{news} GREEN RELEASE Open Letter from Green Party to Michael Moore on Sicko, health reform
Justine McCabe
justinemccabe at earthlink.net
Tue Jul 10 11:03:11 EDT 2007
GREEN PARTY OF THE UNITED STATES
http://www.gp.org
For Immediate Release:
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
Contacts:
Scott McLarty, Media Coordinator, 202-518-5624, mclarty at greens.org
Starlene Rankin, Media Coordinator, 916-995-3805, starlene at gp.org
Green Party to Michael Moore, as 'Sicko' opens nationwide:
. Democrats are a lost cause on health care, while the Green Party's
candidates and platform demand a single-payer national health plan
. Americans will only get a true universal health plan (Single-Payer /
Medicare For All) when Greens are elected
WASHINGTON, DC -- The Green Party of the United States sent an open letter
to Michael Moore, whose movie 'Sicko' opened in theaters last week, urging
him to join the efforts of the Green Party and its candidates and
officeholders to enact a single-payer national health plan (also called
Medicare For All).
The Green Party agrees with Michael Moore's premise that the US's private
insurance system must be dismantled, and that the country must convert to a
single-payer plan similar to the Canadian system.
Greens warned Mr. Moore that the Democratic Party (like the Republican
Party) is too awash in corporate money to end the stranglehold of the
private HMO-insurance industry and enact genuine coverage for all Americans.
Congress will only seriously consider a single-payer plan when Greens
begin to win seats in the US House and Senate.
The Green Party letter encourages Mr. Moore to help Greens get elected to
Congress, as well as state legislatures and city councils, and predicts that
the Green Party's 2008 nominee and national slate will be the only
candidates on most ballots who support single-payer.
The text of the letter follows below.
.
Dear Mike
Congratulations on the opening of 'Sicko' and all the glowing reviews!
We in the Green Party hope that millions of Americans will see 'Sicko' and
understand that America has a choice: we can either have quality health care
guaranteed for everyone, or we can maintain a system based on corporate
insurance and HMO coverage. We can't have both. And we hope that the
American people will realize that it's time to demand a single-payer
national health plan and stop privileging corporate profits over the health
-- the very lives -- of the American people.
Here's the problem: we're not going to get a national health plan as long as
the political landscape remains limited to two parties addicted to corporate
contributions. Republican and Democratic politicians alike refuse to
consider any plan that doesn't leave private HMOs and insurance corporations
in charge.
There are some exceptions among Dems, like Reps. John Conyers (Mich.) and
Dennis Kucinich (Oh.), but Rep. Conyers' single-payer bill has as little
chance of passage as Rep. Kucinich has of getting nominated. Once upon a
time, the Democratic Party supported national health coverage and even
endorsed it in the Democratic national platform in 1948. But they deleted
it from the platform in the 1990s to make room for President Clinton's
'managed-care' phony reform scheme, which would have enlarged the power of
major insurance firms. In the 2000 and 2004 elections, Democratic
presidential candidates Al Gore and John Kerry both rejected national health
insurance. (Mr. Gore saw the light and endorsed it a couple of years
later.)
There's only one prominent national party that supports
single-payer/Medicare For All -- the Green Party. The Green Party and its
candidates have demanded single-payer ever since we were founded, and we
don't accept corporate contributions from HMOs, insurance firms,
pharmaceutical manufacturers, or any other corporate lobby.
Let's be honest, Mike. The USA will never have a national health insurance
program until we break the two-party stranglehold and see the emergence of a
new party that's free of corporate influence.
If we can get a few Greens into Congress, as well as into state legislatures
and city halls all across America, and if our presidential candidates can
draw significant percentages on Election Day, it'll change the political
landscape. When Democratic politicians have to compete with Greens as well
as Republicans, more of them will embrace single-payer. (And some maverick
Republicans will support it, too!)
When the 2004 election season began, you and Bill Maher got down on your
knees in front of 2000 Green presidential candidate Ralph Nader and begged
him not to run again in 2004. You and Bill insisted that 2004 wasn't the
time for a third-party challenge, and that the priority of every rational
American should be the removal of George W. Bush from the White House.
