Howie Hawkins for New York

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9 WAYS TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE BEFORE ELECTION DAY TOMORROW

November 6, 2006 · Leave a Comment

1. Display one of these Hawkins banners on your blog

2. Poll visibility on election day
Statistics show that visibility on election day raises the vote total by more than 10%!

Go to a busy intersection, or to the polling booth on election day (as long as you are 100 ft. away from booths) with some friends or local greens and hold a Hawkins banner or sign while distributing/posting Hawkins posters or literature
http://hawkinsfornewyork.wordpress.com/2006/11/05/active-campaign-coordinators/

3. E-mail or call NPR political editor Ken Rudin at politicaljunkie@npr.org and ask him why Howie Hawkins isn’t included in NPR’s “Election Map 2006″ http://www.npr.org/news/specials/election2006/map/ | (202) 513-2000

4. Write a blog post criticizing Hillary Clinton (gets more internet views and name recognition) while supporting Howie

or send a letter of support to local New York newspapers
http://www.usnpl.com/nynews.html

5. Show a Youtube video of Howie to a friend, or show them Howie’s website at HawkinsforSenate.net
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=howie+hawkins&search=Search

6. Watch the Daily Show or Colbert Report tonight with some friends and keep a look out for Howie’s campaign ad! Then tell them what you know about Howie!

7. Ask a friend/relative/associate who they are voting for, talk about the issues and then tell them about Howie Hawkins

8. REMIND PEOPLE TO VOTE!

9. If you have more ways to help, share it with us by leaving a comment below!

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Campaign coordinators

November 5, 2006 · 2 Comments

Contact your closest local coordinator TO VOLUNTEER FOR ELECTION GET OUT THE VOTE ACTIVITIES!

Or take action yourself with some friends and let us know what you’re doing! Let Howie’s Campaign & nearby coordinators what you plan to do!
Suggestions: Poll visibility, literature distribution from house to house or dorms, good food afterwards, banner holding at intersections/high traffic areas, phone banking Sunday and Monday

Albany
Meet up at Green House, 10 South Lake Ave, (518) 451-9469

Phone banking:  Tuesday – all day (as necessary)

Tabling @ Campus Center, SUNY Albany Uptown
Tuesday 10am-3pm

Tuesday, Nov 7th: Election Day!!
Poll Watching 6-9PM
Visibility 7am-5PM (in shifts)
Palm carding

Albany Election Night Party!: Begins 10pm, after poll watchers return from vote, 10 South Lake Ave.

Binghamton
Andrew Epstein (campus), aepstei3@binghamton.edu, 914-316-4728
or Michael Lurie (city), 607-797-7162

Buffalo / Williamsville
Eric Jones, jazzyjones@hotmail.com

Canton
Ellen Connett, pesticides@flouridealert.org, (315) 379-9200

Dutchess County
Fred Nagel, info@dutchessgreens.org

Glens Falls
Matt Funiciello, mattfuniciello@earthlink.net, 518-361-6278

Geneseo
Michael Case, mac23@geneseo.edu

Ithaca
Victoria Jordan, vjordan@ithaca.edu, 607-277-3967
or Tompkins County Workers Rights Center, 115 The Commons, Ithaca, NY
607-277-3968

New York City
Manhattan Green Party Office, 139 Fulton Street, Suite 215
212-240-0501
Tues., Nov 7th, Election Day: (NYC, Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn) Poll Watching, Poll Visibility, call Jerry 646-724-9983

NYC Green election day party has been organized at Rocky Sullivan’s, 129 Lexington Ave., @ 29th Street, NYC, # 6 train to 28th Street, 9pm to the wee hours. we will have NY1 on two standard screens over the bar and a giant pull down screen in the back as well as session music and tons of food to be prepped by Ann Eagan, Anya Szykitka, Mark Borino and Rebecca White complimentary sodas, juice, water, $4 Jameson $3 Pabst/Miller Light and $4 wine

