T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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711.1 | | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Eat dessert first;life is uncertain. | Tue Jul 25 1989 13:33 | 11 |
| I heard the interview on TODAY and then caught the same discussion on
NPR's Morning Edition on the way in.
Apparently there are pretty strong feelings both ways about setting up
an alternative Women's party, similar to the Green in Europe. One
groups says the Republicans will laugh all the way to the polling
booths as Democrats are splintered/factionalized into two parties.
Marge
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711.2 | | HACKIN::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, Aerospace Engineering | Tue Jul 25 1989 14:22 | 13 |
| This is one of the dumber ideas I've heard in awhile. Nothing like
splitting your strength for little or no reason. I think that if they
were to do this that it would have the net affect of:
a) splintering the Democratic party (though I'm not sure it can become
much more fragmented)
b) causing the remaining Democratic party to not worry as much about
"women's issues" since the hard-core/politically active ones will have
already deserted the party.
Its an interesting thought; I'm not convinced enough people would go
that way to influence the election results in the manner they so
desire.
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711.3 | Light a fire under the establishment. | SHARE::EIBEN | | Tue Jul 25 1989 15:15 | 26 |
| From what I've heard and read (the Globe has done a bit of reporting,
and NPR has been carrying the story), NOW had no intention of starting
a new political party until the delegates on the floor started shouting
for a third party. Apparently, the grass roots feel they are not
being adequately represented by either of the political parties.
(that's the grass roots of NOW; not of the country) The idea
apparently got a lot of support at the convention, so the NOW
leadership is going to look into it. That's about all I heard so
far.
As for the opinion being expressed that this is a bad move, I'm
not so sure. After watching the Democrats (during the last national
election) lean as far to the right as they could without toppling
over, I think a new political party can only do good. It may remind
the Democrats where their constituency is. It may bring more people
to the polls. It may force the Democrats to form a coalition.
It may provide some real choices at election time. It may just
flop, as all other American third party attempts have. I don't
think, however, that it will do irreprable (sp?) damage to the
Democrats, however. Let's face it, they haven't been winning elections
as it is, a bit more splintering will hardly be noticed.
Besides, I'm sick and tired of helplessly watching fat, balding old
men in dark suits make decisions which profoundly affect my life.
I'd enjoy some more equal representation.
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711.4 | My 2 cents | BUSY::NPEASLEE | NANCE | Tue Jul 25 1989 15:19 | 30 |
| Re: .2 "This is one of the dumber ideas I've heard in a while.
Nothing like splitting your strength for little or no reason."
Why do consider this dumb? Is it dumb (to you) because you can't
comprehend the concept behind it?? Is it dumb to you because you
don't agree with it?? Or is it dumb to you because you feel threated
by women getting closer to their goal of equality?
Whose strength does this actually split?? And why do you feel
that there is no reason for this? Perhaps you had a difficult time
comprehending the simple terminology I used in the base note.
One of the goals of this party is to **IDENTIFY** women's issues.
Many of these "women's issues" can have a significant impact on
families, i.e. children and men not just women. Many of the issues
aren't only women's issues - they are issues that will affect everyone.
This party would like those issues to *at least* be openly
aknowledged by the two major parties.
That, to me, is a damn *good* reason.
Its obvious that this will have an impact on the Democratic Party.
It will have an impact on the Republican Party too. It will
force these parties to open their eyes to many issues that have
been side stepped. Will anyone representing the NOW party actually
win an election? Its possible but not probable at this point in
time. Will this party reach one of their goals of getting the issues
they represent addressed?? Yup, probably - therefore I feel that
there is a very good reason for their existence.
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711.5 | counter productive? | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Tue Jul 25 1989 15:42 | 20 |
| I think that a new political party may be counterproductive. A
case could be made that Jessie Jackson helped Bush win by starting
the rainbow coalition. If some significant fraction of the rainbow
coalition stayed home rather than vote for Dukakis (who seemed
closer to the rainbow coalition than Bush did on every issue I'm
aware of), then by trying for a particular candidate, they
indirectly helped the candidate who was farthest from them.
If there are two parties and a third one forms that's to the left
(whatever that means) of both of them, then the liberals split
their vote and the conservatives gain. N.Y. State has a history of
this in Senatorial elections. In filling Robert Kennedy's seat
Goodell (liberal republican) and Ottinger (democrat) split the
vote to allow Buckley (conservative) to win. A few years ago
Javits and someone else split the liberal vote to put Alphonse
D'Amato in the senate.
I'm afraid that in this case "The best is enemy of the good".
--David
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711.6 | I was the grassroots ... | PROSE::BLACHEK | | Tue Jul 25 1989 16:04 | 24 |
| Ellie Smeal has been talking about a third party for the last four or
so years. This whole topic got brought up at a workshop this weekend
in Cincinnati. I think it was orchestrated by the NOW leadership. I
attended each plenary session and it was NOT discussed as a grassroots
type of thing.
What did get voted on was to have a resolution looking into the idea of
a third party. But this is a hot topic right now and the press jumped
on it.
