Showing posts with label Peace and Freedom Party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peace and Freedom Party. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Asiba D. Tupahache





Asiba D. Tupahache, January 16, 1951 (Long Island, NY) -

VP candidate for Campaign for a New Tomorrow (aka Peace and Freedom Party aka Independent aka Equal Justice and Opportunity aka Labor-Farm/Laborista-Agrario Party) (1992)

Running mate with nominee: Ronald Daniels (b. 1942)
Popular vote: 27,884 (0.03%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

Ron Daniels had been the Executive Director of Jesse Jackson's Rainbow Coalition and was involved in Jackson's 1984 and 1988 Presidential primary campaigns, serving as deputy campaign manager in the latter effort. He was also a political science professor, so he was definitely going into the electioneering with no illusions.

With the goal of building a truly multiracial movement dubbed Campaign for a New Tomorrow, he announced his intention to run on Columbus Day 1991 to call attention to the fact that Americans celebrated a day devoted to a man who enslaved and killed people in the civilizations he "discovered."

With Jackson declining to run in 1992 many of his followers felt that Bill Clinton was much too centrist. The Campaign for a New Tomorrow wanted to pick up where Jackson left off. They advocated universal health care, strict environmental laws, inner city restoration programs, cutting the military budget, and increasing taxes on the wealthy.

But instead of having the opportunity to focus on the major parties, Daniels' campaign ended up mostly in conflict with the New Alliance Party. Nowhere was that more evident than in California.

NAP nominee Lenore Fulani was running for President again in 1992, and for a second time won the Peace and Freedom Party primary in California only to be denied the final nomination at the convention. In 1988 the PFP actually melted down and did not have an official nominee, something they did not want to repeat in 1992. Many of Fulani's critics felt the NAP was a cult attempting to take over the PFP and was not actually a true Left wing movement. Fulani provided her own version of events in an article written in 2000:

By 1992, I was running for president for a second time. I sought the California Peace and Freedom Party nomination again. Ross Perot was running for president, too, and the two-party system was about to come face to face with his formidable independent challenge. In liberal and progressive political circles there was feverish concern about the presidential election. Rev. Jesse Jackson had run twice -- in 1984 and in 1988 -- raising and then dashing the hopes of black and progressive Americans that our political power could be expanded through the Democratic Party. But in 1992 Jackson did not run for a third time; instead progressives -- including African Americans -- were being primed to support Bill Clinton, who cut his teeth in national politics by playing the race card. He seized an opportunity to publicly upbraid Jackson to demonstrate that he wasn't sympathetic to black and liberal concerns. This was part of Clinton's strategy to win Reagan Democrats back into the fold. Black and progressive leaders, who had given the Democratic Party a political "blank check," had to figure out how to make Clinton "fly" for their constituents.

Mainstream liberals figured they'd have no problem because their constituents would still feel they had nowhere else to go. But, the left establishment (i.e. the old left) was worried that ordinary progressives and blacks might defect to independent politics. When I threw my hat into the ring again in 1992, the old left needed a candidate to face me down. What better choice than Jesse Jackson's former deputy campaign manager, Ron Daniels, to run as the "official progressive" presidential candidate, but under "black cover."

Daniels puttered around the country, getting on the ballot in only 10 states, and wheeling out every piece of trash the old left had manufactured against me for 15 years, announcing that his goal was to destroy me ... But nowhere was the confrontation between Daniels, the black puppet of the white fringe left and me, the black progressive trying to bring minority voters into the nascent independent movement, sharper than in the 1992 California Peace and Freedom Party primary.

This contest was a three-way between Daniels, myself and a Latina woman whom Daniels' supporters had recruited to siphon off Hispanic and female voters from me. In spite of his vicious cult-baiting, attempts to hijack the party and other forms of political garbage, I won the three-way preferential primary with 51 percent. Daniels polled 32.5 percent and the "planted" candidate 16 percent. Many of my voters came from the black and Latino registrant base -- which had continued to grow since 1988 -- and from white progressives who wanted the party to be more relevant.

But Daniels and his ultra-left political allies weren't done. They once again mobilized support at the state convention to reject the wishes of the membership and gave Daniels the Peace and Freedom line. Once again, these left leaders preferred to disempower the rank and file to pursue their own narrow goals. When the Perot movement hit it big, and 20 million Americans went independent, I was able to take my networks and followers into a new coalition with Perot voters. Peace and Freedom, its fringy ideologues and Ron Daniels were all left behind in the sectarian dust.


It should be noted Daniels had a long career in civil rights activism including participation with the National Black Independent Political Party before his involvement with the Democrats. Also, in 1987 Fulani said the NAP was prepared to endorse Jesse Jackson in the event he won the Democratic nomination, but in case he didn't her campaign was forging ahead. Jackson himself endorsed Clinton in 1992.