Bronx
Carl Lundgren, cllundgren@earthlink.net
718-792-1728

Brooklyn
Colby, 917.627.8000 colby@riseup.net or Lidiya Lednyak, ledjo4894@hotmail.com, 646-258-1569

Queens
Jerry Kahn, jerrykann99@yahoo.com(not preferred), 646-724-9983

New Paltz
Rachel Lagodka, lagodkar@newpaltz.edu, 845-255-3442
or Margaret Human at 845-750-0764

Oswego
Robin Miller, rmille29@twcny.rr.com, (315) 342-7933

Plattsburgh
Jeremy Schneider, rideonice@aol.com, 914-419-1982

Poughkeepsie
Reed Dunlea, redunlea@vassar.edu, 518.598.9992

Rochester
Jason Nabewaniec, j_nabs@hotmail.com , 518.219.4981 (home), 315. 729.7048 (cell)

Saratoga County
Barbara Trypalek, rsage@nycap.rr.com, 518.583.4487

St. Bonaventure
Linda Sinni, sinnila@sbu.edu, 908.227.3493

Syracuse
Syracuse Greens Office, 2617 South Salina Street, Syracuse
315.474.7055
Schedule another drop on Sunday: 315.474.7055

Election Day: All Day! Palmcarding, Visibility outside of Polls.

9pm: Election Night Party at Syracuse Greens Office

Wayne County/ Macedon
Stacy Gulick, hippie_wantab@yahoo.com, (315) 986-8547

Westchester County
Dan Nalven, dmn@nalven.org,914.941.6488

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McCourt Governor Bid has Serious Side

November 4, 2006 · 1 Comment

By Ray O’Hanlon
rohanlon@irishecho.com

Having been born in America, Malachy McCourt could mount a bid for the presidency if he so chose. As such, McCourt has a leg up on Arnold Schwarzenegger.

The governor of California faces a constitutional bar on a White House run because he is not a natural born American citizen. So there will never be a presidential race pitting these two larger than life men, no fight to the finish between the terminator and the tormentor of those who hack along the usual roads to high political office.

In the meantime, however, there is the matter of the New York governor’s race, an event in which McCourt is both the candidate for the Greens and, given the relative paucity of political office-seeking on his otherwise extensive resume, the greenest of candidates.

At 75, a milestone he recently passed flying more colors than just his adopted party’s, McCourt would be forgiven if he put his feet up and simply contemplated a decently long life that has drawn on the absurdities of earthly existence as a fuel for, well, proclaiming to anyone within earshot the absurdity of earthly existence.

But the truth is that Malachy McCourt takes a lot in this world seriously, very seriously.

True, you might have to look past a wall of funny lines as long as the great one in China, but it would be wrong to believe for a minute that the McCourt onslaught on Albany is entirely devoid of gravitas.

“Yes I do take this seriously,” McCourt said this week just before entering a studio for a radio interview.

“Just to mention two issues. I want to see the withdrawing of National Guard troops from Iraq and the outlawing of corporate contributions which amount to the purchasing of politicians,” he said.

As governor, McCourt would also give teachers big pay hikes. If he made them retroactive his brother Frank would owe him big time.

Serious issues aside, McCourt’s presence in the New York race has given the affair a levity that has been almost entirely absent in any race, in any state, this grimly set midterm election year. He is, for example, the only candidate in the country who has proclaimed that if he wins the first thing he will do is demand a recount.

At the beginning of this year, Malachy McCourt was a Democrat. He was, and remains, avowedly anti-war and, as a candidate for governor, has picked up the endorsement of activist mom Cindy Sheehan. He was approached by the Green Party on the basis that, given his singular profile, he would not have trouble securing the 50,000 signatures required to run for governor on that party’s ticket.

By hook and by crook he secured them and the rest, you never know, might be history. But if not history, then at least a little hysterical. Whether he likes it or not, Malachy McCourt has the cut of a politician, though perhaps one of another time and a place. He might have been the Irish-American mayor of a big city in the glorious and damnable days of Tammany.

He might have been Boss McCourt, or maybe Plunkitt.

And pigs may have flown but there was nobody around to notice.

