Cynthia McKinney - Green
Cynthia McKinney was
born March 17, 1955, in Atlanta, Georgia. She was the daughter of Billy
McKinney a former Georgia State Representative and one of Atlanta's first Black
law enforcement officers. She earned a B.A. in International Relations from the
University of Southern California, and a Masters of Art in Law and Diplomacy
from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.
She is a drafted nominee
of the Green Party, which is probably best-known to Americans as the party of
former Presidential candidate Ralph Nader, and indeed, she was slated for Vice
President as Nader's running mate in 2000.
Her career in politics
had a very unique start, when in 1986, her father in the Georgia House of
Representatives submitted her name as a write-in candidate for the Georgia
State House. Despite the fact that she wasn't even living in the United States
at the time, but in Jamaica, she got 40% of the popular vote anyway. This
inspired her to run for the Georgia State House again in 1988, where she was
present in the United States this time, and she was elected, making it the
first time a father and daughter had served in the State House of Georgia at
the same time.
Her next move was to run
for the U.S. House of Representatives in 1992, and she was elected to represent
the 11th District of Georgia, which covers the territory between Atlanta and
Georgia. She was re-elected in 1994. In 1995, the districts were redrawn under
her protest, citing racial motives, and she became the Representative of the
4th district instead. She was to be re-elected to this position in 1996, 1998
and 2000.
She lost the 2002
election to DeKalb County Judge Denise Majette. She protested the results of
the election, claiming that vengeful Republicans had rigged the election as
retaliation for her anti-Bush administration views, her allegations of possible
voter fraud in Florida in the 2000 Presidential Election, her controversial
statements regarding Bush's involvement in 9/11, and her opposition to aid to
Israel. Some voters lodged a formal suit on her behalf, supporting her claims,
but the case was dismissed from lack of evidence.
During her
"exile" from office, she because an outspoken protester against the
Bush administration, and the "white, rich Democratic boys club wanted her
to stay on the back of the bus."
Surprisingly after these
bizarre events in 2002, she regained the position as the 4th district
Representative again in 2004, but would lose it for the final time in 2006.
During her second stay in office, she was one of the thirty-one members of
Congress to make a formal protest over the alleged vote-rigging that kept
incumbent George Bush in the Oval Office. In 2005, also in office, she held the
most prominent briefing on Capitol Hill for the investigation into the events
surrounding the 9/11 attacks. She also submitted the "MLK Records
Act", which would release all records surrounding the assassination of
Martin Luther King into the public record. These records are currently sealed
as of 1978 and are not due to be declassified until 2028. A Senate version of
the bill has been sponsored since by Senator John Kerry and Senator Hillary
Clinton.
Cynthia McKinney has
spear-headed much of the protest against government corruption, incompetency,
cover-up, and civil liberties violations. Her laundry list of injustices she
wants to correct goes on and on, and extend to calling for Presidential
impeachment. While there is some support for her claims, and indeed
overwhelming evidence in many places, her manner of speaking out with much
passion and anger has alienated those who would otherwise agree with her in
some circles. She is highly confrontational.
In any case, CynthiaMcKinney has responded to the draft movement by announcing her candidacy for
the Presidency, under the Green party. She speaks for many Americans who have
lost faith and hope in their government, and she is neither the first nor the
loudest to have pointed out how out-of-control the United States government
appears and how it seems to be sinking into corruption.
She can count on some
support from both African-American and women voters, as well as the beleaguered
Green party, and she just may unite the various groups which have never ceased
to protest since the day Bush took office. Seeing as how Bush polls as one of
the least popular Presidents ever, that could turn into a lot of votes.
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