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Election 08

McKinney on the Record

Green Party presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney talks to Grist

By Kate Sheppard
22 Aug 2008
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Cynthia McKinney
Cynthia McKinney.

Green Party presidential candidate Cynthia McKinney sums up her energy policy with a simple, memorable rhyme: "Leave the oil in the soil."

"Right now we've got two energy policies in this country," McKinney told Grist. "One is war, the other is drilling. And neither one of them works." It's a message she hopes will win over voters who have tired of both the Democratic and Republican parties.

McKinney was a Democrat herself for years, representing Georgia's 4th district in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1993 to 2003, and again from 2005 to 2007. She was the first African-American woman to represent her state on the federal level. During her time in the House, McKinney was active on environmental issues, particularly those related to human health.

Her legislative efforts included lead sponsorship of the National Forest Protection and Restoration Act, which would have eliminated commercial logging on federal public lands. In 2001, she introduced a bill that would have suspended use of depleted uranium munitions until their health effects could be studied further. In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2006, McKinney was a vocal critic of the Bush administration's failure to help residents of New Orleans, and she pushed for comprehensive environmental testing of flooded areas.

McKinney lost her bid for reelection in 2006, and in September 2007 announced that she was leaving the Democratic Party. She soon launched a campaign to become the presidential nominee of the Green Party, and in July the Greens gave her the official nod at their convention in Chicago. McKinney tapped hip-hop activist and indie journalist Rosa Clemente to run as her VP candidate.

Grist caught McKinney by phone at her current home in California, where she's pursuing a Ph.D. at the University of California at Berkeley.




question Why should voters consider you the strongest candidate on environmental issues?

answer I have a record that includes authorship of the National Forest Protection and Restoration Act. From that to drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to my position on offshore drilling, I think my record is pretty clear. And then there is the greatest need we have in this country, and that is for investment in infrastructure and a greening of our economy.

question What sets your green platform apart from other candidates'?

answer We've taken nuclear off the table. When you start talking about sustainable energy, nuclear isn't it. We need to take offshore drilling off the table, we need to take ANWR off the table. We should also make sure that investment in solar and other types of heating and energy supply are made attractive to people, [through] tax schemes that decrease the price to the end user. [We need] also an incentive so that when people are in the process of buying houses, a score is given for the energy consumption that that house represents. Those are just a few things that could be done very easily.

question Energy is a hot topic on the political scene right now. Republicans are really driving home the drilling mantra. What do you think should be done to counter that?

answer My message is to "leave the oil in the soil." Right now we've got two energy policies in this country. One is war, the other is drilling. And neither one of them works. We've got to do something different.

question Another talking point on the Hill right now is that regulating greenhouse-gas emissions and shifting away from fossil fuels will be catastrophic for the economy and working families. These scare tactics seem to work, especially in a period of economic downturn. What's the message you're taking to voters on this? How do you talk about these issues when people are already upset about rising gas prices?

answer I've seen communities over in Europe that have no energy bills at all, and so if we're talking about hardship, the hardship occurs when the elected leadership is stuck in old ways and reticent to invest in new ways that make more sense. And certainly sustainable living makes more sense. Sustainable energy makes more sense. And doing the same thing and getting a worse result is not something that makes more sense. If we continue to do what we've done in the past, on the horizon is nothing more than an extension of war, an extension of the military machine, and reliance on a resource that is not infinite.

question You've said that the United States could declare itself carbon- and nuclear-free. How soon do you think that's possible? What do you propose to do to make that happen?

answer What's on the table now is [a goal of dramatically reducing carbon emissions by] 2050, but of course we don't have that kind of time. Carbon-free communities are being built in other parts of the world, particularly in Europe. There are oil-producing countries in the Middle East that are already at least moving in this direction. We even had the king of Saudi Arabia say, "We're going to leave some of our oil in our soil."

question Do you believe we can achieve political consensus on a goal of 80 percent carbon reductions by 2050?

answer I think that public policy is supposed to reflect the values of the people. To the extent that it doesn't, then it's up to the people to change the policymakers. That's why we have to be engaged at every step of the process of voting -- before we vote, during the vote, during the counting of the vote, and after the election is over -- not only to make sure that the counting process is accountable, but also so that our elected officials remain true to the values that people voted. That has not happened with the Democratic and Republican parties.