Asiba Tupahache, a Matinecoc Nation Indigenous American activist from Long Island, NY, was selected as the VP nominee. Daniels explained his philosophy in his choice of a running-mate during a campaign speech:

So we're talking about using this candidacy. Let’s be clear that it’s an educational vehicle, a vehicle to mobilize the unmobilized, register the unregistered, and more than anything else, to build permanent organizations. And that’s what we're doing in city after city.

This is a movement prepared to work with other initiatives. It's distinguished, however, by the fact that it comes essentially out of the Black community. It's reaching out to people of color in very emphatic and decisive ways. Within the next weeks I hope to announce something we've talked about throughout this campaign, a Native American woman as a running mate.

This is important, both because the issue of Native Americans is crucial and because it's important to have a woman as a co-partner in this process. In 1992, 500 years after the Columbus fiasco, we need someone who will tell the experiences of Native Americans. Let America know what happened 500 years ago, but also that Native Americans are being exploited, preyed upon, dispossessed even as we speak tonight.


It is difficult to find any sources discussing Tupahache's role in active campaigning.

Two years after the election, Daniels was interviewed by Against the Current and he talked about the 1992 campaign:

ATC: What are the lessons that you draw from your own campaign? What you’re talking about here sounds a lot like what you did in 1992. What are the obstacles you met and how could you overcome them?

RD: [Laughs.] Well, no, what I did in 1992 was run. What I'm talking about here is unfinished parts of what we tried to do. In 1992, it was important to try to run to lay out some ideas, which I feel perfectly vindicated about. In fact, I think a lot of people now feel that I was absolutely correct. People who wouldn't touch it. They were into "defeat Bush at all costs." I kept saying that any difference between Bush and Clinton would be incremental and not fundamental.

ATC: In many ways, he's worse than Bush.

RD: Yes, because Bush could not talk about taxing unemployment benefits. There probably would have been more resistance to NAFTA had there been a Republican running it. And then labor just fell for the okie-doke, man. On health care and NAFTA! After NAFTA: "We’re angry. We're going to punish him." He dangled worker replacement legislation in front of them. "Hang on." Then he didn't do a damn thing for it. He just cut labor's throat, and labor went for it. So you're right, having a Democrat is even worse, because there's this illusion.

I think that the key problems of running a candidate are still resources, ballot access. We've got to be able to break this media thing. There would be times when I was making speeches, when I'd be in the stratosphere – to twenty people! I was convinced that if I could have made that same speech on national television, it would have gotten them. We've got to find a strategy that allows us to get our message out. We cannot get around the problem of the dictatorship of the corporate, for-profit media. I think that if we could get a consensus behind someone in 1996 and work out a broad-based coalition of groups that would support a candidacy, then we would have a much better impact than my campaign had. My own game plan would be to see if we can strengthen Campaign for a New Tomorrow and see it as one of the critical centers, because it is a predominantly African-American, person of color formation. If there were a strong affirmation or demand, then I'd be open to running in the year 2000. I'd like to close the century with a campaign that would point to some new directions for the 21st century.


The Daniels/Tupahache ticket could be found on the ballot in seven states plus DC and received recorded write-ins in four others. For some reason Daniels had no running-mate listed on the Utah ballot so the 177 votes in the Beehive State are subtracted from the total. The team's strongest results: District of Columbia 0.52%, California 0.17%, Louisiana 0.09%, Wisconsin 0.07%. 1992 was the last election where either candidate ran for public office.

Election history: none

Other occupations: teacher, author, editor, publisher, video artist

Notes:
Advocate of home schooling.

Thursday, March 19, 2020

B. Kwaku Duren



B. Kwaku Duren, April 14, 1943 (Beckley, W. Va.) -

VP candidate for Independent (aka New Alliance Party) (1988)

Running mate with nominee: Lenora Fulani (b. 1950)
Popular vote: 31,180 (0.03%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

In 1988 Lenora Fulani was the nominee for the New Alliance Party. She managed to achieve the nearly impossible task of gaining ballot status in all 50 states + DC. In some cases the NAP worked with already existing third parties such as the Solidarity Party and United Citizens Party. In California they tried but failed to take over the Peace and Freedom Party and in the process temporarily derailed the PFP for that election year.

In the 1988 election the Peace and Freedom Party seemed to be in a bit of disarray as it tried to fend off a takeover attempt by the New Alliance Party. The PFP appeared to have been seriously split and a third of the delegates walked out of the convention in Oakland. This was a rare election where the PFP did not appear on the Presidential ballot in California. NAP leader Lenora Fulani and Internationalist Workers Party figure Herb Lewin both claimed the nomination but when they filed with the California Secretary of State the election officials refused to recognize either one as the legitimate Presidential selection.

