Upset Victory in Richmond, CA
Green Party of California
www.cagreens.org
November 10, 2006
Released November 8, 2006
Contact: Susan King, spokesperson, 415.823-5524
funking@mindspring.com
Sara Amir, spokesperson, 310.270-7106 saraamir@earthlink.net
Cres Vellucci, press secretary, 916.996-9170 civillib@cwnet.com
Green Party candidate upsets incumbent in
Richmond, becomes first elected Green mayor in state; Victory underscores
major party gains
SACRAMENTO, CA -- The Green Party of California
declared Tuesday's election a major victory after 18 Green candidates won
their races - including Gayle McLaughlin, who captured the mayor's spot in
Richmond to became the first Green ever elected as mayor in California.
Greens now hold 52 elected offices in California. Of 59 Greens on the state
ballot Tuesday, from Governor and US Senate to Congress, the state legislature and local office, 18 of them, or 30.5 percent, were victorious.
Four won city council spots - including incumbent Larry Robinson in Sebastopol which has had a Green majority since 2000. Six Greens won seats
on boards of education, and four now have seats on the Berkeley rent stabilization board.
McLaughlin (http://www.gaylemclaughlin.net),
who first ran for public office in 2004 when she won a Richmond City Council position, defeated the
incumbent mayor of Richmond, although McLaughlin was outspent by about
10-1. The incumbent accepted more than $110,000 from largely corporate
interests, including Chevron, while McLaughlin refused corporate money and
raised about $14,000.
Richmond, a working class suburb of San Francisco with a population of
about 104,000, becomes the biggest city in the U.S. where at Green is at
the helm, and the first in California where a Green was directly elected as
mayor. Twenty-two Greens have been appointed mayor in California, including the cities of Santa Monica, Sonoma, Sebastopol, Santa Cruz,
Fairfax, Albany, Truckee and Santa Monica.
"Gayle's election is a good thing for the party, and for the citizens of
Richmond," said Susan King, GPCA spokesperson. "Overall, this election
resulted in some big victories for the Green Party and our agenda for peace, and social justice," she
added.
Greens believe California voter discontent over the war in the Iraq - and
the role played by Democrats and Republicans in that bloodshed - helped
Green Party candidates this year.