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The Case for a National TRY Strategy.


Are the Green Party and the Nader 2000 organization squandering squan·der  
tr.v. squan·dered, squan·der·ing, squan·ders
1. To spend wastefully or extravagantly; dissipate. See Synonyms at waste.

2.
 an exceptional opportunity to secure widespread implementation of instant runoff voting Runoff voting can refer to:
  • Two-round system - a voting system used to elect a single winner, whereby only two candidates from the first round continue to the second round.
 (IRV IRV inspiratory reserve volume.

IRV
abbr.
inspiratory reserve volume



IRV

inspiratory reserve volume.
)? I will confess to 20/20 hindsight here, but I fear the answer may be "yes."

It is axiomatic ax·i·o·mat·ic   also ax·i·o·mat·i·cal
adj.
Of, relating to, or resembling an axiom; self-evident: "It's axiomatic in politics that voters won't throw out a presidential incumbent unless they think his challenger will
 that Green Party candidacies, beyond solely promoting the distinct Green Party platform, use the "spoiler spoiler: see airplane.

1. spoiler - A remark which reveals important plot elements from books or movies, thus denying the reader (of the article) the proper suspense when reading the book or watching the movie.
2.
" threat to inspire legislative or popular attempts to enact IRV laws. These efforts are most likely to succeed if Greens put as much thought into a linked post-election IRV lobbying/organizing strategy as we put into a particular candidacy itself. The New Mexico New Mexico, state in the SW United States. At its northwestern corner are the so-called Four Corners, where Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah meet at right angles; New Mexico is also bordered by Oklahoma (NE), Texas (E, S), and Mexico (S).  Green Party has demonstrated such success over the years, most recently in getting an IRV bill through the state senate and missing by only one vote getting the bill out of a committee in the state house of representatives.

But where the New Mexico Green Party typically has carefully planned in advance its post-election IRV lobbying efforts, to the point of knowing precisely which state legislator to target as the one to introduce an IRV bill (in the recent case, the very state senator it spoiled in a federal congressional race), neither the Green Party nationally nor the Nader 2000 campaign prior to the election had formulated a post-November 7 IRV lobbying strategy.

Further, even in these post-election months, no discussion appears to be taking place regarding a coordinated strategy. A few weeks after the election, the Steering Committee and some committee chairs of the Association of State Green Parties met privately with Ralph Nader in Washington, DC for a post-election debriefing de·brief·ing  
n.
1. The act or process of debriefing or of being debriefed.

2. The information imparted during the process of being debriefed.

Noun 1.
, but they did not discuss an IRV strategy. Similarly, no strategy was planned at the December meeting of the Coordinating Committee of the ASGP ASGP Association of State Green Parties
ASGP A Small Garlic Press
ASGP Association for the Study of German Politics
ASGP Association des Secrétaires Généraux des Parlements
ASGP Alaska Space Grant Program
ASGP Action Solidarité Grand Plateau
 in Georgia. For its part, the Nader 2000 organization now retains only a skeletal staff in Washington, DC; it retained its state coordinators only through the end of November.

Let us not allow the momentum of the 2000 Presidential campaign to dissipate irretrievably ir·re·triev·a·ble  
adj.
Difficult or impossible to retrieve or recover: Once the ring fell down the drain, it was irretrievable.



ir
. As the standard bearer of this campaign, Ralph Nader could have a singular leadership role to play in a national campaign for IRV. It is not too late for Nader 2000 to take advantage of its vast donor list to fund the rebuilding of its organizational capacity--including hiring state coordinators--and merely change its focus from a Presidential campaign to a national campaign to enact IRV laws. The experience would be a familiar one for the Nader campaign, which charted each state and its ballot access requirements, then put forth a plan for meeting these requirements. Charting each state for requirements for an IRV initiative and developing appropriate implementation strategies would not be a great conceptual leap for the Nader 2000 folks.

Why advocate a nationally coordinated Nader/Green Party campaign for IRV? Since one of the 10 Key Values is Decentralization de·cen·tral·ize  
v. de·cen·tral·ized, de·cen·tral·iz·ing, de·cen·tral·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To distribute the administrative functions or powers of (a central authority) among several local authorities.
, and since the conduct of elections remains in the realm of state statutory law, why not just leave this type of organizing to individual state Green parties?

The answer, simply put, is the difference between enacting 1 or 2 IRV laws by the 2004 Presidential election and enacting 10 to 15. The Green Party should certainly have learned this lesson from its experience with ballot access. Prior to the 2000 Presidential election, just over 10 state Green Parties had attained ballot status over a period of a decade. With the coordinated leadership, strategy, and resources it provided, the Nader 2000 campaign attained a spot on the ballot either for Ralph Nader himself or for the Green Party in about 30 more states.

My own state of Michigan serves as a case in point. The Green Party of Michigan The Green Party of Michigan is the state party organization for Michigan of the Green Party of the United States. The party has had ballot access in Michigan since November 2000.  failed three times prior to 2000 to attain statewide ballot status, in part because Michigan stands in the upper rank of states with restrictive ballot access laws. The GPMI GPMI Green Party of Michigan  has Ralph Nader to credit directly for our ballot line: he hired a capable national field coordinator in Todd Main and state coordinator in Juscha Vannier, and Nader's high-profile, credible progressive campaign attracted countless new people into the party. Even so, we always felt we were "running scared" during the petition drive, and as a cushion against challenges we resorted to a loan (which we still have not completely paid oft) from one of our members to pay petitioners.