Lewin claimed victory but Fulani said she was nominated at a "parallel convention" in a nearby hotel.

It seems the PFP party officials made the request not to list either one on the ballot. Party chair and 1980 presidential nominee Maureen Smith told the press the nomination process "never got off on a legal start" since so many delegates were not credentialed. There had been talk of officially making Eugene McCarthy the PFP choice and it seems some negotiating did take place but consensus was never attained.

Meanwhile, Dennis L. Serrette the New Alliance Party Presidential nominee for 1984, denounced the NAP as a toxic cult during the 1988 election season. This point of view would be shared by several in the cultbusting community.

Fulani had eight running-mates in 1988, stating "If we got elected, we'd figure it out." Her VP who was on the California ballot only was B. Kwaku Duren, one of the few 1988 Fulani ticket-sharers who had already established a prior public political identity independent of the NAP.

In the 1970s Duren was an ex-convict who was already on the path of seeking social change through community action when his sister was shot and killed by a California State Highway Patrol officer during what should have been a normal traffic stop. This seemed to sharpen his resolve as he joined the Black Panther Party and earned a degree in law. Always a controversial figure, Duren was making a second try for a seat in the US House as a member of the Peace and Freedom Party at the same time he was running for Vice-President with the New Alliance Party.

In 1987 Fulani said the NAP was prepared to endorse Jesse Jackson in the event he won the Democratic nomination, but in case he didn't her campaign was forging ahead.

The NAP platform included national health care, support for AIDS victims, recognition of Native American treaty rights, stronger environmental regulations, a freeze on military spending, ending aid to South Africa-Contras in Central America-Israel, support of pro-choice laws, support of public transportation.

Nationally Fulani gained 217,221 votes (0.24%) and placed 4th, a truly impressive and historic finish on many levels-- for openers, Fulani was the first African American woman to be listed on every US ballot. The Fulani/Duren ticket received 0.32% of the popular vote in California, so it was better than Fulani's national average.

Election history:
1986 - US House of Representatives (Calif.) (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
1988 - US House of Representatives (Calif.) (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
1990 - California Insurance Commissioner (Peace and Freedom Party) - primary - defeated
1992 - US House of Representatives (Calif.) (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
2013 - Mayor of Compton, Calif. (Nonpartisan) - primary - defeated

Other occupations: attorney, author, teacher, co-chair of the Coalition Against Police Abuse, Coordinator of the Southern California Chapter of the Black Panther Party, President of the Union of Legal Services Workers of Los Angeles, Executive Director of Community Services Unlimited, founding member and chairman of the New African American Vanguard Movement

Notes:
Winner of the 1986 and 1988 races was Merv Dymally.
One of his fellow candidates in the 2013 race was Rodney Allen Rippy.
Birth name: Robert Donaldson Duren.

Thursday, March 12, 2020

Maureen Smith




Maureen Smith, b. ca1942

VP candidate for Independent (1988)

Running mate with nominee: Eugene McCarthy (1916-2005)
Popular vote: 234 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

The Pennsylvania-based Consumer Party had been around since the late 1960s as a statewide organization. In 1984 they endorsed the Citizens Party but in 1988 they were ready to try a national run with a goal of obtaining ballot status in over half the states. It didn't work out that way.

In 1988 they approached Eugene McCarthy, now 72, and asked him to be their standard bearer. It isn't clear if there was truly an official running-mate (McCarthy always had disdain for the office of Vice-President anyway and felt it should be eliminated), but it would appear Harlem legendary consumer advocate Florence M. Rice was the closest to being the choice of the Consumer Party.

The former liberal icon had changed quite a bit since his independent 1976 run for President. In 1980 he endorsed Ronald Reagan and later had some kind of financial connection with Right-wing cult leader Sun Myung Moon and his Unification Church.  

It was clear McCarthy viewed the nomination as an opportunity rather than a cause. He voiced a hope of broadening the campaign and going beyond Consumer Party in an interview with the Chicago Tribune: "I'd just as soon have a new name. It's like the Know-Nothings and the Barn Burners. I'm hopeful some other groups will come in. We've had some calls from the National Unity people-they're a sort of a (John) Anderson organization. And maybe some independent parties from around the country. I don't know about the Socialists and Vegetarians. The Peace and Freedom people might come in. I don't think they have a candidate. They're a pretty wild bunch."

In the 1988 election the Peace and Freedom Party "wild bunch" seemed to be in a bit of disarray as it tried to fend off a takeover attempt by the New Alliance Party. The PFP appeared to have been seriously split and a third of the delegates walked out of the convention in Oakland. This was a rare election where the PFP did not appear on the Presidential ballot in California. NAP leader Lenora Fulani and Internationalist Workers Party figure Herb Lewin both claimed the nomination but when they filed with the California Secretary of State the election officials refused to recognize either one as the legitimate Presidential selection.