Millions of Americans who support a national health plan -- as well as an
end to the Iraq War -- agreed with you and Bill and voted for John Kerry, a
candidate awash in corporate money. Mr. Kerry dismissed national health
care and declared himself solidly in support of the Iraq War.
What was the outcome? John Kerry and his fellow Dems (again, with a couple
of exceptions like Rep. Conyers) sat on their thumbs when reports of
Election Day irregularities surfaced in Ohio and other states. Thousands,
perhaps tens of thousands of African American and student votes were
obstructed or not counted. Mr. Bush's election in 2004 was as illegitimate
as his 2000 victory!
Mike, I'm sure you remember that it was two third-party presidential
candidates -- the Green Party's David Cobb and Libertarian Michael Badnarik
-- who demanded an investigation and led the Ohio recount. It was Greens
who raised the money for legal expenses in the Ohio and New Mexico recounts.
While John Kerry and his buddies kept mum (maybe they feared that the
Democrats' own election shenanigans would be exposed), Greens fought for
fair and accurate elections and the right to vote.
A few months later, the Conyers hearings proved that the Green Party was
right. Republicans in Ohio not only rigged the election, they also tried to
influence the recount. In January, 2007, two Republican election operatives
were convicted in Cuyahoga County for their role in fixing the recount.
Here's the kicker, Mike. When Republicans in Florida failed to hand in
petitions for George W. Bush before the deadline for the 2004 election,
Democrats gave them a pass and placed Mr. Bush on the ballot anyway!
Imagine the movie you could make about how Republicans and Democrats have
shredded our election system!
We can only conclude that the Democratic Party would rather lose elections
to the GOP than tolerate third parties and independents -- with a special
hostility towards anyone whose campaign brings a noncorporate antiwar
message to the American people.
That's why we can't get a national health program. The Democratic and
Republican leadership doesn't even want Americans to discuss the
single-payer option, although they'll have a hard time censoring the debate
now that 'Sicko' is in theaters.
We know that the private insurance industry, mainstream Democratic and
Republican politicians, and the corporate media are already trying to
undermine the message of 'Sicko.' They're calling national health care
'liberal elitism' and 'creeping socialism' and other names. As FAIR
reported on June 25, CBS's Jeff Greenfield ignored polls in a June 22 story
on 'Sicko' with an erroneous claim that national health coverage has minimal
popular support.
We know that Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and most of the other Democratic
presidential hopefuls are offering corporate-friendly health care reform
plans. We can predict that they'll claim their plans will solve the crisis
depicted in 'Sicko,' just as the Clinton Administration dishonestly called
its managed-care proposal 'universal health care' back in 1993.
On June 26, 2007 six Democratic US Senators spoke at an SEIU-sponsored
'universal health care' rally on Capitol Hill in which single-payer and
Medicare For All were never mentioned. When Dems say 'universal health
care,' they really mean "For God's sake, anything but single-payer!"
The Green Party will be the ONLY PARTY in 2008 that demands single-payer.
The Green nominee will be the ONLY PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE who talks about
single-payer.
We'll be the only party supporting what Michael Moore supports!
The argument that our first priority must be the defeat of the GOP no longer
holds water. Regardless of whether Democrats or Republicans get into public
office, the real winners are powerful corporate lobbies: insurance, HMO,
pharmaceutical, oil, defense, credit card, real estate, you name it. And if
the Republicans manipulate the vote again and engineer their own victory,
blocking African Americans, young voters, poor voters, and voters serving
overseas in the US Armed Forces, we can be sure that the Democratic
leadership will again roll over, scratch their butts, and say "Let's not be
divisive! It's time to move on!"
'Sicko' will not change the Democratic Party agenda. MoveOn, Progressive
Democrats for America, and terrific pro-single-payer candidates like Dennis
Kucinich will not influence the Democratic platform in 2008.
It's a safe bet that MoveOn & Co. will place party loyalty ahead of their
own stated ideals and endorse whichever corporate candidate gets the 2008
Democratic nomination. These Pied Piper Progressives will lure voters who
want single-payer, voters who want US troops out of Iraq, voters who want a
White House and Congress free of insurance, oil, and defense industry
influence into voting for a Democrat who flushes their agenda down the
drain.
As David Cobb observed during his 2004 Green presidential campaign, the
Democratic Party is the "graveyard of progressive politics." It's the
graveyard of national health care.
