Showing posts with label North Bridge Alliance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North Bridge Alliance. Show all posts

Monday, April 1, 2013

A case for public banking as the cure for cannibals

"Too big to fail" is also "too big to jail," but how does that practical immunity drive the buisness practices of our largest banks? Over the last decades we've seen the finance industry undermine the long-term economic vitality of much of the country's manufacturing base and its housing stock. Are private for-profit banks invariably parasitical? What might have been different in this country if instead of bailing out casino capitalists, the public sector had simply taken over failing banks, regardless of size? Why should we beware public-private partnerships in banking?

Here's some brief but powerful answers to those questions, all of which makes a strong argument for public banking. The presenter is Michael Hudson, a former financial analyst and now a professor of economics at the University of Missouri at Kansas City, appearing on The Real News Network last week.

AfD members are active with public banking working groups in Massachusetts and Washington DC. To keep up with these and other campaigns, subscribe to our e-news.


More at The Real News

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Monday, November 12, 2012

Resolutions in favor of amending Constitution to ending corporate access to constitutional rights pass by wide margins on Election Day


America has declared loud and clear that it wants the Constitution amended. Every ballot resolution supporting amending the Constitution to end corporate access to constitutional rights passed, whether at the local, county, or state level, and in most cases at a rate above 70%. Voters in more than 150 cities, towns, counties and state weighed in, bringing us, by one count, 1/4 of the way toward amendment!

Some examples:
Both Colorado and Montana had statewide ballot measures on the ballot and while the language was different, both states approved their measures with at least 74% approval rates.  The Montana measure called for overturning Citizens United, abolition of corporate personhood and declared that money is property, not speech. (Demonstrating that you don't have to be a "liberal" to support ending corporate personhood, Montana voters also approved ballot measures which require parental notification to an abortion for a minor, deny certain government services to illegal immigrants and prohibit government from mandating the purchase of health insurance.)

Colorado's measure was narrower in scope. Amendment 65 called for a constitutional amendment to overturn Citizens United and to allow Congress and the states to limit campaign contributions and expenditures. It went on to instruct the Colorado legislature to approve such an amendment when Congress sends it to them. Pueblo County, Colorado, also had a resolution on the ballot declaring that artificial entities like corporations do not have constitutional rights, that money is not speech, and that limiting political contributions and spending is not equivalent to limiting political speech. Despite the local paper editorializing against it, the resolution passed with 65% of the vote.

On the local level, a third of Massachusetts voters weighed in on a non-binding public policy question calling for amending the US Constitution to affirm that corporations do not have the constitutional rights of human beings and that Congress and the states have the right to limit political contributions and spending. The question passed with a 76% approval rate overall, including those towns carried by Republican Senate candidate Scott Brown. (AfD'ers were very active in this campaign through the North Bridge Alliance for Democracy chapter.)

In California, San Francisco voters approved Prop. G with 81% of the vote. In Richmond, voters approved Amend 2012 with 72% of the vote. Mendocino County, the first California county to place a Move to Amend citizen's initiative on the ballot, explicitly voted to "stand with the Move to Amend campaign" by a 73% margin. (Several Alliance for Democracy Mendocino Chapter members and supporters worked on this measure!)

Seventy-four percent of the voters in Chicago approved amending the US Constitution to Take Back Our Vote which called for allowing the federal government and the states to "regulate and limit political contributions from corporations."

Four ballot questions went to voters in Oregon. In Ashland, voters approved a measure stating: "Shall Ashland voters instruct Congress to amend U.S. Constitution to grant only natural persons constitutional rights and limit campaign spending?" It passed by 79.5%.

Corvallis voters approved a measure stating: "Shall the City urge elected representatives to support Constitutional Amendment denying artificial entities’ personhood and rejecting money as speech?" It passed by 75%.

Eugene voters approved a measure stating: "Shall Congress send to the States constitutional amendment reversing the negative impacts of the Citizens United case and limit independent campaign spending?" It passed by 73%.

Finally, Lincoln County voters approved a measure stating: "Should citizens urge Congress/Oregon Legislature to amend Constitution to clarify corporation/union political speech rights, allowing campaign finance regulation and limits?" This passed by 77%.

Read more:
Peter Schurman:  America on its way to overturning Citizens United http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2012/11/08/174102/america-on-its-way-to-overturning.html
Move to Amend: Election Roundup
Reclaim Democracy: State Initiatives to Revoke Corporate Personhood and Overturn Buckley v Valeo Win Big  

Read more...