Lewin claimed victory but Fulani said she was nominated at a "parallel convention" in a nearby hotel.

It seems the PFP party officials made the request not to list either one on the ballot. Party chair and 1980 presidential nominee Maureen Smith told the press the nomination process "never got off on a legal start" since so many delegates were not credentialed. There had been talk of officially making McCarthy the PFP choice and it seems some negotiating did take place but consensus was never attained.

Old time Trotskyite and retired machinist Herb Lewin of Pennsylvania acted as if he was the PFP nominee anyway. However in California there was no PFP candidate on the ballot. McCarthy had sort of a backhanded endorsement when PFP Chair Maureen Smith became his running-mate in the Golden State. Unfortunately for them, they had to settle for being certified write-ins.

McCarthy proposed shortening the work week, curtailing or eliminating the FEC, raising tariffs, and creating a national sales tax on "wasteful, socially undesirable consumption, not just of cigarettes and liquor, but also of oversized, overpowered and overfueled automobiles." 

McCarthy's quotes from the campaign:

There is no real choice between Democrats and Republicans. If any new direction is to come, it must come through an independent party, the Consumer Party, and I have willingly offered myself to lead it.

I don't expect to lose. Sure I've lost before, but I didn't feel I wasted my time, and I expect to have a significant impact.

There are two kinds of people who don't make good presidents-- vice presidents and governors.

We are being controlled, and conditioned, over-advertised, dominated by corporate power, by the media. You watch the evening news, where you are supposed to be getting your information. They give you 35 seconds of news and then they give you relief for hemmorhoids. We spend more on advertising than we do on education.

Responsible political participants should challenge absolutely the concepts and historical judgments now used to justify militancy and the arms buildup.

The perception that American politics should be conducted within the framework of only two parties is a misconception. It's against what the Founding Fathers intended.


When the media did cover McCarthy, which was not often, they spent most of their time treating him as the new Harold Stassen and a relic as they used more ink on his history than on his current platform. Many editorialists were not kind.

McCarthy was on the ballot in four states and a certified write-in for Arizona (apparently no VP with him there) and California. In total he had three running-mates and nationally earned 30,905 votes, placing sixth. The McCarthy/Smith ticket earned 234 write-in votes in California.

Election history:
1980 - US President (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
1986 - Treasurer of California (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
1992 - US House of Representatives (Calif.) (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated

Other occupations: Peace and Freedom Party chair, clerical worker, Santa Clara County Transportation Agency

Notes:
Winner of the 1992 race was Leon Panetta.

Friday, March 6, 2020

Victoria Ann Murdock

Victoria Ann Murdock, August 30, 1948 -

VP candidate for Peace and Freedom Party (aka Internationalist Workers Party) (1988)

Running mate with nominee: Herbert G. Lewin (1914-2010)
Popular vote: 10,148 (0.01%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

1988 was Herbert Lewin's second Presidential run.

In the 1988 election the Peace and Freedom Party seemed to be in a bit of disarray as it tried to fend off a takeover attempt by the New Alliance Party. The PFP appeared to have been seriously split and a third of the delegates walked out of the convention in Oakland. This was a rare election where the PFP did not appear on the Presidential ballot in California. NAP leader Lenora Fulani and Internationalist Workers Party figure Herb Lewin both claimed the nomination but when they filed with the California Secretary of State the election officials refused to recognize either one as the legitimate Presidential selection.

Lewin claimed victory but Fulani said she was nominated at a "parallel convention" in a nearby hotel.

It seems the PFP party officials made the request not to list either one on the ballot. Party chair and 1980 presidential nominee Maureen Smith told the press the nomination process "never got off on a legal start" since so many delegates were not credentialed.

Old time Trotskyite and retired machinist Herb Lewin of Pennsylvania acted as if he was the PFP nominee anyway. Lewin had lost the Liberty Union Party primary in Vermont, and also the non-binding California primary for the Peace and Freedom Party. He had a history with the Socialist Workers Party but by 1984 had been selected by the ultra-obscure Internationalist Workers Party to be their first President candidate. Their method was to work within existing Leftist political parties.

During the campaign Lewin criticized the New Alliance and Workers World parties for being too cozy with the Democrats.

He was on the ballot in three states as the PFP Presidential candidate: New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Also as a registered write-in in California. Vikki Murdock was his running-mate the first two states, Emma Wong Mar the VP in Vermont and California. It isn't clear between Murdock or Mar who was serving as the official nominee and who was the stand-in, or indeed if that situation even existed. Both VPs were based in California. Some news reports did vaguely indicate Mar was the actual Party selection. She described herself to the media as "an independent Socialist."