When people cast their vote for the Green Party, they're voting for green solutions. They're voting for people who have the attitude that this is possible, that this is doable, and we represent the best alternative for the voting public.

question How would you bring China and India to the table on a global climate treaty?

answer I think the best way is to lead by example. The United States isn't doing that. In fact, there's an effort to make it appear that China and India are enemies. China and India are no more enemies than the United States' behavior toward them would lead them to be. So first of all, the United States needs to do what it must do to reduce the greenhouse gases.

question What should be done at a federal level about food issues -- farming, genetically modified foods, etc.?

answer There is an effort to store seeds in Norway. And at the same time, there's this push to impose particular Monsanto-type seeds on farmers around the world. That needs to stop, and it needs to stop right here in the United States. I would prohibit it. I would ask Congress to prohibit it and allow farmers to grow their crops in the best manner time-tested for thousands of years.

I used to be on the Agriculture Committee and represented farmers in Georgia. I got to visit farmers in Europe, and they have really taken this to an entirely new level, where not only is there the organic farming, but also a level beyond organic. Every aspect of the production is done in a way that has no toxins, no chemicals, nothing that would be harmful to man or any aspect of nature. Those are the kinds of agricultural trends that ought to be supported, for example, in the Farm Bill.

question What other environmental issues need more national attention?

answer There was an effort that we tried to focus on with only limited success, and that was the cleanup of our military bases. Cleanup of these installations would provide far more jobs than one would think, because of the egregious nature of the problem.

We've also got this situation of environmental injustice that hasn't been taken care of. Hurricanes Rita and Katrina coated every building, every item, every living and non-living thing in New Orleans with slime, and we've got the toxic effects of that. The legislation that I introduced was to provide for the testing of the environment -- all of the land, soil, and air in New Orleans -- and then making that known to people so they know what the potential health effects are. That has not even been ascertained by any official governmental body. Basically what was done in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina was looking at the buildings -- they were classified as habitable if they were structurally sound. But nobody tested the mold and the slime and the toxicity of those structurally sound buildings.

And then of course in Louisiana we've got Cancer Alley, which has been noted for a number of health effects.

We've just got massive cleanup that needs to be done inside this country, and it receives very little attention even now as we all talk about environmental issues.

question Are Democrats and their presidential candidate, Barack Obama, doing enough on environmental issues?

answer I think that's a question that voters, those who are particularly interested in environmental issues, will have to sort out for themselves. But there is a party, the Green Party, that is dedicated and founded for the purpose of extending social justice as well as ecological wisdom for people in this country and around the world. And the Green Party is an international collection of parties that help to make policy on the national level in many other countries around the world, and it's about time that we had the influence and the impact of Green Party policies here at home in the U.S.

question After Ralph Nader ran on the Green Party ticket in 2000, there was a lot of anger from folks afterward that he tipped the presidency to George W. Bush. Are you concerned about siphoning off votes from the Democrats this year, possibly changing the outcome of the election?

answer It's a ludicrous assumption, and it's not based on the facts. In 2000, 1 million black people went to the polls and voted, but their votes weren't counted. So now who's responsible for that? Nine hundred thousand of those votes would have gone to the Democrats, but the Democrats conceded the election rather than demanding a recount or an investigation that would have found the guilty parties. Unfortunately, those misconceptions that are put forward by the corporate press have nothing to do with the truth. Seventy-eight thousand black people in Florida alone voted and their votes weren't counted, and that doesn't even include the number of people who went to the polls and attempted to vote, who didn't even get a chance to cast their votes.

It's ludicrous to think that George Bush won the election by 537 votes, but it's also ludicrous for the political party that actually won the election to give it away. The question should be posed to them: Why did they?

question What environmental achievement are you proudest of?

answer The National Forest Protection and Restoration Act was something that was near and dear to my heart.