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Mendocino petition drive meets signature goal, Massachusetts not far behind

Alliance members and supporters in Mendocino County, California, and eastern Massachusetts have reached signature goals to get voter referenda against corporate personhood before the voters.



In Mendocino, the Citizens Advisory measure is on the ballot, after 5661 signatures were turned in, 74% more than the 3240 needed! 



Next, the county Board of Supervisors will put the measure on the ballot. The initiative is on their July 24th agenda; supporters are urged to turn out and show support. 



Tom Wodetzki, AfD member and co-chair of the Mendocino County Move to Amend effort, writes: "Ours could be the first county in California to pass such a citizens initiative, and thereby join the growing number of counties, cities and states nationwide expressing a strong desire to restore real democracy. 


"Our federal and state representatives are not acting to end this outrageous corruption of our elections," he said, "since they benefit from the status quo. So only an ever-growing demand from the grassroots will get the legal change we need, which has to be in the form of a Constitutional amendment." 



“Bravo!" writes Nancy Price, AfD Co-chair and member of the Move to Amend National Organizing Team. "Significantly, the Mendocino initiative supports an amendment to abolish ALL [corporate] constitutional rights, including the First Amendment, and reversal of the doctrine that money is speech. We will only get one chance at a Constitutional amendment and it has to be one that will really set the country on the path to end corporate rule and restore real democracy.”



In Massachusetts, North Bridge Alliance Chapter members petitioned with  Common Cause, Greater Boston Move to Amend, and other groups to get a non-binding referendum question on the ballot in three eastern Massachusetts state senate districts and one representative district. Other groups worked on collecting signatures on Cape Cod and in western Massachusetts. Organizers will know in August whether a sufficient number of signatures are certified, but in most districts the number collected was well over the required number to get the measure before voters.
 


In both Massachusetts and California, resolutions in favor of an amendment to overturn Citizens United only were introduced in state legislatures. California recently passed theirs, becoming the sixth state in the country to do so.

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Monday, January 23, 2012

Occupy the Courts: Boston

In Boston, Occupy the Courts inspired more than 200 people to come down to the waterfront and rally at the Joseph J. Moakley Courthouse. After a fife and drum fanfare, they heard from AfD member and Greater Boston Move to Amend affiliate coordinator John Hill, state Representative Cory Atkins, and Pam Wilmot of Common Cause. Rounding out the rally, a skit in which a certain famous monopolist auctioned off free speech, the White House, the 2012 elections and Congress to a bunch of eager corporations until the ignored 99% took charge and put him under citizens arrest.

North Bridge chapter members brought three carloads of demonstrators and volunteers from the greater Concord area, where they were joined by folks from the north and south shores as well as Cape Cod. The rally was co-sponsored by several local organizations including Alliance for Democracy, Clean Water Action of Massachusetts, Coffee Party USA, Common Cause Massachusetts, Community Labor United, Corporate Accountability International, Greater Boston Coffee Party, The LEAH Advocacy Group, Massachusetts Senior Action, MassVOTE, Progressive Democrats of America, and the Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Andover. Occupy Boston stood in solidarity with us, and Operation Woof, the canine contingent of Occupy Boston, also turned out to remind us that if we need to know what human is, we should ask a dog.

Video of the event isn't online, but the local Univision affiliate provided some good coverage here. You can see some pictures of the event here.

After the rally both AfD and Move to Amend supporters participated in a two-day Occupy Boston "Rally and Summit to Unite Citizens for Democracy," featuring panel discussions, trainings and presentations, and a reprise of the auction skit.

We'll be following up with new contacts at a meeting on February 2, at 7 p.m. at the Cambridge YWCA--for more information, please email bostonmta@gmail.com.

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Monday, May 16, 2011

Close vote in Concord--what about your town?

In a tight, and ultimately disappointing vote, Concord (Massachusetts) town meeting voted down a town-wide ban on single-serve, PET bottled water last month. The vote came a year after the 2010 town meeting passed a ban on bottled water, only to have it overturned by the state's Attorney General's office because it was not enforceable as written. The ban was introduced by town resident Jean Hill.

The 2010 version passed with little controversy. But even though this year's ban was more narrowly written to focus only on PET bottles of less than 1 liter, it attracted out-of-town opposition from the International Bottled Water Association, headquartered in Virginia. In the weeks before town meeting residents received mailings from the IBWA and "push poll" calls from individuals who were, according to reports, unwilling to identify the organization they were working for.