Murdock was also running for US Congress in California's 32nd District as a member of the Peace and Freedom Party in 1988 where she earned 2.35% of the vote.

Nationally Lewin earned 10,367 popular votes (0.01%) mostly from New Jersey. The Lewin/Murdock ticket received 0.32% of the vote in New Jersey actually placing third [!] and 0.05 in Rhode Island.

Election history:
1986 - California Assembly (Pace and Freedom Party) - defeated
1988 - US House of Representatives (Calif.) (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
1990 - US House of Representatives (Calif.) (Peace and Freedom Party) - primary - defeated

Other occupations: anthropology student, temporary postal clerk,

Notes:
Raised in Long Beach, attended Paramount High School and California State University-Long Beach.

Sunday, February 9, 2020

Bill W. Thorn Sr.




Bill W. Thorn Sr., b. ca1916

VP candidate for Consumer Party (aka Citizens Party) (1984)

Running mate with nominee: Sonia Johnson (b. 1936)
Popular vote: 21,628 (0.02%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

In their second, and final, national election the Citizens Party selected Sonia Johnson as the standard bearer. Johnson had an inner conflict to reconcile-- she was a devout Mormon but also passionate about the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment. Naturally as her ERA activism increased and she became critical of the Church she found herself excommunicated. To some she was a heretic, to others a heroine.

Barry Commoner, the 1980 Presidential nominee, endorsed Rev. Jesse Jackson in the Democratic primaries, a move that many felt took the wind out of the sails of this new third party. Another major hurdle for the 1984 campaign was that the Party was still paying off the debt from the 1980 effort.

There were three running-mates for Johnson in 1984. Richard Walton was the official VP nominee on the ballot or certified write-in in 21 states. In California Johnson had won the primary for the Peace and Freedom Party (which included defeating Dennis Serrette of the New Alliance Party and Gavrielle Holmes of the Workers World Party) and her running-mate there was Emma Wong Mar. In Pennsylvania under the banner of the Consumer Party her VP was Bill Thorn.

Thorn included a brief autobiographical statement in a newspaper profile: "For 40 years I have been leading fights in my community for civil rights, jobs, housing, rent control, and lower utility bills. I've testified before congressional committees, sued in courts, and walked picket lines seeking justice and the right to a decent life for all people."

In addition to the Peace and Freedom Party and the Consumer Party there was another major player. The Socialist Party of the United States of America decided not run a ticket in 1984 and endorsed the Citizens Party.

There was a bit of excitement in the press in Pennsylvania concerning a switch in political allegiances. Dorothy Muns Blancato, an interior decorator and Jazz pianist from Vanport, Penn. was selected as the VP for the New Alliance Party and planned to be listed in three states: Alabama, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. Although news reports indicate she was originally intended to be a stand-in candidate, in August 1984 she withdrew from the ticket without informing NAP Presidential candidate Dennis Serrette first and instead endorsed Sonia Johnson of the Citizens Party. Part of the result of this complicated episode was that Serrette failed to find a place on the Pennsylvania ballot.

Although the Citizens Party had a generally progressive platform and was comprised of the largest confederation of Leftist parties in 1984, Johnson's campaign understandably made feminist issues the central focus.

The popular vote was almost evenly split three ways among the VPs. Nationally the Party grossed 72,161 votes (0.08%), a considerable decline from their 1980 performance. Interesting that 2/3 of the result came from California and Pennsylvania where they ran under the names of their host parties.

The Johnson/Thorn ticket placed 3rd in Pennsylvania with 0.45%, one of only two states (the other being Louisiana) where Johnson ran ahead of all the other third parties. It was also the state where Johnson received her second highest percentage.

The Citizens Party evaporated shortly after the election. Or did it? In hindsight we see they served as a forerunner of today's Green Party, America's 4th largest political party. Meanwhile, the Pennsylvania-based Consumer Party limped along for another Presidential election cycle.

Election history:
1982 - Pennsylvania State House of Representatives (Consumer Party) - defeated
1983 - Philadelphia City Council (Consumer Party) - defeated
1986 - Governor of Pennsylvania (Consumer Party) - withdrew

Other occupations: welder, welding instructor, tenants rights activist, founder of Montrose Civic Association,

Buried: ?

Notes:
Withdrew from the 1986 race for Governor of Pennsylvania after suffering a stroke.
Possibly the same as Willie W. Thorn 1916-1993 but I cannot make the connection.

Saturday, February 8, 2020

Emma Wong Mar




Emma Wong Mar, September 7, 1926 (New York, NY) – September 16, 2015 (Oakland, Calif.)