Regardless, by simply being himself, Mayor McCourt would have made people laugh, thus at least putting himself on a higher plain than many a onetime mayor, governor or indeed president more apt to make the voters groan. It will be curious indeed to see how many New Yorkers vote for McCourt on Nov. 7. Behind the celebrity status that he brings to his adopted party, McCourt’s candidacy is being seen by some as a symptom of a wider need for noticeable third choice candidates in local and national politics.

Of course there are not a few voters who would see McCourt more in terms of being a third rail candidate. Either way, his bid, be it eccentric or essential, has to be seen against the backdrop of an increasing number of voters across the country declaring themselves to be independent of any party affiliation; a sign, if one was needed, that there is now a need in American politics for a viable third party.

If one evolved, it’s a fair bet that Malachy McCourt would not join. He is above all, a rebel, an independent, one of a kind, even in the context of a family that seems to have a trademark on all of those categories. Like his famous brother, Frank, Malachy was one of the Brooklyn McCourts who emigrated in reverse back to Limerick. Before Frank was a literary celebrity, Malachy was certainly very well known if not necessarily known very well. When he returned to America in the early 1950s he worked a variety of jobs before setting out to become an actor. This he did with a fair degree of success. Along the way he was a radio talk show host who was frequently summoned to television shows to keep the talking going.

This he did with ease and aplomb. As a writer and raconteur, however, McCourt, arguably, found his truest callings. He co-authored the play “A Couple of Blaguards” along with Frank and, like his brother, has produced a torrent of writings and musings over the last decade or so. The two most prominent of the McCourt brothers seem to be engaged in a bookish version of a weapons race. Frank, despite a literary trifecta that includes the Pulitzer-winning “Angela’s Ashes,” is trailing Malachy who now has eight titles in print including the best selling memoir, “A Monk Swimming.” Malachy’s latest tome, “Malachy McCourt’s History of Ireland” is quite simply that and is, if nothing else, less stressful than the real thing. It is also surprisingly sympathetic towards a number of Irish historical figures who McCourt would have little time for in purely political terms. Which begs a question. Would Malachy McCourt the rebel and outsider have anytime at all for Governor McCourt?

By way of an answer, here’s a prediction. Should Malachy McCourt be elected governor of New York, once he has stopped laughing and has rammed his serious initiatives through the gobsmacked legislature, his next move is a no-brainer.

He will found an underground movement dedicated to his own downfall.

Categories: Uncategorized

Top 10 Reasons Why to Vote Howie, Not Hillary!

October 29, 2006 · Leave a Comment

Howie Hawkins is the Green Party Candidate for U.S. Senate from
New York State. For more information, please see:
http://hawkinsforsenate.net/howie-not-hillary/howie-not-hillary.php

Please send this to your friends in New York State.

Top 10 Reasons Why to Vote Howie, Not Hillary!

10.  Howie never served on Wal-Mart’s board of directors, nor he did own stock in South Africa diamond company De Beers while other Americans were dropping their investments in that country’s corporations to protest apartheid.

9.  Howie isn’t running for president in 2008, so he cares more about voters in Buffalo, Manhattan and Utica than he does about voters in Buffalo, Texas; Manhattan, Kansas; and Utica, Mississippi.

8.  Howie isn’t a cosponsor of a Utah Republican’s “flag-protection” amendment.

7.  Howie didn’t raise nearly $50 million in campaign contributions over the past six years. His top donors aren’t major corporations and their officials, and he didn’t raise the most campaign contributions from the Wall Street investment banks, stock brokerages and hedge funds of any politician in the country.

6.  Howie supports health care for all Americans, allowing Americans to import low-cost prescription medications from Canada and using the federal government’s buying power to negotiate better drug prices for seniors. He hasn’t taken PAC money from America’s Health Insurance Plans, Humana, Aetna, Express Scripts, UnitedHealth Group, Caremark RX, Hoffmann-La Roche, Pfizer and Sanofi-Pasteur.