After the tragedy of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, the piece of legislation that we introduced to ascertain and make public the environmental status of the area was also necessary, particularly given the situation with the first responders at the World Trade Center after Sept. 11. It was clear that there were going to be health effects [after the Sept. 11 attacks], and yet the workers were sent in there anyway to rescue people as best they could and then to find as many bodies as they could. They did that work, and the Bush administration lied to them, and to all of us, and now they truly are suffering the health effects.

The depleted uranium legislation that I introduced is also something that I am proud of. My bill would have stopped the use of all depleted uranium ammunitions until we understood clearly what the health effects were.

question Who is your environmental hero?

answer My heroes are the people who strove for justice, and the ultimate environmental hero in my opinion would be someone who was working to make peace. If we understand the sanctity of human life, then we are, I believe, less apt to destroy that which sustains our life. So perhaps the people who struggle for human rights have to be the environmental heroes. As I think about it, for example, it's the women's suffrage movement who are responsible for me and [my running mate] Rosa being where we are right now with the Green Party ticket. Then of course you've got the abolitionists -- Frederick Douglass and Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman. I certainly wouldn't be where I am without them. And so those are to me the ultimate heroes, because it's on their shoulders that I stand.

question What have you done personally to lighten your environmental footprint?

answer Well, I don't consume very much. Where possible, I'm changing my shopping habits, in terms of the food that I buy. I choose to buy from the local folks as opposed to the mega folks. Of course, you have to go to the supermarket every once in a while to get stuff. I'm trying to live within the 200-mile rule of thumb in terms of my food consumption. As a black person, there's a dearth of services generally and a lack of healthy food in the black community, so that's been a challenge.



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Kate Sheppard is Grist's political reporter.
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Comments: (19 comments)

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Use A Megaphone

Ok, I'm sure her blouse is cotton and she uses natural hair spray and those earings are wood, not plastic right?

So what about the plywood (lacquer) podium and mike cables (insulation)?

Texeme.Construct.Questioner

Jabailo, you're a fascist...

I say if you don't think women or black people should have the right to vote, just come out and say it.  

Yeah, you can pick everything apart...right down to her earrings but wearing plastic earrings is a far cry from owning an unknown number of homes like John McCain or doing your photo ops on oil rigs.

You're exactly the reason that people like me get out of the military...because as Cynthia McKinney says, our energy policy is war and drilling.

Il faut cultiver notre jardin.

Green Party

Why does the Green Party feel the need to self-destruct? There is overwhelming evidence that various things about our country can at the same time be more enviromentally friendly AND better for everyone all around, if we had the leadership to see it done.

Instead, all I hear from the Green Party are increasingly strident arguments against "the Man." I mean, I understand that there are quite a few disenfranchised people in the U.S., but they are still a minority and you won't win an election by alienating the majority.

I don't want to hear about what's good for [enter subgroup here], I want to hear about what's good for America and what's good for my family. Strike that chord with me and I'll vote for you.

Green Party Vote

Unfortunately, in this presidential election, I feel that a vote for anybody other than Obama is a vote for McCain. We just can't take the chance.

Build, don't destroy Green Politics

Why not ask, "Why is it so hard to build a new political party in our democracy, when the Green values are majority values?" instead of "Why does the Green Party feel the need to self-destruct?"

Of course there are plenty of people who are trying to destroy the Green Party, because the Greens are the only organizational alternative in this whole area of American politics! Why would the Green experience be different from any other attempt at building a new political force, all of which have been attacked by the various forces of the status quo.

People who are really in favor of the values of the Greens pitch in support the Greens 95% of the time, rather than sniping from the sidelines.

two things

I like it how she refers to 'Europe' as if it was a homogeneous country. We might all be white, but we have hugely different cultures and even more different energy and food policies. Her blatant generalizations about 'Europe' are somewhat astounding (as if I said that America was poor because I visited a couple of villages in Mexico).

Second, if the Green party attempted to put up the appearance that they cared, then they would get more votes. How is she planning to campaign while working on her PhD? Also, once they build a strong base, get some congressional seats, and play the power game, then I will consider them a serious party. Now they are just rebel-rousers trying to 'make a point', gambling with 8 more years of McBush III.

www.campusprogress.org

hero?

funny, that she skirts the idea of environmental hero. not that her answer is wrong in any way. the people she mentions by name are incredible role models for everyone, everywhere.
but note that she doesn't mention anyone that has made a modern environmental impact. I'm a Green myself, and hope McKinney brings votes to the party. But couldn't she have snapped her fingers and had some aide give her a name?