VP candidate for Peace and Freedom Party (aka Citizens Party) (1984)
VP candidate for Peace and Freedom Party (aka Internationalist Workers Party) (1988)

Running mate with nominee (1984): Sonia Johnson (b. 1936)
Running mate with nominee (1988): Herbert G. Lewin (1914-2010)
Popular vote (1984): 26,297 (0.03%)
Popular vote (1988) : 219 (0.00%)
Electoral vote (1984, 1988): 0/538

The campaign (1984):

In their second, and final, national election the Citizens Party selected Sonia Johnson as the standard bearer. Johnson had an inner conflict to reconcile-- she was a devout Mormon but also passionate about the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment. Naturally as her ERA activism increased and she became critical of the Church she found herself excommunicated. To some she was a heretic, to others a heroine.

Barry Commoner, the 1980 Presidential nominee, endorsed Rev. Jesse Jackson in the Democratic primaries, a move that many felt took the wind out of the sails of this new third party. Another major hurdle for the 1984 campaign was that the Party was still paying off the debt from the 1980 effort.

There were three running-mates for Johnson in 1984. Richard Walton was the official VP nominee on the ballot or certified write-in in 21 states. In California Johnson had won the primary for the Peace and Freedom Party (which included defeating Dennis Serrette of the New Alliance Party and Gavrielle Holmes of the Workers World Party) and her running-mate there was Emma Wong Mar. In Pennsylvania under the banner of the Consumer Party her VP was Bill Thorn.

Mar has the distinction of being the first Asian American VP on a Presidential ticket.

In addition to the Peace and Freedom Party and the Consumer Party there was another major player. The Socialist Party of the United States of America decided not run a ticket in 1984 and endorsed the Citizens Party.

Although the Citizens Party had a generally progressive platform and was comprised of the largest confederation of Leftist parties in 1984, Johnson's campaign understandably made feminist issues the central focus.

The popular vote was almost evenly split three ways among the VPs. Nationally the Party grossed 72,161 votes (0.08%), a considerable decline from their 1980 performance. Interesting that 2/3 of the result came from California and Pennsylvania where they ran under the names of their host parties.

The Johnson/Mar ticket placed 5th in California with 0.28%, but it was Johnson's highest popular vote (26,297) of any single state and the third largest percentage.

The Citizens Party evaporated shortly after the election. Or did it? In hindsight we see they served as a forerunner of today's Green Party, America's 4th largest political party.

The campaign (1988):

In the 1988 election the Peace and Freedom Party appeared to be in a bit of disarray as it tried to fend off a takeover attempt by the New Alliance Party. The PFP appeared to have been seriously split and a third of the delegates walked out of the convention in Oakland. This was a rare election where the PFP did not appear on the Presidential ballot in California. NAP leader Lenora Fulani and Internationalist Workers Party figure Herb Lewin both claimed the nomination but when they filed with the California Secretary of State the election officials refused to recognize either one as the legitimate Presidential selection.

Lewin claimed victory but Fulani said she was nominated at a "parallel convention" in a nearby hotel.

It seems the PFP party officials made the request not to list either one on the ballot. Party chair and 1980 presidential nominee Maureen Smith told the press the nomination process "never got off on a legal start" since so many delegates were not credentialed.

Old time Trotskyite and retired machinist Herb Lewin of Pennsylvania acted as if he was the PFP nominee anyway. Lewin had lost the Liberty Union Party primary in Vermont, and also the non-binding California primary for the Peace and Freedom Party. He had a history with the Socialist Workers Party but by 1984 had been selected by the ultra-obscure Internationalist Workers Party to be their first President candidate. Their method was to work within existing Leftist political parties.

During the campaign Lewin criticized the New Alliance and Workers World parties for being too cozy with the Democrats.

He was on the ballot in three states as the PFP Presidential candidate: New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Also as a registered write-in in California. Vikki Murdock was his running-mate the first two states, Mar the VP in Vermont and California. It isn't clear between Murdock or Mar who was serving as the official nominee and who was the stand-in, or indeed if that situation even existed. Some news reports did vaguely indicate Mar was the actual Party selection. She described herself to the media as "an independent Socialist."

Nationally Lewin earned 10,367 popular votes (0.01%) mostly from New Jersey. The Lewin/Mar ticket received 58 write-in votes in California and 219 votes (0.07%) on the ballot in Vermont.

Election history:
1982 - California State Assembly (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
1986 - California State Assembly (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
1990 - Lt. Governor of California (Peace and Freedom Party) - primary - defeated
1992 - California State Assembly (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
1994 - US House of Representatives (Calif.) (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated

Other occupations: medical technologist, Planned Parenthood,  State Chair of the Peace and Freedom Party, union activist

Buried: ?

Notes:
Winner in the 1994 race was Ron Dellums.