5.  Howie wants to crack down on high credit-card and banking fees the average American faces and stop predatory lending. He can push these issues because he hasn’t accepted PAC money from American Express, Bank of America, Bank One, Citizens Financial Group, Washington Mutual and HSBC North America.

4.  Howie would support lower-polluting renewable sources of energy and require auto manufacturers to increase fuel economy. You guessed it: no PAC money from General Motors, Exxon Mobil, National Grid, KeySpan Energy or Duke Energy.

3.  Howie didn’t vote for Bush’s Patriot Act, and he will fight to protect the Bill of Rights, which makes our democracy the world’s best. He will demand answers from Bush’s cronies on why the administration is spying on law-abiding groups such as the Raging Grannies, the American Friends Service Committee, Gold Star Families for Peace, 9/11 Families for Peaceful Tomorrows, People for the American Way and the NYCLU.

2.  Howie didn’t vote for Bush’s Iraq war, and unlike Hillary, Howie wants to bring the troops home now. (Some of Hillary’s defense contractor PAC donors include BAE North America, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Raytheon and Northrop Grumman.)
1.  After the past six years, isn’t it time to vote for someone who will fight for what you believe in? Vote Howie Hawkins for Senate, for peace, for the people.
If you can spare a dollar or more for each of these reasons, please make a donation to Hawkins for Senate at http://www.hawkinsforsenate.net/donate/index.php

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Help display these banners on your websites!

October 28, 2006 · 3 Comments

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10/22 NYC Debate Protest Pictures

October 24, 2006 · Leave a Comment

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10/20 Rochester Protest Pictures

October 21, 2006 · Leave a Comment

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Oct 22: Protest the Silencing of Anti-War Candidates

October 20, 2006 · Leave a Comment

— please forward widely –

Let Howie Hawkins in the Debates! (more…)

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Take Action! Contact the Sponsors of the Debates and Tell Them: Let Howie Debate!

October 14, 2006 · 3 Comments

UPDATE: League of Women Voters of New York State Withdraws Sponsorship From Candidate Debates” Thank you!

Please contact the sponsors of the debates below by phone, email, fax and letters and demand: “I want Howie in the Debates, Exclusion is Un-Democratic!” Please give the League of Women Voters in NYC a big THANK YOU for taking a stand for Democracy!

League of Women Voters NYC – Co-host of Oct. 22nd NYC Debate
Phone: (212) 725-3541
E-mail: lwvnyc@hotmail.com
Fax: (212) 725-3541
Address: 45 East 33rd St #331, NY, NY 10016
www.lwvnyc.org

League of Women Voters, Albany State Wide Office
Email: kris@lwvny.org, lwvny@lwvny.org Phone: (518) 465-4162
Fax: (518) 465-0812
Address: Mrs. Marcia A. Merrins, President
League of Women Voters of New York, 35 Maiden Lane, Albany, NY 12207-2712

(more…)

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Pick-Up Locations for Hawkins Materials

October 14, 2006 · 2 Comments

recently added: Buffalo

Albany
Contact: Mike
E-mail: okym@riseup.net
Phone: (518) 451-9469

Binghamton
Contact: Michael
Phone: (607) 797-7162

Buffalo
Contact: Eric Jones
E-mail: jazzyjones@hotmail.com

Ithaca
Contact: Worker’s Rights Center
Phone: (607) 269-0409
or Contact Victoria
Phone: (607) 277-3967

Glens Falls
Contact: Matt
Address: 21 Saratoga Rd. Gansevoort, NY
E-mail: mattfuniciello@earthlink.net
Phone: (518) 361-474-7055

New Paltz
Contact: Rachel
E-mail: Rlagodka@bestweb.net
Phone: (845) 430-0941

Poughkeepsie
Contact: Reed
E-mail: redunlea@vassar.edu
Phone: (518) 598-9992

Syracuse
Contact: (315) 474-7055

Central Westchester County
Contact: Dan
59 Morningside Dr.
Ossining, NY 10566
E-mail: dmn@nalven.org
Phone: (914) 941-6488

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