FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Oct. 10, 2005
Matt Thieke for Governor
PO Box 1712
Brick, NJ 08723
Contact: Matt Thieke, 609-330-6552, mthieke7@yahoo.com
www.MattThieke.com
GREEN CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR OUTLINES PLANS FOR POLITICAL REFORM
Citing a "democracy deficit" in New Jersey, Green Party gubernatorial candidate
Matt Thieke today announced his 7-point plan to bring wide ranging reforms to
state government, focusing on campaign finance "pay to play" reform and making
government more transparent.
Thieke issued the following statement: "The Green Party and I place a high value
on grassroots democracy. The voters are eager for real reforms, unfortunately
neither Jon Corzine nor Doug Forrester are willing or able to bring about these
kinds of changes. That's because both of the major parties are corrupt machines
that want to maintain the status quo. We Greens want to empower the citizens of
New Jersey and believe that a lot more can be done to increase the level of
democracy in our state. To that end, my campaign is proposing this 7-point
plan:"
Clean Elections: Unlike the state's current version of public financing being
tested in two legislative districts, we need a "clean" elections system that's
closer to the laws in Maine and Arizona. One that makes it easier for candidates
to qualify by drastically lowering the amount of money candidates must raise. In
addition, third party and independent candidates must be given funding equal to
the two major parties. A workable system of public financing would then be used
for all elected offices: governor, legislature, freeholder, mayor etc. Besides
'clean' financing, we have to lower the dollar amount of allowable contributions
to candidates and parties, and ban all contributions from companies doing
government work, i.e. "pay to play".
Initiative and Referendum: When elected officials fail to pass needed reforms
(see property taxes), the voters should have the right to place questions on the
ballot. Half of the states have I&R. New Jersey should join them.
Term Limits: I believe that absolute power corrupts absolutely. If our governor
is limited to 8 years in office, then state legislators should have limits too.
I propose a limit of 10 years for members of the Assembly, and 10 years for
state senators.
Ban politicians from holding multiple offices: Simply put, no politician should
be able to hold more than one government job.
Proportional Representation: One problem with winner-take-all district
representation is that minority views are under-represented. The major parties
gerrymander legislative districts until most are "safe" for one party or the
other. Instead of electing two people to represent one district, I propose
having just one Assemblyperson elected per district, and electing the other 40
seats 'at-large' using proportional methods. If a party gets 10% of the votes,
they get 10% of the at-large seats.
Elect more officials, appoint fewer: New Jersey appoints a far higher portion of
its public officials than most states. Too many of these are patronage jobs used
to reward partisan supporters. In most states, commissions are elected rather
than appointed; in many states, planning boards are elected. Since the Green
Party values grassroots democracy, we propose opening up our government by
electing our state and county commissions (e.g. county improvement authorities,
state port authorities, highway commissions, BPU, Pinelands commission) and
municipal planning boards. By electing these positions, the media will pay more
attention to the work of these agencies, and the public will know more about the
decisions that are being made. In addition, we need an elected Attorney General
whose independence from the governor will enable him or her to expose corruption
within the administration. Current Attorney General Peter Harvey has been
completely blind to the corruption in state politics.
Televised government: New Jersey needs its own version of C-SPAN. I'd like to
see a second NJN-type channel devoted to televising committee hearings in the
state legislature, county freeholder meetings, state authority meetings, school
board meetings, etc. Democracy only works when the voters know what our elected
officials are really doing.
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