Thursday, January 2, 2020

Elizabeth Cervantes Barron





Elizabeth Cervantes Barron, March 14, 1938 (Los Angeles, Calif.) -

VP candidate for Peace and Freedom Party (1980)

Running mate with nominee: Maureen Smith (b. ca1942)
Popular vote: 18,116 (0.02%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

In 1968, 1972, and 1976 the Peace and Freedom Party had been an entity with national electoral ambitions and joined political confederations to form umbrella groups. By 1980 in the face of  the rising wave of conservatism, the Party retrenched and settled on making California their focus.

The nonbinding PFP California primary election drew an ecumenical list of Leftists. The winner was Dr. Benjamin Spock (Presidential nominee of the PFP-backed People's Party in 1972) and the runners-up were Gus Hall (Communist Party USA Presidential nominee 1972, 1976, 1980, 1984), David McReynolds (Socialist Party USA Presidential nominee 1980, 2000), and Deidre Griswold (Workers World Presidential nominee 1980). At the following convention, in which Spock was absent, the LA Times reported  "after considerable bickering, party delegates turned to Maureen Smith as a 'unity candidate.'"

Her running-mate was Elizabeth Cervantes Barron, a teacher who had run for other offices and successfully racked up enough percentage points in votes in the 1970s to have the PFP qualify for the ballot in 1980.

Smith, a clerical worker from Santa Cruz County told the press she expected the campaign would be working with a budget of only $1000.

"By voting for us, we'll tell the powers that be that you're tired of Carter and Reagan and the other politicians serving the corporate interests of this country," Smith was quoted by the press. "The challenge of the 80s is to establish an alternative system for socialism and feminism ... We're for full employment and worker ownership of industry. We're for affirmative action to be competitive with a white, male dominated society ..."

The PFP platform included support for disarmament, graduated income tax, rent control, Gay rights, socialized health care and opposition to deportation of undocumented migrants and the draft. Smith said the PFP was "the only Left" party on the ballot. In California, the lone state where the PFP was on the Presidential ballot in 1980, she very well might have been correct, although a few folks in Barry Commoner's Citizens Party might argue otherwise. David McReynolds, the Presidential candidate for the Socialist Party USA and not on the California ballot, endorsed the Smith/Cervantes Barron ticket.

Smith said she would consider 50,000 to 100,000 votes a success, or 0.50% to 1%. The results fell a bit short of that where they earned 0.21% of the vote. Cervantes Barron was also running for the California State Assembly as the PFP candidate in the same election and finished that race with 5.85%.

In the event they had won the Presidential election the fact that both candidates were from the same state would have posed a probable Constitutional crisis.

Election history:
1974 - US House of Representatives (Calif.) (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
1978 - California Controller (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
1980 - California State Assembly (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
1994 - US Senate (Calif.) (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated
2006 - California Controller (Peace and Freedom Party) - defeated

Other occupations: teacher

Notes:
Plays the piano.
Winner of the 1994 race was Dianne Feinstein.
Joined the Peace and Freedom Party in 1967.

Thursday, November 14, 2019

Julius Wilson Hobson












Julius Wilson Hobson, May 29, 1919 (Birmingham, Ala.) – March 23, 1977 (Washington, D.C.)

VP candidate for People's Party (aka Liberty Union Party aka Peace and Freedom Party aka Independent aka New Party aka Common Good Party aka Human Rights Party) (1972)

Running mate with nominee: Benjamin McLane Spock (1903–1998)
Popular vote: 78,759 (0.10%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

The People's Party was an attempt to form an umbrella political party for the far Left. It was comprised of elements from the Peace and Freedom Party (Calif, Idaho, Ind.), Liberty Union Party (Vt.), Common Good Party (NY), Human Rights Party (Mich., Utah), and the New Party.

The New Party attempted to draft consumer advocate Ralph Nader for President, but he refused to run that year. The Peace and Freedom Party, now mostly centered in California, joined the coalition to form the People's Party. Michigan's Human Rights Party declined to place Dr. Spock's name on the ballot in deference to Sen. McGovern. Efforts to place Spock on the ballot in New York and Utah came to nothing.

After seriously considering backing the nomination of US Sen. George McGovern (D-SD), the Party chose to nominate Dr. Benjamin Spock, with Julius W. Hobson as his running mate. Dr. Spock stated he was merely a stand-in candidate and would gladly step down if someone else with more stature such as Rep. Shirley Chisholm agreed to run in his place.

Hobson, who by 1972 was something of a political gadfly, had evolved into an increasingly militant activist to battle various manifestations of segregation in Washington, DC using original and effective tactics on the streets, in court, and serving in public office. The man had a unique blend of being part political theater showman and part researcher. In 1971 he was given just six months to live as a result of multiple myeloma, a cancer of the spine, but fooled everyone by surviving until 1977 although he eventually was restricted to a wheelchair. In at least one photo from the 1972 campaign Hobson can be seen using crutches.