Proponents of the ban countered with letters to the editor from nearly a dozen residents, including members of AfD's North Bridge chapter. AfD'ers helped with get-out-the-vote and a public forum, and organizers from Corporate Accountability International and Food and Water Watch provided background info on the social and environmental costs of bottled water, as well as help with strategy.

Despite the loss, organizers intend to keep building on the educational work they've done and hope to get a larger group of residents together to work on a future ban. Concord voters did pass two related measures at town meeting, one asking the town to support a voluntary ban on bottled water, and another encouraging sustainability, and these steps could be foundations for more comprehensive action.

And, of course, Concord doesn't have copyright on the idea of banning bottled water. If your town would like to cut down on plastic waste and make a strong statement about protecting water resources from commodification, Concord organizers want to talk to you! Contact backthetap@gmail.com for more information.

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Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Two events in Boston!

The Boston/Cambridge and North Bridge chapters are co-sponsoring the following events on militarism, climate, and human rights:

Friday, 2/11: "No War, No Warming!"
Barry Sanders, author of The Green Zone: The Environmental Costs of Militarism, examines the environmental impact of US military practices and declares military activity, from fuel emissions to radioactive waste to defoliation campaigns, as the single greatest contributor to the worldwide environmental crisis. Dr. Maggie Zhou, Biologist, member of Massachusetts Coalition of Healthy Communities and Climate SOS, will discuss the climate justice perspective, international climate conferences in Cancun/Copenhagen/Cochabamba, and the race to militarism vs. peace.

The talk takes place Friday, February 11 from 7 to 9 p.m. at Boston University's Photonics Building, 8 St. Mary's Street. Download a flier here. Map & directions here. Suggested donation, $5.

Co-Sponsors: Boston UNAC, United for Justice with Peace, Alliance for Democracy - Boston/Cambridge & North Bridge chapters, Peace & Justice Task Force of Watertown Citizens for Environmental Safety, Massachusetts Coalition for Healthy Communities, Massachusetts Global Action, Boston University Antiwar Coalition

Say 'No' to the Anti-immigrant "Secure Communities" Program! A Call for United Action

On Saturday, February 12th from 1 to 3 p.m., people from across Massachusetts will come together at the State House to fight against the State's intention to join the anti-immigrant and racist “Secure Communities” program. 


Under the guise of public safety, “S-Comm” endangers the civil rights and security of all and is particularly an attack on immigrants and people of color. The federal program mandates local law enforcement to cross check the fingerprints of those arrested against the Homeland Security's database in search of immigration status. While supposedly targeting violent offenders, the vast majority of those detained and deported are considered “non-criminals”. This would include those who have been unlawfully arrested, those arrested for minor offenses like traffic violations and those who ultimately have their charges dropped.

In Suffolk County, the only jurisdiction in the state currently enrolled, 68% of those detained and deported have been “non-criminals”, the sixth highest percentage in the country. 

The "S-Comm" program is part of an overall effort to target immigrants and maintain a permanent second-class status for millions of workers.

Initiated by the Boston May Day Committee (BMDC - participants: Mass. Global Action, July 26 Coalition, Tecschange, Latinos for Social Change, Socialist Alternative, Socialist Party USA, Socialist Workers Party, ANSWER Coalition) 

Endorsers (as of 2/4/11): Boston/Cambridge and North Bridge Alliance for Democracy, Circulo Bolivariano Marthin Luther King, Community Church of Boston, Dominican Development Center, Harvard No Layoffs Campaign, Industrial Workers of the World, International Action Center, National Lawyers Guild - Boston, Party for Socialism and Liberation, Project Voice AFSC, Proyecto Hondureno, Stop the Wars Coalition, Student Labor Action Movement (SLAM) 

For more information, contact the Boston May Day Committee or call 617-290-5614. Sign the on-line petitions demanding that the U.S. sign the UN Convention on Migrant Workers Rights at the Boston May Day Committee website.

Read more...

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

North Bridge members help speak out for democracy at Concord's Patriots Day festivities

by Barbara Clancy, AfD office and North Bridge Alliance for Democracy
After our very well-attended public meeting on Citizens United, corporate personhood, and the need for an amendment to protect the rights of people from being misappropriated on behalf of corporations, we followed up with a poster-making party and a stand-out at Concord's Patriot's Day parade. North Bridge AfD members joined representatives from the Concord-Carlisle League of Women Voters, and members of climate groups from Concord and Carlisle.

Feedback from the crowd was mostly positive, with some others curious about what the signs meant, but then supportive once they heard about the Citizens United decision and what's being done to counter it.

