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Candidate Questionnaire

Any Oregon voter-age resident who wishes to be nominated or endorsed by the Oregon Progressive Party needs to download and fill out the candidate questionnaire for state office or the one for federal office.  Links to both are below.

Please return your completed questionnaire(s) to info@progparty.org.  If that is not possible, you can print out your answers and fax that to 855-280-0488 toll-free

Be a Candidate

For Candidates

Anyone who is interested in running as a Progressive Party candidate for public office should contact us directly and fill out our candidate questionnaires.

The Progressive Party Of Oregon is entitled to place one candidate on the general election ballot for each of the following offices:

  • President of the United States (not in 2014)
  • United States Senator
  • United States Representative (in each of 5 districts)
  • Governor
  • Secretary of State (not in 2014)
  • Attorney General (not in 2014)
  • State Treasurer (not in 2014)
  • State Senator (in each of 30 districts) (15 districts are contested each election year)
  • State Representative (in each of 60 districts)
  • some county commissioners and any other office that is elected on a "partisan" (by party) basis

Note: To run as a Progressive, you do not have to file 70 days prior to the primary election date, as do persons who want to run as Democrats or Republicans. Instead, you have to receive the nomination of the Progressive Party at least 70 days prior to the November general election.

The Progressive Party of Oregon will offers candidates many of the same services that are offered by the major political parties, including:

- Access to the Oregon voter file, including statewide and district lists.

- The ability to download canvassing lists.

- Contact lists of Progressive Party members in your district.

Issues Poster



Progressive Party Positions

Progressive Party of Oregon says:
Compare the Positions of the Parties
January 1, 2010


 

Democratic

Republican

Progressive

Oppose Wall Street bailouts

NO

NO

YES

Single Payer health care

NO

NO

YES

Same-sex marriage

NO

NO

YES

End the drug war

NO

NO

YES

$10 minimum wage

NO

NO

YES

Cut military spending

NO

NO

YES

Oppose use of mercenaries

NO

NO

YES

End wars of aggression

NO

NO

YES

Oppose NAFTA; outsourcing

NO

NO

YES

Oppose FISA; civilian spying

NO

NO

YES

Oppose offshore drilling

NO

NO

YES

Clean energy; no nuclear

NO

NO

YES

Real campaign finance reform

NO

NO

YES


Before Republicans were Republicans. Before the Democrats were spineless.

There was the Progressive Party. The People are back.

Letter Writer Finds New Hope in Nader

New hope: Nader

Most of us didn't realize that when Barack Obama talked of hope during his presidential campaign, it meant hope for insurance and pharmaceutical companies, the military-industrial complex, banks that were bailed out and the bankers who received huge bonuses.

But when consumer activist and third party presidential candidate Ralph Nader spoke in Portland on Saturday, I felt a sense of hope. It wasn't because he made promises. As a matter of fact, he talked a lot about what our president hasn't done.

Nader was in Portland to promote the Progressive Party. It was the audience reaction to his speech that inspired me, and the hope that perhaps Americans will stop watching sports and television long enough to sift through mass media information and learn what is going on in America and to care.

BEV ANSLOW
Gladstone

Ralph Nader Speaks in Portland on May 8, 7:30 p.m.

RALPH NADER IS COMING TO PORTLAND on Saturday, May 8!
First Unitarian Church Sanctuary
1211 SW Main Street, Portland
Doors/book signing at 7:30 p.m. Program at 8:00 p.m.

“Obama So Far . . . A New Strategy for Progressives”

Mr. Nader will discuss his book “Only the Super-Rich Can Save Us!” and
Ways to Democratically Mobilize the Country for Long Overdue Changes, including:

Wall Street: What Real Reform Would Look Like
Clean/Renewable Energy vs. Subsidizing Nukes and Coal Plants

Oregon Supreme Court Upholds Law Requiring Truthful Reporting of Sources of Political Contributions

Oregon Supreme Court Upholds Law Requiring Truthful Reporting of Sources of Political Contributions

but the unanimous decision does not address whether the current ban on anonymous contributions is valid
April 29, 2010

The Oregon Supreme Court today issued its opinion in State of Oregon v. Thomas Paul Moyer, in which a person accused of making political contributions in a false name challenged the the constitutionality of Oregon's statute that prohibits any political contribution from being made "in any name other than that of the person who in truth provides the contribution to." ORS 260.402. This law was enacted by voter initiative over 100 years ago and has never before been challenged. Local businessman Tom Moyer was accused by the Multnomah County District Attorney of contributing to a campaign for Mayor of Portland in the names of his relatives and employees.

The opinion is at: http://www.publications.ojd.state.or.us/supreme.htm#apr10

The brief of Amicus Curiae and other briefs are here: http://fairelections.net/court/moyer

The attorneys representing the defendants (Michael Garone, Ronald Hoevet, and Janet Lee Hoffman) argued that requiring anyone to truthfully identify himself as the source of a political contribution violates the First Amendment of the U .S. Constitution and the free speech provisions of the Oregon Constitution. The State of Oregon argued that the statute is valid, as did the Policy Initiatives Group and seven Oregon voters (the Amicus Curiae) represented by attorneys Dan Meek and Linda Williams, who also have represented FairElections Oregon (sponsor of Oregon's recent campaign finance reform statewide ballot measures).

