carter ran for governor under the banner of the Green Party in 1994. His 6.5% surpassed the 5% threshold for official ballot status. . .
Much of the political energy of the Party in the next two years went into support for a statewide referendum to ban clear cutting in a campaign led by Carter. The effort provoked what the new governor, Angus King, described as the most intensely debated issue ever to take place in the state. The campaign lost, but the Green Party gained a great deal of notoriety, both positive and negative, and Carter survived an all-out personal attack on him by the paper companies. The Party seeded several new locals in the state. The number of registered voters in the Green Party grew to over 3000.
Rensenbrink ran for United States Senator in 1996 on the slogan "Don't eat the seed corn!", coupling this with a strong emphasis on campaign finance reform. He got 4% of the vote. He campaigned along with Ralph Nader, the Green Party's candidate for President, who received 2% with a minimal campaign. The Party continued to grow in numbers and was increasingly recognized as a political force in the state. However, the Party lost its ballot status.
The Secretary of State, a Democrat, ruled that a Party had to receive at least 5% of the vote in both the Gubernatorial and Presidential election. . . Since Nader did not get 5% for President, the Party could no longer qualify. The Green Party contested this interpretation of the relevant statute, pointing out that the . . . The case went as far as the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals in
When Pat LaMarche declared her candidacy for Governor in January 1998, the Court had not yet handed down its decision, leaving the Party in limbo. She was forced to run as an Independent.
But she was prohibited from running as an Independent on behalf of the Green Party (since its status was legally in doubt). She opted to run as an Independent on behalf of the Green Independent Party, a name adopted on the spur of the moment.
LaMarche conducted an effective campaign and received over 7% of the vote, doing so with only $21,000. This gave official ballot status to the Party under its new name the Maine Green Independent Party.
In the Legislative session following LaMarche's vote, Nancy Allen and John Rensenbrink successfully lobbied the
The Party received an anonymous donation of $5000 in 1999 and hired Ben Chipman on a part-time basis to raise money and to enroll voters in the Party. An organization was put in place that prepared the way to take maximum advantage of Ralph Nader's full-court run for President in 2000. Party registration zoomed past 10,000 in just a few years. Nader received over 6% of the vote and sustained the Party's official ballot status.
Party enrollment increased to 25,000 by 2006, the largest Green Party enrollment per capita in the
That same year, 2002, Jonathan Carter renewed his bid for Governor of the state. Running as a Clean Election candidate (publicly financed), he received 10% of the vote.
The Green Party focused most of its political energy in 2004 on campaigns for state legislature, running a record 23 candidates. Several got over 30% of the vote and some came very close to winning. Beginning with this election cycle and continuing through the election cycles of 2006 and 2008, Ben Chipman played a leading role in helping to recruit and organize the campaigns of Greens running for local and state office.
Pat LaMarche was the Vice Presidential candidate for the United States Green Party in 2004. In 2006, Pat La
In 2008 the Party ran a strong group of candidates for state legislative seats, for Portland School Committee and City Council seats, and for
Currently, the State Party is led by a seven member Steering Committee. . .


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