Some of the demonstrators standing out along the parade route:


















North Bridge Alliance member Mary White talks to Concord League of Women Voters members after the march:


















We're going to be hosting another speakers event with Mary Zepernick of POCLAD and State Senator Jamie Eldridge on May 19 in Concord. Jamie, who was elected to the Senate as a "clean elections" candidate during Masschusetts's brief era of public funded elections, has said he is interested in filing a resolution in favor of a constitutional amendment barring corporate free speech rights.

Read more...

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Mary Zepernick on the history of corporate personhood and a broad amendment strategy for overturning it

Last week, North Bridge Alliance for Democracy joined with Concord Carlisle League of Women Voters, Concord CAN, and the Carlisle Climate Action Network to present a panel discussion on the Citizens United decision and its implications for American democracy. Mary Zepernick, of POCLAD and WILPF, one of the presenters, was unable to attend in person but sent the following history of corporate personhood as well as her observations on the need for ending all corporate appropriation of personhood rights through a Constitutional amendment.

WILPF, POCLAD & AfD have been allies since the latter two organizations’ founding some 15 years ago, though WILPF has 95 years on the other two. And here we are on the Steering Committee together of the campaign to Legalize Democracy: movetoamend.org.

On occasions like this I describe myself as a reconstructed US history teacher doing penance. Of the many lenses through which to view US history, one that is central to our purpose this evening is: Who is and who is not a person under the law? And what does this mean for our ongoing quest to be truly self-governing?

At the outset, legal persons were white propertied men, 55 of whom gathered in Philadelphia in 1787, closed their doors and replaced the Articles of Confederation with the Constitution – sealing their records for half a century. The historian James Beard referred to them as the well bred, well fed, well read, and well wed!

Cape Cod’s revolutionary pamphleteer and playwright Mercy Otis Warren when the new document was unveiled: the Senate is too oligarchical, the country is too big to be governed by a strong federal system, and where are the rights of the people?

Mercy would be even more outraged to learn that the three Democratic and three Republican Senators brought together by Max Baucus in search of a health insurance plan are from states with a combined population of 8.4 million, 2.7% of the US population. The country is many times larger now and still in the hands of a strong federal government, despite growing dissent. And the rights of the people have been hijacked by property’s most powerful expression, the corporate form.
A significant Court decision in 1803 set the stage for subsequent judicial supremacy, all the way to Citizens United v FEC and beyond, until we change it. Chief Justice John Marshall established in Marbury v Madison: the principle of judicial review: the right of the federal courts to review actions of executive or legislative bodies to determine their consistency with statues, treaties or the Constitution. Then President
Thomas Jefferson wrote: “ To consider judges as the ultimate arbiters of all constitutional questions is a very dangerous doctrine indeed, and one which would place us under the despotism of an oligarchy.”

Given the oppressive role of the Crown trading corporations and colonies under the British, post-revolutionary corporations were small, relatively few in number, and restricted by the conditions of their charters, which were often amended or revoked by state legislatures or courts when violated .

An example of the prevailing political culture regarding corporations is the PA legislature’s declaration in 1834: "A corporation in law is just what the incorporating act makes it. It is the creature of the law and may be moulded to any shape or for any purpose that the Legislature may deem conducive for the general good."

This was no golden age of democracy, but the corporate form was in the appropriate subordinate relationship to the people’s representatives – not withstanding the fact that at this point legal persons still consisted of white men, usually propertied.More than a century later, Justice Felix Frankfurter described the modern corporation this way:

“Today’s business corporation is an artificial creation, shielding owners and managers while preserving corporate privilege and existence. Artificial or not, corporations have won more rights under law than people have– rights which government has protected with armed force.”

So what happened between the Pennsylvania legislature’s and Justice Frankfurter’s description of the corporation role’s in society? The short version is that by the mid-19th century, the industrial revolution, the growth of railroads and banking, then the Civil War saw an increase in the size and wealth of corporations. Corporate executives and lawyers sought ways to slip the bounds of their charters, bringing case after case up through the federal court system. As you probably know, they hit pay dirt in 1886, in an otherwise insignificant tax case. A since-disputed headnote in Santa Clara v. Southern Pacific Railroad declared the corporate form a person under the 14th Amendment to the Constitution.

