For a political party that positions itself as the principled, unflinchingly liberal ones, I’ll never understand why the [tag]Green Party[/tag] allows itself to be used in such a blatant matter by the right.
Thanks to the generosity of GOP donors, a Green Party candidate is expected to make it onto the ballot in Pennsylvania’s Senate race and siphon votes from Democratic front-runner Bob [tag]Casey[/tag] in his bid to unseat Republican Sen. Rick [tag]Santorum[/tag]. […]
Green Party candidate Carl [tag]Romanelli[/tag], making his first bid for statewide elective office, acknowledged Monday that Republican contributors probably supplied most of the $100,000 that he said he spent gathering signatures to qualify for the Nov. 7 ballot.
Romanelli said he expects to turn in far more than the required 67,070 signatures by Tuesday’s deadline.
Asked to explain all the help he’s getting from [tag]Republicans[/tag], Romanelli told the AP, “I have friends in all political parties. It’s just that my Republican friends are more confident about standing with me than my Democratic friends. And as a group, my Republican friends are a little better off.”
I’m sure Romanelli isn’t a complete fool, and I suspect he realizes that his “Republican friends” aren’t really his friends.
But at some point, doesn’t a sense of personal pride kick in?
There can be little doubt that Romanelli is being used. A total of $66,000 went into Romanelli’s signature-collecting efforts — and nearly every single donor had given to Republican candidates in recent elections.
Some Greens realize the game the GOP is playing and don’t like it. Peter Camejo, Nader’s running mate in 2004, said he believed in returning the money sent to the campaign from conservatives who wanted to exploit an ideological opportunity. “[I]f your purpose [for contributing] is because you think this is going to have an electoral effect, we don’t want that money,” Camejo said. “I take no money from people who disagree with us. We’re not interested in that.” As it turned out, Nader disagreed with Camejo’s beliefs and wanted the money anyway, but at a minimum, Camejo’s position is ideologically consistent.
But for guys like Romanelli, it’s absurd. The GOP wants to use him as a tool, split the left, and help keep Santorum, one of the Senate’s most conservative members, in office for another six years. In response, Romanelli, the champion of progressive ideals, essentially responds, “Sounds good to me.”
By the way, why don’t the Dems do more to support far-right candidates, offering the polar opposite of this GOP/Green stunt? Because, in the vast majority of states, the hyper-conservative Constitution Party isn’t organized enough to field half-way credible candidates. And even if they did, it’s not altogether clear that they’d welcome support from [tag]Democrats[/tag], the way Greens gladly accept “help” from Republicans.