The Green Party is growing. We've continued to face down antidemocratic
challenges from the old parties. In 2006, Green candidate Rich Whitney drew
11% in the race for Governor of Illinois and achieved ballot status in his
state for the Green Party, after Gov. Rod Blagojevich spent $800,000 in
taxpayers' money trying to keep Greens off the ballot. Nationally, we won
more votes than ever before in the 2006 election. But we have a long way to
go.
Hey, Mike, do you really want to see a national health plan enacted? Do you
really want the message of 'Sicko' to be part of the public debate over
health care in the 2008 election and beyond?
Then let's stop wasting time. Help us run a Green candidate for president
in 2008. Help us get Greens elected to Congress. Help us place Greens in
statehouses and county commissions and city halls and school boards. (Yes,
we know you have supported Green candidates in the past!) Help us get
ballot access in every state. Help us bring the Green message to the
American people. Help us make the Greens a major political US party. Help
us spark the kind of revolution in US politics that will make a single-payer
national health plan a reality!
Yours truly,
The Green Party of the United States
MORE INFORMATION
Green Party of the United States
http://www.gp.org
1700 Connecticut Avenue NW, Suite 404
Washington, DC 20009.
202-319-7191, 866-41GREEN
Fax 202-319-7193
Green Party News Center http://www.gp.org/newscenter.shtml
Green Party Speakers Bureau http://www.gp.org/speakers
'Green for a Change': 2007 Green Party National Meeting in Reading,
Pennsylvania, July 12-15
http://www.gp.org/meeting2007/
Media credentialing page http://www.gp.org/forms/media
Archives from the 2004 Cobb-LaMarche presidential campaign, including
information on the Ohio and New Mexico recounts
http://www.iwantmyvote.com/
The Green Party and Single-Payer National Health Insurance
. "Sen. Hillary Clinton and other Democratic leaders are obstacles to real
health care reform, say Greens" (press release, February 26, 2007)
http://www.gp.org/press/pr_2007_02_26.shtml
. "Democrats and Republicans Downplay Health Care Crisis" (press release,
August 24, 2006)http://www.gp.org/press/pr_2006_08_24.shtml
. Video: Pennsylvania Green gubernatorial candidate Marakay Rogers discusses
national health insurance http://gp.org/video/2006stateofunion/video2.shtml
. Green Party Platform: Universal Health Care
http://www.gp.org/platform/2004/socjustice.html#1004214
Physicians for a National Health Program http://www.pnhp.org
Frequently Asked Questions http://www.pnhp.org/facts/singlepayer_faq.php
"CBS's 'Sicko' Spin: Americans Don't Want Single-Payer Health? Except They
Do"
FAIR Action Alert, June 25, 2007
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=3124
Information on rigged US elections:
"The GOP's Cyber Election Hit Squad"
By Steven Rosenfeld and Bob Fitrakis, The Free Press, April 23, 2007
http://www.freepress.org/departments/display/19/2007/2553
"Will The Next Election Be Hacked? Fresh disasters at the polls -- and new
evidence from an industry insider -- prove that electronic voting machines
can't be trusted"
By Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., Rolling Stone, October 5, 2006 issue
http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/11717105/...
"Our Rigged Elections: The Elephant in the Polling Booth"
By Mark Crispin Miller, The Washington Spectator, October 3, 2006
http://www.washingtonspectator.com/articles/20061001elephant_1.cfm
"Was the 2004 Election Stolen? Republicans prevented more than 350,000
voters in Ohio from casting ballots or having their votes counted -- enough
to have put John Kerry in the White House."
By Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., Rolling Stone, posted June 1, 2006
http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/10432334/was_the_2004_election_stolen
"None Dare Call It Stolen: Ohio, the election, and America's servile press"
By Mark Crispin Miller, Harper's Magazine, August 2005
http://harpers.org/ExcerptNoneDare.html
"New Florida vote scandal feared"
By Greg Palast, BBC, October 26, 2004
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/newsnight/3956129.stm
"Did Bush camp err on ballot papers? Democrats say the president may have
missed Florida's filing deadline, but say they don't plan a challenge."
St. Petersburg Times, September 11, 2004
http://www.sptimes.com/2004/09/11/Decision2004/Did_Bush_camp_err_on_.shtml
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