Of the three so-called Civil War Amendments – the 13th abolishing slavery and the 15th granting black males the vote – the mighty 14th was the corporate prize. Here is the relevant passage for our purpose:

No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty,or property without due process of law; nor deny to any person with its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. Due process and equal protection

WILPF’s timeline includes the corporate “person’s” Bill of Rights protections that flowed from the Santa Clara decision; here are some examples:

• 1893: due process of the 5th Amendment

• 1906: “search & seizure protection of the 4th Amendment

• 1908: 6th Amendment right to trial by jury

• 1922: “takings clause” protection of the 5th Amendment

• 1976: 1st Amendment: “Political money is equivalent to speech” (Buckley v Valeo)

• 1977: 1st Amendment used to void a Massachusetts law restricting corporate spending on political referenda

A similar timeline could be constructed for the slow march of rights gained by women, including the Suffrage Amendment in 1920. Not until 1971 was the 14th Amendment ruled to apply to women, though it was assumed in earlier cases!

For WILPF’s campaign to Challenge Corporate Power, Assert the People’s Rights, AfD and WILPF and AfD members Jan Edwards and Bill Meyers coined the phrase: Slavery is the legal fiction that a person is property, and corporate personhood is the legal fiction that property is a person,

In 1857 the Supreme Court declared in Dred Scott v Sandford: "The right of property in a slave is distinctly and expressly affirmed in the Constitution. The right to traffic in it, like any ordinary article of merchandise and property, was guaranteed to the citizens of the United States, in every state that might desire it...And no word can be found in the Constitution which give Congress a greater power over slave property, or which entitles property of that kind to less protection than property of any other description. The only power conferred is the power coupled with the duty of guarding and protecting the owner in his rights."

Ten years after the Santa Clara decision on corporate personhood, the Supreme Court declared in Plessy v Ferguson, 1896, that separate but equal accommodations were legal.Thus African Americans saw their personhood diminished, even as the corporate form continued to accumulate power based on corporate constitutional rights. Half a century later, Brown v Board of Education in effect reversed Plessy. However, early last year the Supreme Court overturned desegregation plans in Seattle and Louisville. And women’s right to abortion, Roe v Wade, 1973, has been steadly assaulted and eroded.

Thus our struggle continues between justice and equality for natural persons and the illegitimate rights of the so-called corporate person to usurp our promised self-governance. May we seize this opportunity to see that the Supreme Court has at last overstepped its bounds!

According to Larry Kramer, author of The People Themselves, American revolutionaries considered the notion of "Popular Sovereignty" more than an empty abstraction, more than a mythic philosophical justification for government. The idea of "the people" was more than a flip rhetorical gesture to be used on the campaign trail.  Ordinary Americans once exercised active control over their Constitution.

After the initial shock at the 5-4 decision in Citizens United v FEC, dropping the remaining barriers to corporate funding of the people's elections, many of us realized that Court had actually handed us a great opportunity. In the 15 years that AfD, POCLAD, WILPF and a growing number of allied activists have focused on illegitimate  corporate power and rights, there has never been the ferment in the press and populace that this case has created. 

Why is the Campaign to Legalize Democracy: movetoamend.org using a broad amendment strategy?  In effect, we are seizing the opportunity to exercise active control over our Constitution – not a document belonging to the Courts, nor to the Congress nor to the Chief Executive, but to us, the people's Constitution. At this stage, no one knows the"right" path to take. This is a long term, multi-layered challenge. It's not a contest but a collaboration between two approaches (and probably more to come).

Given the nature of the case itself, it's logical and useful to have a focus on the First Amendment: freespeechforpeople.org. 

It's  logical for those of us who have been organizing around "legal" but illegitimate corporate constitutional rights to seize this opportunity to raise a range of issues and to go for what we want and need: like the examples in my talk's short list of cases, taking back our rights from the corporate form. In the wake of a retreat in California following the September rehearing of the case, these two approaches began to form. Since then the email dialogue representing a range of people and views in both budding campaigns has been vigorous, respectful and fruitful.

The Campaign To Legalize Democracy; movetoamend.org aims to claim and make real in law and practice our birthright of self-governance. The Steering Committee, representing 15 organizations, and dozens of partners and endorsers believe that the Supreme Court is misguided in principle and wrong on the law.

Thus we reject the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in Citizens United, and move to amend our Constitution to:

    * Firmly establish that money is not speech, and that human beings, not corporations, are persons entitled to constitutional rights.
    
* Guarantee the right to vote and to participate, and to have our votes and participation count.
    
* Protect local communities, their economies, and democracies against illegitimate "preemption" actions by global, national, and state governments.     

Signed by 74,255 and counting . . .

Read more...

