"...Here in the US, we are doing publicity tours with Newt Gingrich to promote public awareness of the problem. With all due respect to Reverend Sharpton and my sisters and brothers in the National Action Network, that is insufficient for Black America and for all America..."Dr. Fulani is recognized as having created the contemporary independent movement with her historic run for President in 1988 when she became the first woman and first African American to ever be on the ballot in all 50 states. She ran as an independent, collecting over 1.5 million signatures nationally and a quarter of a million votes. Fulani is a co-founder of the All Stars Project, Inc. and founder and director of Operation Conversation: Cops and Kids.
Up this week, Charter Revision hearings tonight in Queens and Tuesday night in Brooklyn. Watch the April 19 Charter Commission Hearing Live from Long Island City, at LaGuardia Community College, via Webcast at 6pm Monday.
Meanwhile...
- Voters in West Virginia and North Carolina are becoming more independent.
- Oregon experience says YES! to Top Two open primary.
- 5 out of 6 Pennsylvania gov candidates support open primaries (bill introduced by Eugene DePasquale) for the Keystone State.
- California Dem Party rejects open primaries.
- Florida Gov Charlie Crist says he's not gonna run for re-election as an independent but lots of folks wish he would.
- Nationally speaking, the Top Two right now are Barack Obama and Ron Paul.
- Today's Pew Research polls finds Americans are living in Distrust, Discontent, Anger and Partisan Rancor.
1 comment:
Lenora Fulani did not run as an independent for president in either 1988 nor 1992. She ran as the nominee of the New Alliance Party, and she had the New Alliance Party label next to her name in 39 of the 50 states in 1988. She was chosen at the party's national convention in August 1988, and she received primary season matching funds because she was seeking the nomination of that party. For some reason, activists in the old New Alliance Party don't seem to want people to remember their party, which achieved many successes.
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