I was going to publish some version here anyway, but wanted to get something out before the GP National Convention is done, so here we go.
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"Decentralization."
It's one of the Green Party's Ten Key Values.
But, beyond that, for many Greens, it's a shibboleth.
Should it be?
I think not.
In fact, along with some other Greens, such as Bruce Dixon,
Mark Lause and perhaps Howie Hawkins, among others (my opinions are ultimately
my own, though), I think it's as much impediment as party benefit.
That's both on matters of party organization and on how to
implement particular issues, should Greens gain major state or national
offices.
I'm not a pilgrim. I've voted Green for president every
election this century. I've voted Green in most state races where I've had the
option in Texas. I've been to Green state conventions. When I lived in Dallas, I was semi-involved with local meetings. I've signed ballot
access petitions.
That said, I've probably learned more about the Green Party,
in details of its polity, organization and history, in the past two years than
in the dozen-plus before that.
I've heard comment about things such as the GPUS being
"the 51st state party" and similar. And, I think even if a sketch,
it's not a caricature, and it's more true than false. (Sadly, one reason it isn't totally true is that several state parties are semi-defunct, so it's more like "the 37th state party.")
The 2004 presidential nominating process is arguably one
example. Different state parties' stances on fusion candidacies if their states
allow them, or not, is another. Whether to have dues-paying membership is
another.
I'm not arguing for abandoning the idea entirely.
Centralization is no more a shibboleth for me than decentralization. I do think
it needs to be dropped as a "Key Value," though. Along with that, the
national party needs to be more empowered for creating greater unity across
state party positions. It also needs to include clear positions forbidding
state party delegates or administrators from engaging in activities to boost
candidates of other parties or candidates of other parties. Lause notes the New
York state party pushed for such an issue for the national party to adopt in
2004 and it didn't happen. That needs to be revived. Standard minimum
requirements for state administrative positions would also be good. Per Dixon,
the lack of centralization, and lack of organization that goes with it,
arguably contributed to problems at the 2017 national meeting.
On political positions, de-emphasizing decentralization
would also be good. Greens need to look national-first for many issues,
starting with core issues of environmental concern. Other regulatory issues,
including financial regulation above all, are also not amenable to
decentralization.
Yes, many Greens will note that the description of
decentralization doesn't make the party's focus on that absolute. However, from
what I've seen on social media, many "in the field" Greens take it as
at least near-absolute.
Per Lause, Dixon and others, better organization and clarity
at the national level would not only trickle down to the state level, but
promote better political focus there, too. Both, and others, discussed these
and other issues at the recent Left Forum in New York City.
Will Rogers once said, "I'm not a member of any
organized party; I'm a Democrat."
What would he say of today's Greens?
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Note: I have blogged before about all Ten Key Values.
Independent Political Report has select meeting highlights. Here's the GP's annual meeting subpage.
Margaret Flowers, now a national co-chair, wrote about some issues the party faced back in late 2016 and reposts it now. That includes, though she doesn't use the word, AccommoGreens, though she does mention the safe states strategy.
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Note: I have blogged before about all Ten Key Values.
Independent Political Report has select meeting highlights. Here's the GP's annual meeting subpage.
Margaret Flowers, now a national co-chair, wrote about some issues the party faced back in late 2016 and reposts it now. That includes, though she doesn't use the word, AccommoGreens, though she does mention the safe states strategy.
Decentralization probably means different things to different people. For example, some Southerners might think of states rights, or even "the South shall rise again." This is not what decentralization means to me as a member of the Green Party.
ReplyDeleteThe way I explain it to people is that it refers to lopsided power: An economic elite should not be making all the rules with little or no input from the rest of us. In a word, "decentralization" refers to same thing as "broad-based-democracy."
Another aspect of decentralization is that many Greens favor local banks and credit unions over centralized banks that are too big to fail.
Or this, people living in states should have more say over oil lines that are being placed next to their water sources. We have a very centralized decision-making system that runs roughshod over property owners, the tribes, and just about everyone else who gets in the way.
An example is the placement of the (fiasco) nuclear waste facility in Yucca, "highly contested by the non-local public, the Western Shoshone peoples, and many politicians.[3] The project also faces strong state and regional opposition." The Federal Government tried to place the facility there in spite of the objections of the Governor of the state and many local and non-local people.
I am not for removing all authority from the Federal Government. For example, we need uniform laws governing civil rights, uniform gun laws (in my opinion), uniform, minimum standards not only for environmental protection but for many other areas. Voting, for example, once controlled almost entirely by the states, is now (in my opinion again) an outmoded approach.
Nevertheless, not all Greens will agree with my interpretations, but probably every Green will be able to imagine areas that definitely need to be decentralized. Walmart, in my opinion, is a company that could have been decentralized decades ago. The government has the power and the authority to resist monopolization and restriction of competition among for-profit industries, but they seldom use that power. Why not?
Well, that's about my spiel on decentralization. It leaves room for adding and subtracting, but in general, overly-large corporations that are not regulated by government are prone to overreach that does not serve the nation so well in the long run. In the long run, the bigger the corporation, the more it controls and eliminates competition, which in turn stifles creativity and progress in general.
I said I was stopping, so I had best sign off here. Please feel free to add or subtract, as I said earlier.
Frank Lockwood
Membership Coordinator for Green Party of the Mid-Columbia (Washington State)