Now, as difficult as it was for the GPMI to collect and submit the required 32,000 signatures for ballot status, it would be impossible for us on our own to collect the over 242,000 signatures that would be required to place an IRV initiative question on the ballot in Michigan. Many states that allow the initiative process present a similar story: a signature requirement for initiative 5 to 10 times that for political party ballot access. (A complete list of states that allow initiative, including their signature and other requirements, can be found at the website of the Initiative and Referendum Institute The Initiative and Referendum Institute is an organization promoting initiative and referendum in the United States. It maintains a state-by-state history and status report of the Initiative and Referendum system throughout the country. : www.iandrinstitute.com). These types of numbers can only be secured through broad coalitions.

A reconstituted--and perhaps renamed--Nader 2000 organization, again working with the Green Party, could use the experience and momentum of the 2000 presidential campaign to build such a national coalition. To demonstrate how, I can again draw on the experience in my home state.

A key dynamic of the 2000 presidential campaign was a variant on the process of inspiring in legislators and citizens a desire to enact IRV laws through spoiling a race. In the presidential race, instead, the inspiration to enact IRV laws comes through the frustration people experienced in having been afraid to support the right candidate in the first place out of concern that he would have been a spoiler. In Michigan, there was no better symbol of this fear and frustration than the sentiments of Steve Yokich, the president of the United Auto Workers' Union (UAW (spelling) UAW - Misspelling of "IAW"? ). Yokich knew full well that Nader was the best candidate for the American Worker, given Nader's supportive stance on issues like the Living Wage, WTO See World Trade Organization. , NAFTA NAFTA
 in full North American Free Trade Agreement

Trade pact signed by Canada, the U.S., and Mexico in 1992, which took effect in 1994. Inspired by the success of the European Community in reducing trade barriers among its members, NAFTA created the world's
, Taft-Hartley repeal, etc. Just after the Congress, with Gore's support, approved permanent PNTR PNTR Permanent Normal Trade Relations  status for China, a fuming fuming /fum·ing/ (fum´ing) emitting a visible vapor.

fum·ing
adj.
Producing or emitting smoke or vapor, as for certain concentrated nitric, sulfuric, and hydrochloric acids.
 Yokich issued a statement in which he hinted that the UAW might support Nader. But, out of the fear that support for Nader might lead to the election of the greater of two evils, Bush, the UAW fell into line and supported the lesser of two evils, Gore.

Surely this experience has made Yokich receptive to the need to replace the winner-take-all electoral system. If the UAW, along with other unions, joined an IRV coalition in Michigan, this would certainly cinch cinch

a saddle girth on an American stock saddle. Tightens with a knot on a ring instead of with straps and buckles.
 such a coalition's ability to get an IRV initiative proposal on the state ballot, and would vastly increase the prospects of actual passage. Certainly the GPMI could approach the UAW about organizing such a coalition in Michigan, but it was Nader who, through his stature, actually achieved a one-on-one meeting with Yokich last May. And further, why limit such organizing to one state, when the UAW has a significant presence in other industrial states with initiative, such as California, Massachusetts, Missouri, and Ohio? Countless other likely candidates for membership in a broad IRV coalition also are national in scale. Some of them, such as the Sierra Club Sierra Club, national organization in the United States dedicated to the preservation and expansion of the world's parks, wildlife, and wilderness areas. Founded (1892) in California by a group led by the Scottish-American conservationist John Muir, the Sierra Club  and the PIRGs, have already made public statements in support of IRV since November 7. Nader could also attempt to recruit into an IRV coalition t he many issue-oriented national groups he has founded in the past, such as Common Cause and Public Citizen, as well as the organizations that endorsed his presidential campaign. Finally, if the other "minor" political parties came on board as well, none of the issue groups would have to be concerned about the appearance of partisan alignment with the Green Party.

Absent a national strategy, the prospects for enacting IRV will likely be spotty at best. The citizens of Alaska have succeeded in getting an initiative question on the ballot. States with strong Green Parties and traditions of using statewide initiatives, such as Oregon and California, could also succeed with IRV campaigns. Where initiative is not available, as in New Mexico, the NMGP will surely persist in its patient effort to get the legislature to act. The Vermont legislature has also had IRV under consideration. Finally, in rare cases where local municipal elections are partisan and home rule traditions are strong enough, Greens might lobby for municipal elections through IRV: the Huron Valley Greens in Michigan have discussed the possibility of working to re-establish the IRV ordinance that the City of Ann Arbor used in the 1975 municipal elections.

However, if Greens and others want to see IRV implemented in the near future, and on a scale that makes a significant difference in American politics and society, then a national, coordinated IRV campaign will be essential.

James J. Nicita was the Green Party of Michigan's candidate for Wayne State University Wayne State University, at Detroit, Mich.; state supported; coeducational; established 1956 as a successor to Wayne Univ. (formed 1934 by a merger of five city colleges).  Board of Governors in the November 7, 2000 election.
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Title Annotation:Instant Runoff elections
Author:Nicita, James J.
Publication:Synthesis/Regeneration
Article Type:Statistical Data Included
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 22, 2001
Words:1489
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