I personally will not support it. I voted to study it, because there
is merit in that. But I don't think a third party is a viable
alternative in our country. Look how long the Libertarians have been
trying. However, if this scares the hell out of some politicians, then
it will be great to just discuss it.
Some people tried to get the choice issue off of the Democrat platform
in 1988. If we had talk of this party going around, I doubt very much
that that would ever be brought up again. The Democrats cannot afford
to lose us.
Just one opinion,
judy
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711.7 | sign me up! | DECWET::JWHITE | I'm pro-choice and I vote | Tue Jul 25 1989 16:09 | 12 |
|
for what it's worth, in iceland the women's party is a full partner in
the ruling coalition.
as for here, i would be more hopeful if a women's party had a policy
wherein it could throw its support to major party candidates. this is
the flip side to mr. wittenberg's observation about new york state
politics: occasionally a democrat has been elected because s/he also
had the support of the liberal party.
that being said, i think it's a great idea.
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711.8 | | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Tue Jul 25 1989 17:04 | 15 |
| RE: .6
The democrats can't afford to lose the feminist vote, but by the
same token, the feminists can't really afford to lose the
democrats, as the only alternative is the republicans, who seem
even less of a fit. Third parties have rarely managed to get their
candidates elected.
Re: .7
I like the idea of an organization that throws its support behind
major party candidates with whom it agrees. I just don't like
seeing the vote split when they can't reach agreement.
--David
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711.9 | Ever hear of Independents? | DELNI::P_LEEDBERG | Memory is the second | Tue Jul 25 1989 18:37 | 23 |
| FWIW - I don't think that an adult would serious call
another adult "dumb" face to face - now would
they!
Remember, there hasn't always been a Democrat and a
Republican party - the US has had a number of other
parties some have changed and some have just died out.
Remember the Federalist?
NOW would not be looking for just Democrats but Republicans
who are fed up with the non-response they are getting and
but at that sizable glob of independents who are floating
free. I am not sure that a goodly number of the free-floaters
would be adversed to joining a party like the Green.
_peggy
(-)
|
CHOICE transcends political barriers
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711.10 | index: individual liberties | SKYLRK::OLSON | Partner in the Almaden Train Wreck | Tue Jul 25 1989 19:08 | 70 |
| I'll admit to ambivalent feelings about several of the things mentioned
so far in this string...and part of it is because I don't really feel
at home in either of the two mainstream political parties today
(although I usually identify myself as having voted Republican in the
last major election on foreign policy issues).
First- a comment on leftwards-rightwards dimensions; I don't think the
distinction is accurate, though I recognize its been the shorthand for
describing the spectrum from "liberadical" to "archconservative" for
quite a long time now. The single dimension (left vs right) doesn't
really do justice to the complexities among political thought. So
identifying a potential women's party as "farther left" doesn't tell me
anything useful. Among many other dimensions of the political spectrum
today, the one I use more than any other is not "left vs right"; its
"towards vs away from maximal individual liberty"; more on that below.
I entered a long paragraph on the disintegration of the parties but
I'll spare you; it wasn't that conclusive, so I'll just toss out my
conclusions as opinions. The parties are not unified and able to forge
strong programs with any solidarity; any big issues see dozens of
politicoes fence sitting instead of toeing party lines. The cause/
effect relationship is not clear to me, but single-issue constituencies
are clearly gaining the ability to influence these political programs.
A women's-issues party could have a significant voice in this climate.
In response to David's observation in .8-
> The democrats can't afford to lose the feminist vote, but by the
> same token, the feminists can't really afford to lose the
> democrats, as the only alternative is the republicans, who seem
> even less of a fit.
I was more than a little bemused to read this and some of the
preceeding comments about fat old men (or whatever Republican
stereotype someone trotted out, can't remember.) I was just thinking
about how well *either* party really fits women's issues. To my way
of thinking, my concerns in any election are to do with preserving
the maximal amount of liberty we've managed to retain despite our
government's history of abuse of those individual freedoms. The
Republican's biggest offenses in these areas stem from their prudish
attempts to dictate morality; anti-gay, anti-choice, anti-drugs,
anti-porn, etc. The Democrat's biggest offenses stem from their
inability to see that building larger government programs to provide
handouts saps the economic health of productive people, provides
little encouragement to freeloaders, and, since public spending is
always more inefficient than private spending, always results in waste.
[Note: I'm not saying that all assistance program beneficiaries are
freeloaders. I've read and well remember the stories in this conference
and elsewhere. Please don't ask me to defend something I haven't said.]
However, while both parties have their transgressions against freedom
for individuals, they both also have their strong points. The Democrats
support choice, for example; the Republicans (more often than not) support
the 2nd Amendment. So insofar as women's issues "fit" one party better
than another, I can't really agree with David that the choice is obvious.
That is, I think that the feminists can well afford to do without the
Democrat party and go it on their own; raising the issues of importance
to women, not spending time or compromising concerns in political deals
merely to participate within the existing, traditional party structures.