Quibble bibble

Obviously tboggia-- like most Americans-- does not know that in order to get and maintain ballot status (have your candidate's names appear on a ballot) in the United States, a new political party must qualify and re-qualify according to rules set by officials who are Democrats & Republicans, and that this has to happen on a state-by-state basis. And many states have wildly differing qualifying rules from others.

Sometimes those rules include requirements that a party receive a certain number of votes at the top of the ticket to get ballot status for the party in the next election(s). The alternative is to petition or pay, and the petitioning requirements are usually for many times the number of signatures required of Democratic and Republican parties.

You ever try getting votes, much less winning congressional seats, etc., without having the names of your candidates on the ballot?

It is a pretty complicated pain in the butt which is no accident. So quit complaining about those who are trying to improve things and pitch in to be constructive, what do you say?

Otherwise we are just gambling with 80 more years of the same system we have now.

Support This Candidate!


Please, about half of all Democrats, be sure to vote Green Party in November!

Texeme.Construct.Questioner
Environmental Progess

Every environmentalist should be working with the Green Party, a party that won't sell out to corporate donors, to get environmental activists elected as mayors and other local offices.  The Green Party has given us an opportunity to create the change we need in our government and our polices. A real movement for sustainability won't happen without our participation.  

Waiting for it to happen has not worked, let's get good people elected.  

Can't afford to let McCain win

Look, I sympathize greatly with the message of the Green party and McKinney... but what chance does she really have of winning?

Instead of attempting a "Hail Mary" every Presidentail election the Green party should be getting Representatives and Senetors elected.

I know getting Senators and Representatives elected isn't as "sexy" as getting a President elected, however if we can get 10 Representatives and 3 Senators elected... we can have a real voice and we'll have a solid foundation upon which we can build.

Until that time, were just playing the lottery hoping to get lucky... instead of knuckling down and doing the hard work necessary to create real change.

Obama may not be all that great, but he's better than McCain, and until the Green party get's serious he's our best hope for positive change.

Thank you Grist...

for giving Cynthia McKinney much needed and deserved attention.

How do you define "winning"?

WE as a Party are running All Kinds of local, state and nat'l candidates.
When it comes to a Nat'l presidential ticket we can only run as Greens who don't get the corporate media coverage.
We also run in a climate of black and white, either or and lesser of two evils, what we've done and continue to do is run as Strong as we can to adress the issues we Know need addressing and not Only Don't we get coverage we get hesitant support from many Greens, caught up in the fear factor of lesser evilism, but outright hostility from so called progressive Democrats who Know we need change yet undercut our efforts to inspire people to become involved and active and why? Cuz "We're the Boogeyman! the Spoiler!" Not the corrupted voting machines and spoiled Closed Debates etc..etc..., Not the Dem's without a backbone to impeach the MOST Impeachable President ever, but US! The Green Party, give me a break!
We've got two Strong Women who are Tuned into What's wrong and how to make it right, but it's just Too Scary to let them be heard?
Give me a break!
Winning to me is Waking up a Nation to the Power they COULD have still, and How Close we are to Losing that Power through Apathy, Fear, Infighting, Blackouting, etc..
Winning to me is getting Enough of an ABUNDANCE of Votes if you get people to the polls who otherwise would ONCE again "sit this one Out" because the two Chosen ones by corporate parties funded by the Arms industry hope to give us More of the Same. That given those inspired to vote for Truth we as the GP might have a fighting chance of ballot access in our states.


Wait..it'll will be your turn next time

Sorry, I have waited long enough for the Dems to actually do something.  And to stop acting like "Republican light" by catering to corporate interests.  I am voting Green. And my conscience is clean.  

Green party strategy

The Green Party is the only party talking about the environmental solutions that America needs. The Green plan would make us all healthier and safer, and if the poor have more to gain from that (as they've borne the brunt of environmental problems), does that make it any less valid? The fact is that America's working poor have no voice in Washington aside from a handful of maverick Democrats, and Greens are working to change that. And since all Green candidates take a pledge to refuse corporate money, you can be sure they won't back down from protecting our environment.