Monday, March 22, 2010

North Bridge chapter helps turn out a crowd in Concord to discuss constitutional amendments and corporate personhood

A standing-room-only crowd of more than 100 people from Concord, Massachusetts, and surrounding towns, came out on Friday, March 19 to learn what the Citizens United decision means for election funding, and to start a discussion on what steps need to be taken locally and nationally to curb the Supreme Court's attack on democracy.

The talk was entitled "Democracy in the Balance: Corporate Power in Politics," and was modeled after the local "Life in the Balance" speakers series on environmental issues.

Planned speakers included Jeffrey Clements and John Bonifaz, of FreeSpeechforPeople.org, and Mary Zepernick, of WILPF and POCLAD, both part of the Campaign to Legalize Democracy/MoveToAmend.org coalition. Unfortunately, Mary couldn't attend in person, but sent a statement, which was read by a member of the Concord-Carlisle League of Women Voters, who sponsored the event along with AfD's North Bridge chapter, and the Concord and Carlisle climate action groups.

Although the audience was made up of people from a variety of local groups--including some supporters of the Citizens United decision--the general belief was that getting money out of politics was the necessary first step to achieving any substantial government action on any issue. Questions focused on ways to contain the behavior of corporations beyond their participation in politics, on various reforms proposed in Congress, and on the merits of an amendment to limit corporate First Amendment rights versus an amendment eliminating all personhood rights for corporations. FreeSpeechforPeople.org's approach, as explained by Jeff Clements, was to focus on taking away corporate First Amendment rights and overturning the legal definition of money as speech as the most harmful instance of corporate personhood because of its effect on campaign finance. Others in the audience felt that corporate personhood as a whole needed to be abolished.

Many in the audience signed up to be part of future events and action groups.

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Thursday, March 11, 2010

Concord, Massachusetts forum on corporate personhood and defending democracy

What led up to the Citizens United decision, how will it affect elections and our democracy, and what actions can individuals take in response? To answer some of these questions, four Concord, Massachusetts community groups have organized "Democracy in the Balance: Corporate Power in Politics," a free public forum on Friday, March 19, 2010, from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Trinitarian-Congregational Church, 54 Walden St., Concord, MA.

The forum will feature three experts on the issues raised by Citizens United:

  • Mary Zepernick, a researcher for the Program on Corporations, Law & Democracy and a board member of the Women’s International League of Peace & Freedom, both of which filed an amicus curiae brief in Citizens United;
  • Jeffrey Clements, the Concord lawyer who was counsel of record for that amicus brief; and
  • John Bonifaz, constitutional lawyer, founder of the National Voting Rights Institute and legal director of Voter Action in Western Massachusetts.
The March 19th forum has several aims:
  • To look at the historical highlights of government restrictions upon or expansion of corporate power since the founding of our nation;

  • To explain the recent Supreme Court case and its likely impact on our democracy; and

  • To explore current options for redressing the now unfettered corporate influence on elections.
After the presentations, there will be an opportunity for discussion. This free forum is open to all, and refreshments will be served.

Democracy in the Balance is co-sponsored by four community groups dedicated to educating and engaging the public: the Alliance for Democracy, North Bridge chapter; Carlisle Climate Action; ConcordCAN (Concord Climate Action Network); and the League of Women Voters of Concord- Carlisle. For more information, visit www.lwvcc.com, email DemocracyForum@lwvcc.com or call 978-369-3842.

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Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Corporate personhood and home rule will be topics of Boston-area forums

Members of the Boston/Cambridge and North Bridge Alliance chapters will be working on organizing two forums on two related issues: corporate personhood and reforming municipal home rule.

The corporate personhood forum will feature an introduction to the history of the usurpation of personhood rights by corporations, with a focus on the decision in "Citizens United v. FEC" and its potential impacts on our election system. Depending on the scope of the decision--which could be broad enough to imperil state-level campaign finance law--the forum will also emphasize actions that individuals and organizations can take to counter a ramped-up "pay-to-play" political system.

Home rule, the idea that localities should be able to pass and enforce laws without unreasonable interference from higher levels of government, was a featured topic of discussion in the recent "Democracy and Relocation" workshop that AfD'ers Dave Lewit and Ruth Caplan facilitated in Boston, and is key to rights-based campaigns, like the work of the Defending Water for Life project. When states or the federal government limit home rule, it means that decisions on local resource management, public health or other issues are turned over to legislators that are less responsive to constituent needs.

In Massachusetts, home rule law has short-changed the city of Boston, overruled local rent-control ordinances, and most recently made it difficult for one town to regulate noxious fumes from a local pig farm. Even legislators agree that the system needs an overhaul. Robust home rule enables a bottom-up strategy for fighting corporate rule.

