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Native
American Press/Ojibwe
News
Green candidate McGaa launches campaign in tight
three-way Senate race
By Clara NiiSka - June 7, 2002
U.S. Senate candidate Ed McGaa wrote in his bid for Green Party
endorsement, “I am running to Win because this position is as open as
the Governorship was last election.”
McGaa was endorsed by the Green Party of Minnesota at
its May 18th convention on the second ballot despite a contingent of
Greens, including Indian activist and former vice presidential
candidate Winona LaDuke, calling for “no endorsement” and urging GP
delegates to back incumbent Democrat Paul Wellstone against the likely
Republican challenger, former St. Paul mayor Norm Coleman.
After McGaa’s endorsement, Wellstone met with northern
Minnesota tribal officials in Bemidji, actively courting Native votes
and praising LaDuke’s efforts to persuade the Greens not to nominate a
candidate in the senate race.
Wellstone also reaffirmed his ties with the tribal
establishment at Red Lake, which has been a DFL stronghold at least
since the late 1950s when Hubert Humphrey’s support underwrote Roger
Jourdain’s successful efforts to restructure tribal government and
establish Jourdain’s powerful thirty-one year reign as chairman.
By late May, incumbent Red Lake chairman Bobby
Whitefeather openly supported Wellstone’s run for a third senate term.
Whitefeather, however, stands for election himself on July 17th, and
challenger and former tribal chairman Gerald “Butch” Brun is not the
DFL ‘party man’ that Whitefeather is.
Green challenger McGaa, who earned a law degree from the
University of South Dakota as well as “studied under” Chief Eagle
Feather and Frank Fool’s Crow, is an enrolled Oglala Indian from Pine
Ridge reservation. Over the recent Memorial Day weekend, McGaa
reaffirmed his connections with northern Minnesota Indians at the Leech
Lake Spring Pow-wow, held at the Veterans Memorial Grounds at Cass Lake.
McGaa, a Marine Corps veteran who served in Korea and
was decorated for his combate service as a fighter pilot in Vietnam,
evinced his support for Indian veterans at the Leech Lake pow-wow –
arousing the concern of some Green party members deeply committed to
the “Non-violence” planks in the Green’s platform.
McGaa met with Green party members at a May 30th meeting
in Minneapolis, and again on June 4th, to address “concerns regarding
values” expressed in the party platform and the “statements and ideas
expressed publicly by Ed McGaa.” Among the primary concerns at the May
30th meeting was “Nonviolence.”
McGaa told Press/ON that should he win the Senator’s
seat he would form an advisory committee to address issues at the
foundation of the Minnesota Green Party’s platform, particularly
non-violence, and to help bridge the differences between Indian
peoples’ “values approaches” and those of Euroamericans.
The Minnesota Green Party’s endorsed candidate for U.S.
Senate is currently putting together his campaign organization. He says
that he plans to campaign “throughout the state,” and – as a candidate
for Minnesota’s third political party with “major party” status – hopes
to participate in the debates.
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