DougO
PS- To avoid the ratholes, I freely admit that all the statements in
the above note on specific issues are only opinions. Those opinions
have coalesced into this perspective on this note's topic...a party for
women's issues. If you *must* take up my opinions on the specific
issues, please do so within the context of an appropriate note...I won't
defend 2nd Amendment or pro-choice or other specific issues here. Thanks.
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711.11 | Need a change in party platforms | ACESMK::POIRIER | Be a Voice for Choice! | Tue Jul 25 1989 19:15 | 11 |
| RE: 10
I'm glad to see someone else feels the way I do! I'm tired of the
"spend more money on the problem and the problem will go away" attitude
of the Democrats and I'm tired of the "morality pushing" & "defense
intensive" of the Republicans. I've voted mostly democratic fearing
the loss of liberties is more important to me right now. But neither
party really fits my bill. I'm ready for a change - I don't know if
the NOW party is that change we need though.
Suzanne
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711.12 | what can I say? I'm a political centrist | HACKIN::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, Aerospace Engineering | Tue Jul 25 1989 19:28 | 19 |
| Given the results of the Anderson campaign in '80, I'm not convinced
that an independent party does anything except sap the support base of
the other "major" party most closely aligned with it. In the case of
NOW-based party, its my unsubstantiated guess that it will weaken the
already weak power base of the Democratic party and not significantly
affect the base of the Republican party. And they still would not get
people into political office since there probably (again, my guess) not
be enough support for them. There are a lot of people I know who
consider themselves advocates of "women's rights" but are in
disagreement with a lot of the "left-oriented" positions taken by NOW.
Having NOW candidates join the major party of their choice would have a
better chance of winning, and thus furthering their agenda, than
running under a different party. The biggest win, in my opinion, would
to have NOW candidates running under the republican ticket since that
appears to be, on the national level at least, where there are the most
differences between the party and NOW policies.
I could be wrong, though, since a number of other parties have come and
gone over the course of American history.
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711.14 | | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Jul 26 1989 15:13 | 20 |
|
I believe that the time is right for a third party. And I agree
with Eagle that the third party platform must include all of those
segments of our society who feel alienated and powerless.
A third party that stood for individual freedom, for equal rights for
everyone regardless of sex or sexual inclination, regardless of
color or religion. One that seeks to protect the rights of the
individual. One that works towards world peace and most important
that seeks to heal and preserve the precious ecology of our planet.
A third party that represented everything this country believes
in and stands for in the traditional sense while seeking to focus
on the problems that face us in our modern world. We spend billions
on defense but it is the destruction of our planet that looms as
the greatest threat to our survival.
I believe that a third party who incorporated all of these issues
into it's platform would win the hearts and loyality of many, many
Americans today. Its time!
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711.15 | I like | RUTLND::KUPTON | Let Dad pull that tooth for ya | Wed Jul 26 1989 16:44 | 10 |
| Being a Right Wing Independent officially, but a Republican
Centralist voter, I'd love to see a third party with a liberalist
platform. It would solidify the Right, Split the Democratic money
spending machine, polarize the Rightist Demos, and probably get
3 seats in the house and 0 in the Senate. It would give the majority
to the Republicans in both Houses and near guarantee the White House
to the Republicans for at least 12 years.
Ken
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711.16 | | SX4GTO::HOLT | Robert Holt @ UCS | Wed Jul 26 1989 23:25 | 4 |
| re -.1
You are a troublemaker, right..?
|
711.17 | But.. | MAMIE::KEITH | Real men double clutch | Thu Jul 27 1989 09:14 | 12 |
| Would this new party (I can assume Pro-Choice) also support Pro-gun
(not control). It seems if you use the premise of freedom to choose
for one you can make the same argument for the other.
I do have to agree that the women's movement would be hurting
themselves by leaving the Dems.
The Dems have made themselves 'jack of all trades, masters of none'
so to speak. They try to appeal to too large a group, which by the
way do not necessarily vote (as witnessed by the last pres election).
Steve_now_readying_for_flames.
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711.19 | | SX4GTO::HOLT | Robert Holt @ UCS | Thu Jul 27 1989 14:54 | 9 |
|
My take is that an exclusively women's party would be by necessity
a fringe party. But if we added the planks of the Green platform,
such as peace, disarmament, environment, and conservation, we'd
have a new party with a chance of throwing out the crooks sitting
in Washington DC now...
I believe the Greens of Europe have an essentially NOW-compatible
feminist plank (from what I hear on PBS anyway)...
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711.20 | 2 parties could nominate the same person | TLE::INSINGA | Aron K. Insinga, zk2-3/n30 (3m23), 381-1928 | Fri Aug 04 1989 14:38 | 11 |
| It may be that a N+1th (can't really say 3rd since we do have the Libertarian
etc.) party doesn't need to field a different candidate, but can be a more
effectively way of brokering a block of votes than the current organizations
have. For example, it is my understanding that NY has >4 parties: something
like added Liberal and Conservative parties, which usually nominate the same
candidates as the Democratic & Republican parties, but not necessarily.
("If you really buy into putting plank X into your platform, we'll put your
name on our lever in the voting booth, too; otherwise, we'll find someone
else...")
(Is there anyone who is/was into NY politics who can verify/correct this?)
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