The Green Party is working hard to get senators, representatives, and other officials elected. However, it makes no sense to sit out the presidential election when Greens would lose hard-won ballot access in many states by doing so. As we watch both parties moving farther into the corporatist camp, it's imperative that we break our addiction to the corrupt, do-nothing Democratic party and build a party based on real American values. If you want more military spending, more drilling, and more government surveillance, by all means vote for Obama/McCain, but recognize my right to vote for a candidate that I actually agree with. If you think I should vote for Senator Obama, then tell him to debate Cynthia McKinney so that we can compare their respective merits.

McKinney and the Greens know that with the corporate media and the Commission on Presidential Debates whiting her out, she'd be lucky if a majority of Americans even knew she were running. That being said, McKinney has wisely defined victory as 5% of the vote - which would establish the Green Party as America's third major party and qualify it for federal matching funds. Think about it - a national party standing up for grassroots democracy, social justice, human rights, peace, and ecological wisdom. That's what we're working for, and if environmentalists and their fellow progressives ever want to stop fighting Washington DC and start running it, then they should help build the Green Party into a force to be reckoned with. Meanwhile, Greens will keep running at all levels, against all odds, because there is so much at stake.

Why should Cynthia run?

Several reasons:
--to give people who have dropped out of politics a reason to register and vote
--to get the Green Party ballot access in states that require running a presidential candidate
--to attract voters to local Green Party candidates on the same ballot line
--to bring attention to issues the other candidates won't dare mention (like single-payer universal healthcare and immediate withdrawal from Iraq)
(by the way she will win if enough people vote for her!)

Don't trust her....

I was in her district in GA when she was in Congress. This woman is not who Greens should be wanting to represent them. When she lost her seat, she & her father (both career politicians) had no qualms about letting their true colors show. They both said it was because of the Jewish vote! This in a district which is massively African-American with a very small Jewish population. She also had some rather outlandish theories regarding the 9/11 attacks, among other things.

Knowing what I know about her, I think the Greens should have looked elsewhere for a candidate. McKinney acted like a nutcase as Congresswoman, & it's likely she hasn't changed much since then. Don't waste your vote on her; she's really not worth it.

Thank you for McKinney attention- finally!

Please keep it up!  I've been a longtime Grist fan, and a registered Green for longer than that, but extremely disappointed in your total lack of coverage for Green Party candidates, rather ironic for an e-rag that dotes on environmental as well as political issues.  You're practically giving McCain the greater benefit of the doubt and free publicity too boot.

Meanwhile, without a third party to apply pressure to the candidates, esp. the Dems, they're free to court the center stripe and back away from ambitious and much-needed change vis a vis everything from energy policy to endangered species.
Case in point . . . offshore drilling.  Obama first opposed it, now is capitulating.  If he had the fear that voters would vote Green instead he might actually stand firm and walk his talk.  McCain is certainly not holding his line, esp in regards to climate change- is it too much to expect of these guys?

Every midterm I hear people bemoaning their own party's ineffectiveness and discussing the need for a new party.  Well here it is folks, but you have to have the fortitude to leave the nest first, or at least make it clear that you expect more from your own candidates, and a system that allows third parties to compete fairly and squarely.

But please Grist-  more Green Party coverage!

NM Green

If multiparty democracy is good enough for our troops to die for in Iraq, it's good enough for the U.S. to enact! Register, vote, respect third parties!

Are you voting for a candidate or a party?

I also live in McKinney's old district in Georgia and think those of you supporting her are just as crazy as she is.

Are you voting for the Green Party or Cynthia McKinney the candidate?  I think anyone that votes party is no better than the ultra conservative republican that votes based on the fact that their candidate is pro-life.  

I agree with Green Party ideals but I have to ask if you seriously believe that she is a better candidate than Obama?  And what about her VP?  I have nothing against Rosa Clemente but I hardly think she is qualified to be a heartbeat from the presidency.

I think the most important thing is that everyone gets out there and votes their conscious but please don't think you're voting for an idea; you are voting for a person (2 actually), the people that will lead our country!

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