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News Articles
Citizens 1, Corporations 0
John Nichols, The Nation Blog
June 7, 2006
In states across the country Tuesday, primary
elections named candidates for Congress, governorships and other important
offices. But the most interesting, and perhaps significant, election
did not involve an individual. Rather, it was about an idea.
In Northern California's Humboldt County, voters decided by a 55-45
margin that corporations do not have the same rights -- based on the
supposed "personhood" of the combines -- as citizens when it
comes to participating in local political campaigns.
Until Tuesday in Humboldt County, corporations were able to claim citizenship
rights, as they do elsewhere in the United States. In the context of
electoral politics, corporations that were not headquartered in the county
took advantage of the same rules that allowed individuals who are not
residents to make campaign contributions in order to influence local
campaigns.
But, with the passage of Measure T, an initiative referendum that was
placed on the ballot by Humboldt County residents, voters have signaled
that they want out-of-town corporations barred from meddling in local
elections.
Measure T was backed by the county's Green and Democratic parties, as
well as labor unions and many elected officials in a region where politics
are so progressive that the Greens -- whose 2004 presidential candidate,
David Cobb, is a resident of the county and a active promotor of the
challenges to corporate power mounted by Democracy Unlimited of Humboldt
County and the national Liberty Tree Foundation -- are a major force
in local politics.
The "Yes on T" campaign was rooted in regard for the American
experiment, from its slogan "Vote Yes for Local Control of Our Democracy," to
the references to Tuesday's election as a modern-day "Boston Tea
Party," to the quote from Thomas Jefferson that was highlighted
in election materials: "I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy
of our monied corporations which dare already to challenge our government
to a trial by strength, and bid defiance to the laws of our country."
Just as Jefferson and his contemporaries were angered by dominance of
the affairs of the American colonies by King George III and the British
business combines that exploited the natural and human resources of what
would become the United States -- and wary of the machinations of those
who would establish an American economic royalism -- so Humboldt County
residents were angered by the attempts of outside corporate interests
to dominate local politics.
Wal-Mart spent $250,000 on a 1999 attempt to change the city of Eureka's
zoning laws in order to clear the way for one of the retail giant's big-box
stores. Five years later, MAXXAM Inc., a forest products company, got
upset with the efforts of local District Attorney Paul Gallegos to enforce
regulations on its operations in the county and spent $300,000 on a faked-up
campaign to recall him from office. The same year saw outside corporations
that were interested in exploiting the county's abundant natural resources
meddling in its local election campaigns.
That was the last straw for a lot of Humboldt County residents. They
organized to put Measure T on the ballot, declaring, "Our Founding
Fathers never intended corporations to have this kind of power."
"Every person has the right to sign petition recalls and to contribute
money to political campaigns. Measure T will not affect these individual
rights," explained Kaitlin Sopoci-Belknap, a resident of Eureka
who was one of the leaders of the Yes on T campaign. "But individuals
hold these political rights by virtue of their status as humans in a
democracy and, simply put, a corporation is not a person."
Despite the logic of that assessment, the electoral battle in Humboldt
County was a heated one, and Measure T's passage will not end it. Now,
the corporate campaign will move to the courts. So this is only a start.
But what a monumental start it is!
Sopoci-Belknap was absolutely right when she portrayed Tuesday's vote
as nothing less than the beginning of "the process of reclaiming
our county" from the "tyranny" of concentrated economic
and political power.
Surely Tom Paine would have agreed. It was Paine who suggested to the
revolutionaries of 1776, as they dared challenge the most powerful empire
on the planet, that: "We have it in our power to begin the world
over again. A situation similar to the present hath not happened since
the days of Noah until now. The birthday of the new world is at hand,
and a race of men, perhaps as numerous as all Europe contains, are to
receive their portion of freedom from the events of a few months."
It is time to renew the American experiment, to rebuild its battered
institutions on the solid foundation of empowered citizens and regulated
corporations. Let us hope that the spirit of '76 prevailed Tuesday in
Humboldt County will spread until that day when American democracy is
guided by the will of the people rather than the campaign contribution
checks of the corporations that are the rampaging "empires" of
our age.
See the comments on this blog...
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Humboldt County Leaders Endorse Measure T!
Democratic Party of Humboldt County
Green Party of Humboldt County
Central Labor Council of Humboldt and Del Norte Counties
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) Local #1684
Building and Construction Trades of Humboldt and Del Norte Counties
Carpenters Union Local #751
Operating Engineers Union Local #3 AFL-CIO
Paul Gallegos, Humboldt County District Attorney
Peter LaVallee, Eureka Mayor
Chris Kerrigan, Eureka City Council
Dave Meserve, Arcata City Council
Harmony Groves, Arcata City Council
Paul Pitino, Arcata City Council
Bob Ornelas, Former Arcata Mayor
Connie Stewart, Former Arcata Mayor
Elizabeth Conner, Former Arcata City Council
Julie Fulkerson, Former Humboldt County Board of Supervisors
... and hundreds of other individuals and local businesses! Join us today!
View the full list of public endorsements!
Learn More!

Learn more about Measure T in a Pros and Cons Video, produced by Eileen McGee (51 mins)
Radio Ads

Chris Kerrigan, Eureka City Counsel, and Kate Christensen, owner of The Garden Gate, support Measure T! (1 min)

Paul Gallegos, Humboldt County District Attorney, and Nezzie Wade, community member, support Measure T! (1 min)
Larry Glass, owner of The Works, and Dennis Rael, owner of Los Bagles, support Measure T! (1 min)
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