Look for updates in future issues of the e-news and on the AfD blog.

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2009 end-of-year report

Here's the wrap-up on major chapter and national campaign activities for 2009--if you're not an AfD member, why not join now? A stronger democracy in 2010 should be on everyone's list of resolutions!

Contribute on-line here. If you'd like to join but can't afford to make a donation right now, please email the Alliance for Democracy at afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org.

2009 AfD Activity Report

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Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Corporate personhood strategy session in Concord, Massachusetts

This Sunday, join Boston-area AfD members, local activists, and citizens concerned about corporate rule at the Alliance for Democracy's southern New England member meeting. Not a member? Come anyway!

Seating is limited, since the venue is a member's home in Concord--please email afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org for location and directions and to RSVP, or if you need a ride from the train station!

We'll be meeting from 4-7 p.m on Sunday, November 8 with:

  • Ruth Caplan, Director, Alliance for Democracy’s Defending Water for Life project--How have small towns organized to take away corporate personhood rights?
  • Jeffrey Clements--the Concord lawyer who authored an amicus curiae brief in “Citizens United v. FEC”—the “Hillary, the Movie” case. The case will be decided by the US Supreme Court and could overturn decades of hard-fought victories against corporate influence peddling in elections.
If you'd like to stay for a potluck dinner! Please consider bringing an entrée, vegetable or salad, or dessert to share (local ingredients if you can!). If not, Jeffrey and Ruth will be speaking from 4 to 5:30 or so, with questions.

Get involved! Come find out what the national organization has been doing, what local chapters and members are working on, and how you can participate in creating a healthy democracy—locally and nationally. Join old friends and new for good food, good conversation and good news about grassroots alternatives to corporate rule.

RSVP to afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org.

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Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Is there a regional meeting near you?

The latest on our regional meetings! If you don't see one near you, organize one! It doesn't have to be elaborate--if a potluck and discussion meets your local needs, that's fine. We can also suggest possible topics for speakers or films, and provide you with literature and in some cases dvds. For more information, contact afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org

October
Oct. 6, Tuesday, Blue Hill, ME
Blue Hill Public Library, 7:00 pm
AfD national council member Bonnie Preston hosts panel on water with Emily Posner Defending Water for Life in Maine on bottled water; Sarah Bigney of Maine Fair Trade Campaign on trade and water; Antonio Blasi, a member of Maine Water Allies, active in eastern Hancock County, on ground water; and Nancye Files, of Alliance for Democracy Downeast.

Mid-October, Sacramento, CA, TBA
AfD Defending Water for Life Campaign hosts with other co-sponsors the movie “Tapped” on bottled water. View trailer and Ruth Caplan here. Nestlé is coming to Sacramento and we’re fighting back!

Oct. 31, Saturday, Portland, OR
First Unitarian Church, SW 12 and Salmon, Time TBA
Watch AfD Portland website for details. Possible topics: election reform in OR and the nation; corporate personhood and corporate money in elections: Citizens United v. FEC; water privatization: Cascade Locks/Nestlé and bottled water-Bull Run reservoir and costly water treatment plants;

November
Nov. 8, Sunday, Concord, Massachusetts
Boston/Cambridge Alliance and North Bridge Alliance potluck focuses on corporate personhood and Citizens United v. FEC

Nov. 12, Thursday, Davis, CA
Time/Place TBA: Potluck and discussion of the corporate voice vs. the people’s voice in local land-use development campaigns

Nov. 12, Thursday, Pittsfield or Rochester, NY
Time/Place TBA: Local Potluck Dinner and discussion on “Do Corporations Rule the World?”

Nov. 14 -15, Sat-Sun, Ukiah, CA
Bi-annual Convention of Northern California Alliance for Democracy
“Rethinking Rights of Corporations in Northern California: What Can Local Communities Do Now?” Details coming!

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Monday, July 27, 2009

In Boston, Thursday July 30, Rally at the State House for Single Payer

On July 30th, Medicare turns 44. To celebrate, attend a rally to ask Governor Patrick and candidates Charlie Baker and Christy Mihos to give America the gift of Medicare For All!

Expanding Medicare to cover everyone in America would mean lower health care costs, better medical treatment, and improved access to vital health services for all of us. Join us to ask candidates to give the gift of universal health care to our country!

