Elect Henry Green 2014 Maryland House of Delegates District 33

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Statement from Metropolitan Baltimore Council of AFL-CIO Unions

Metro Baltimore Council AFL-CIO Endorses Henry Green District 33


Congratulations!  At the April 22 meeting of the Maryland State and District of Columbia AFL-CIO, the Metro Baltimore Council AFL-CIO recommended you for endorsement in the 2014 Maryland Gubernatorial  Primary Election.  The Executive Board voted to endorse your candidacy.
We wish you the very best in your campaign and look forward to working with you in the future…
Ernie Grecco, President
Metropolitan Baltimore Council AFL-CIO Unions

Thursday, April 17, 2014

Sierra Club Endorses Rev. Henry Green

We endorse Rev. Henry Green, candidate for the Maryland Legislature from District 33.  He recognizes that "environmental issues affect every other human endeavor—our home lives, our economic security and our future aspirations" and has an environmental record that faithfully mirrors his rhetoric. While pastor of Heritage Baptist Church in Annapolis, he worked with the Chesapeake Bay Trust and the Spa Creek Conservancy to create seven rain gardens at the headwaters of Spa Creek, and provided an easement through the church property to slow polluted runoff from Forest Drive. He is a passionate advocate for action by individual persons, institutions, and government, using both public and private assets for environmental progress.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Working Together for Results

On Monday night, April 7, 2014, I attended the Anne Arundel County Council meeting. After sitting for over three and one-half hours, the council finally took up the recommendation from Councilman Jamie Benoit to put a funding mechanism in place to build a high school for the Crofton community. The recommendation he made creates a path to bring all of the stakeholders together to find a solution to the issue of overcrowding in Arundel and South River High Schools and offer a sustainable plan for the county to fund needed educational projects going forward. If passed, the School Board will recognize the good faith effort on the part of the County Council and authorize this needed project in their overall plan. The County Executive, whomever that may be, will be in the position of delivering on a vital need for the Crofton community. Ultimately, the benefit of this 13th high school will redound to everyone in Anne Arundel County. Predictably, there was some negative reaction to Mr. Benoit’s proposal—coming not in the form of an alternative, but a knee jerk “No!” that typifies our friends in the austerity camp. By now, it’s clear to most of us that when an elected official hides behind “austerity” he or she is simply shirking responsibility. That’s why we have a plague of broken government at the federal, state and local level. If we are going to break out of the logjam of do nothing government we must reject the regressive voices that offer no solutions and hide behind the hypocrisy of hollow rhetoric. Telling people the truth about the needs of our communities and working together to find solutions must not disappear down a partisan political fault line. As the former Speaker of the US House of Representatives, Tip O'Neill once said, "All politics is local." In other words, we all live together and we all must try to work together to solve pressing issues that impact all of our lives. For most of us, our home represents the biggest investment we will make in our lifetimes. We want to protect the value of that investment by strengthening our communities and our neighborhoods with amenities like good public schools, efficient transportation, effective public safety, community centers, great libraries, good jobs, a clean environment and top level medical care. We are all in this together! It’s the job of elected leaders to cultivate, nurture, build and protect those amenities.

Monday, April 7, 2014

Statement on County Council's Rejection of Council Member Benoit's Proposal for Path to 13th County High School

Henry Green, candidate for the Maryland General Assembly from District 33 (Crofton, Davidsonville, Severna Park & Cape St. Clair) issued the following reaction to  the Anne Arundel County Council rejection of a proposal by Council Member Jamie Benoit opening the way of a 13th high school in the County.

I am appalled at the failure of leadership by County Executive Laura Neuman who claims she supports building a 13th high school in the County, but opposes the way forward offered by Mr. Benoit’s proposal. And shame on the four council members who voted against Mr. Benoit’s proposal. Their votes effectively defer the needs and wishes of their constituency for yet another budget cycle. Government is supposed to be about addressing needs of citizens, not hewing to some dysfunctional viewpoint or posturing for political advantage.

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Speech in America Now Has a Price Tag—and It Could Soon be Too Expensive for Folks Like Us



On April 2nd the Supreme Court (SCOTUS) put a price tag on “free speech”—enabling a few super rich individuals to speak and be heard while muffling the voices of millions of Americans like you and me. The so-called McCutcheon case closes the loop on a line of SCOTUS decisions that could eventually move our nation out of the community of democracy and into the dark reaches where the rich and powerful—plutocrats— will decide America’s future.

The five Supreme Court Justices who prevailed in the McCutcheon decision effectively declared that super rich individuals can dump as much as $3.5 million directly into political campaigns and committees in every election cycle.
Why do they want to spend so much money to influence the outcome of an election? Because there is much more money to be made if government is compliant and too small to enforce rules. Dysfunctional government enables the big banks and Wall Street to make stock purchases in mere nanoseconds and resell at higher prices to those without that advantage.  Who will regulate this corruption when the 1% are able to buy off all the politicians?

If you think this doesn’t affect your life, think again. The eventual consequences will depend upon people like us. Some will become discouraged and demoralized and drop out of the political process. But, that’s what the other side—the 1%— wants. If the rest of us are willing to fight to win our democracy back, we can redirect the course.

The proponents of big money in politics cloak themselves as advocates of “free speech,” but they mean something far different than that term implies for the average citizen. They want to reinforce the plutocracy represented in the widest economic disparity in our nation’s history. The more they can frustrate the democratic process, to make it seem impossible for the average person to make a real difference, the deeper and wider the gap will become in our nation’s soul. If they succeed, they are sure to diminish public commitments to infrastructure, divert our efforts to protect our environmental treasures like the Chesapeake Bay, and dilute availability of quality education for our children. All the while, they will be loosening the few safeguards we have to protect our democratic institutions.

Only four years ago, the same set of Supreme Court justices issued the Citizens United opinion, setting the stage for McCutcheon. Citizens United opened the spigot for unlimited “dark money” to flow into politics through “social action” committees that provide a shroud of secrecy for donors who do not want to be publicly associated with the goals that these committees pursue.

It was no surprise that the 2012 presidential election that followed set a record for political spending—$6 billion! How much more dark money will flow into the mid term election this year? Certainly as much. Some are predicting the 2016 presidential race will be twice as expensive as four years earlier.

Using money to undermine democracy is not a new phenomenon. Some states still have “ballot access fees” that effectively protect incumbents against challenges by the average person. When I ran for Congress in Florida in 1996, for instance, I was required to either pay $10,020 or undertake the expense of securing 5,000 signatures from residents of the district. And, if I fell short of that 5,000-signature mark, I would have to pay the ballot access fee anyway. Maryland has a more modest $150 fee; in California, it is $1,000; in Georgia it was $4,000 in 1996 (don’t know what it is now).

I sued the state of Florida to contest this unfair requirement. Although my attorney and I tried mightily to get this case before the Supreme Court, it was remanded back to Florida’s state courts which, not surprisingly, ruled to dismiss my suit. My efforts earned a footnote in history because the court precedent my lawsuit created in 1998 directly contradicted underscored the hypocrisy and cynicism of the rationale behind landmark Supreme Court decision in Gore Vs. Bush that stopped an election recount in Florida and gave the 2000 election to George Bush. Retired Justice Sandra Day O’Connor confessed not too long ago that this was the worst decision she ever participated in. Nevertheless, this SCOTUS did not seem troubled by the inconsistency of its decision.

Despite all that, I’m not about to walk away from my personal commitment to redirect our politics back to what was envisioned by the founders: a government of the people, by the people and for the people. I want to represent the citizens who still hold that vision dear.