The Multnomah County Circuit Court had ruled that the law is invalid under the Oregon Constitution's free speech provisions. This decision was reversed in January 2009 by a 6-4 decision of the Oregon Court of Appeals, but there was no majority of the 10 judges (en banc) in agreement on any single rationale for upholding this law. Instead, a combination of two rationales were cobbled together to uphold the law. The Oregon Supreme Court the granted review and held oral argument in September 2009.

In general, under the Oregon Supreme Court 's current analysis, any law that by design restricts speech is invalid, under Article I, Section 8, of the Oregon Constitution, unless the law comes within an "historical exception," meaning that it was the type of law that existed at the time of the adoption of the Oregon Constitution in 1859. The brief of the Amicus Curiae focused on whether the law at issue came within an historical exception. The Oregon Supreme Court agreed that ORS 260.402 did come within an historical exception. The Court also narrowed the sweep of its previous decision involving campaign contributions and expenditures, Vannatta v. Keisling (1997), noting that not all political contributions are "constitutionally protected expression."

The Amicus also pointed out that, if prohibiting campaign contributions in a false name is a violation of "free speech," then the government cannot require accurate reporting or disclosure of campaign contributions at all. Candidates in Oregon should then expect to receive massive contributions from "anonymous." They could reject the anonymous contributions but place themselves at a huge disadvantage to the candidates who accept them. And, if many Oregon politicians, from both major parties, decide to take the anonymous money, it will not be a potent campaign issue for their opponents to use against them.

If Article I, § 8, of the Oregon Constitution does not allow the government to require that campaign contributions not be made "in any name other than that of the person who in truth provides the contribution," ORS 260.402(1), then the government also cannot require that the sources of campaign contributions be accurately reported. If Article I, § 8, invalidates the requirement that a campaign contributor truthfully reveal her contribution, in her own name, then it would be impossible for a campaign to accurately report its contributors under the requirements of ORS Chapter 260.

The federal government and every one of the 50 states requires public reporting of political campaign contributions. Campaign Disclosure Project, Grading State Disclosure 2008 (Pew Charitable Trusts 2009). Of those states, 37 have freedom of speech clauses essentially identical to Oregon's. Each of them declares that every person has the right "to speak, write, or print freely on any subject." Some of them use the word "publish" instead of "print," but they are otherwise the same as Oregon's. [table omitted] We are not aware of any reported cases in which the political contribution reporting requirements of any of these states has been held to be invalid due to the free speech clause (or any other clause) in the state's constitution.

The Oregon Supreme Court in today's decision expressly did not reach the issue of whether the current ban on anonymous campaign contributions violates the Oregon Constitution, because ORS 260.402 (the statute at issue) does not ban anonymous contributions. Instead, it bans contributions "in any other name than that of the person who in truth supplies such money." "Anonymous" is not a "name." "No doubt someone now will challenge the constitutionality of the ban on anonymous contributions," said Dan Meek. "We will be there again to defend the right of Oregonians to know who is funding political campaigns in this state.

For more information:

Daniel Meek, attorney
(503) 293-9021
dan@fairelections.net

Linda Williams, attorney
(503) 293-0399
linda@fairelections.net

Oregon Progressive Party Semi-Permanent Post Column Page

Hi Dan. Use this page to create the text and/or graphics you want to appear in the semi-permanent post column of the new homepage. -- DI

May 2010

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May, 2010
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Saturday, May 1,South Park Blocks (SW Park and Salmon)

Celebrate International Workers' Day

11am: Sign-Making, Entertainment
12pm: Rally
1pm: March

Oregonian: State Treasurer employees get $475,000 in bonuses, as funds they manage lose 27% of value

Oregon Treasurer's fund managers get thousands in bonuses

by Michelle Cole
September 30, 2009

Eleven employees in the Oregon treasurer's office received bonuses in February ranging from $9,860 to $57,006.

The money was paid as a performance reward to investment managers who oversee the Oregon Public Employees Retirement Fund, the Common Schools Fund and other portfolios totaling about $60 billion.

. . . Last year, with the nation mired in recession, the Public Employees Retirement Fund was down 27 percent, which was not comforting to thousands of retirees but in line with other public pension systems. Based on the performance of the fund and other state funds, 11 of the 14 investment managers in the treasurer's office were paid a total of $475,000 in bonuses and related costs.

Oregonian: Treasurer Calls for Reform of . . . Treasurer's Office

Oregon Treasurer Ted Wheeler calls for travel audit, agency reform

by Les Zaitz and Ted Sickinger
April 14, 2010

State Treasurer Ted Wheeler stepped up his efforts Wednesday to reform his agency in the wake of disclosures that employees have been traveling in luxury at the expense of the investment firms they oversee.

Wheeler has asked Secretary of State Kate Brown to evaluate travel undertaken last year by state investment officers.

He also said he will appoint a citizens panel to review the agency's travel policies and recommend changes. He said he would then ask the Oregon Government Ethics Commission to endorse a new travel policy.