Thursday, July 30
12 Noon
Front Steps, State House Boston

For more information, call (860) 281-9792, or visit www.massjwj.net

Sponsors: Mass-Care, Jobs With Justice, Mass Nurses Association, Democratic Socialists of America, Boston Liberation Health Group, Physicians for a National Health Plan, Jewish Alliance for Law and Social Action, Our Bodies Ourselves, Alliance for Democracy, UE Northeast Region, Progressive Democrats of America

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Monday, May 4, 2009

Southern New England Afd'ers meet

On April 11, AfD members from Eastern Massachusetts and Rhode Island met for a day-long conference entitled "Maintaining Democracy: Undermining the Corporate Agenda from the Bottom Up." It was an opportunity to find out more about member and supporters activism, and to hear from groups allied with AfD about their work, with special focus on climate change and localization, healthcare, and media.

Invited speakers included Nancy Lee Wood, who has been working on peak oil education and preparing her community and university for a post-carbon future: Jill Stein, from Massachusetts Coalition for Healthy Communities, speaking on climate change: local radio hosts Stan Robinson and John Grebe on media: and Katie Robbins, from Healthcare-Now, discussing the national push for single-payer health care. Barbara Clancy from the Alliance office talked about AfD’s work for single payer, focusing on state level work in New York, Pennsylvania, California, and Massachusetts. Member-educator Mary Rossborough discussed her work on economics; Garrett Whitney
introduced Concord (MA) actions on climate change and the transition town concept, and David Lewit talked about economics and localization, Cynthia Whitty gave a short history of her town’s long-term community-building activism, and Ruth Weizenbaum recognized the volunteers who keep the “Other Voices” video project on the air. Raging Grannies provided the music!

It was a full day, with, sadly, less time for open discussion than had been originally planned. A “post conference” chapter meeting is in the works to consider follow-ups to the event, including a possible New England conference in the fall, and a roundtable on localization and building local and regional economies.

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Thursday, March 26, 2009

Saturday, April 11: Northeast AfD Regional Meeting

Fed up with corporations running the country? Want to know how the corporate agenda shapes policy on energy, trade, and regional issues? Grassroots action for changing the status quo will be the focus of the Alliance for Democracy's Northeast Regional meeting on Saturday, April 11. Entitled "Maintaining Democracy: Undermining the Corporate Agenda from the Bottom Up," it will be held at the Walker Center, 171 Grove Street, Auburndale, MA. The day-long conference features a special emphasis on preserving and expanding democracy as we deal with peak oil, health care, media, sustainable communities, trade and other issues. For information, call the Alliance office at 781-894-1179, or email afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org.

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Wednesday, March 4, 2009

North Bridge Chapter affiliates with Mass-Care

The Alliance's North Bridge (Concord, MA) chapter has become an affiliate member of Mass-Care, the statewide coalition working to pass single payer health care legislation in Massachusetts and to promote single payer healthcare nationally. North Bridge member (and office manager) Barbara Clancy participated in a lobbying day for single payer health care at the Massachusetts State House, while other members called legislators to voice support for both the statewide single payer bill and Cape Care's bill to bring a community health trust to residents of Cape Cod.

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Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Massachusetts members begin work to pass citizens' trade commission bill

The Boston Cambridge Alliance and North Bridge Alliance for Democracy will be working this spring to build a coalition of activists and groups to advocate for a bill creating a state commission to study the impact of federal trade pacts on state laws and policies.

The bill was first proposed in 2002 in wake of federal judgments against Massachusetts in cases brought by private corporations who claimed that international trade agreements overruled state laws. Its most recent version brings the structure and representation on the committee closer to that of existing committees in Maine, Vermont, and New Hampshire.

Massachusetts supporters are urged to contact Barbara at bclancy122@earthlink.net and find out how to get involved. Info on the bill will be posted at www.newenglandalliance.org.

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Monday, December 8, 2008

New England Roundtable video online

Video of the first part of the 2005 New England Roundtable on popular governance is online at Blip.tv, here. The roundtable brought representatives from several communities to Burlington, Vermont, for a discussion on how the New England region can increase self-reliance and cooperation between communities in an age of increasing globalization. The roundtable was organied by Boston Cambridge Alliance chapter coordinator Dave Lewit, and presentations were taped by Victor Franke and edited by Boston Cambridge Alliance member Joanna Herlihy, and North Bridge member (and council ombudsperson) Cynthia Ritsher. Thanks to Cambridge Community Television (CCTV) for helping with use of editing facilities.

(As a CCTV volunteer, Joanna also taped this segment on a Cambridge "weatherization barn raising" organized by HEET (Home Energy Efficient Team) a Cambridge-based co-op.)

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