The platform, according to the New York Times, included "immediate withdrawal of all American troops abroad; free medical care as a right; an end to tax preference; an allowance of $6,500 for a family of four; the legalization of abortion on demand and marijuana, and an end to discrimination against women and homosexuals." Unfortunately for the People's Party the Democratic Party nomination of McGovern, easily the most Leftist candidate that party has offered since FDR, absorbed a group of voters who otherwise would have supported Spock if someone like Hubert Humphrey or Henry "Scoop" Jackson had been chosen instead.

On the ballot in ten states the Spock/Hobson ticket finished strongest in California 0.66%, Vermont 0.54%, Idaho 0.29%, and Colorado 0.25%.

Election history:
1968-1969 - District of Columbia Board of Education
1969 - District of Columbia Board of Education - defeated
1971 - US House of Representatives Delegate (DC Statehood Party) - defeated
1975-1977 - Council of the District of Columbia (DC Statehood Party)

Other occupations: custodian, paper company worker, soldier (WWII), Library of Congress researcher, Social Security Administration economist and statistician, teacher, Chair of the District of Columbia’s chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), founder of Association Community Teams (ACT), author

Buried: ?

Notes:
Some sources give his year of birth as 1922
"For 25 hell-raising years, Mr. Hobson shook Washington in unorthodox, unpredictable ways. As
  often as not, he was the lone front-line fighter against some aspect of racial discrimination, the
 gruff-and-ready tickler for equal education. He was always fast with an irreverent quip, and he never
 let up on his lawsuits, his books, his thorough research, his provocative political activities and his
 extraordinary ability to intimidate, embarrass or fool officialdom into doing something about civil
 rights."--Washington Post obituary.
In 1981 the Washington Post revealed that Hobson had been a paid informer for the FBI in the 1960s.
 Many of his supporters suspect he was playing a game of supplying misinformation or using the
 Bureau to thwart his enemies.
In Vermont in 1972 Bernie Sanders was downticket running for Governor also as part of the Liberty Union slate.

Saturday, October 19, 2019

Rodolfo Gonzales





 Cesar Chavez, Corky Gonzalez

 Ralph Abernathy, Corky Gonzalez, Peggy Terry

 Angela Davis, Corky Gonzalez


Rodolfo Gonzales, June 18, 1928 (Denver, Colo.) – April 12, 2005 (Denver. Colo.)

VP candidate for Peace and Freedom Party (1968)

Running mate with nominee: Eldridge Cleaver (1935-1998)
Popular vote: 1512 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

Driven chiefly by Californians, the Peace and Freedom Party was organized in the mid-1960s and went national in an attempt to link together various contingents of the Left. At their Presidential nominating convention Aug. 17-18, 1968 in Ann Arbor, Mich. where Eldridge Cleaver was selected over Dick Gregory, a schism had already become obvious. Gregory would go on to outpoll Cleaver on Election Day.

Cleaver, the author of Soul on Ice and the Minister of Information for the Black Panther Party, had little patience for the serious bickering that took place at the convention. When it came time to nominate a Vice-Presidential candidate, Cleaver suggested Youth International Party activist Jerry Rubin-- an idea that went nowhere as many considered Rubin to be too erratic, uncontrollable, and part of the Far Right of the Far Left. As the convention wrestled over this and other issues, Cleaver walked out in frustration and the matter was eventually left up to each state to select his running mate.

A member of the Socialist Workers Party took notes at this event and concluded:

Some Generalizations 1) The P&F movement is in a state of serious disarray. 2) The "coalition" with the Panthers had been badly shaken. 3) If Cleaver doesn't extricate himself from this mess soon he will rapidly and thoroughly discredit himself in the eyes of black militants inside and outside the BPP.

In April 1968, prior to being nominated, Cleaver was involved in a police shootout. Shortly after the election he felt obliged to jump bail and flee to Cuba.

The Iowa and Utah Peace and Freedom Party conventions selected Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales as the VP nominee. A former boxer of some note, author of the epic poem I Am Joaquin (1967), and a leader in Mexican-American civil rights, Gonzalez had been an active Democrat starting in the late 1940s to the mid-1960s, but felt frustrated working within the major party system.

There are conflicting newspaper accounts concerning the blank spot on the Utah ballot for the Peace and Freedom Party option for President. One story has it that because Cleaver was too young to serve, he was stricken from the ballot while Gonzales (and the Electors) remained. The second story, according to the Aug. 25, 1968 Salt Lake Tribune, is that the Utah PFP majority opinion was to leave the position blank in spite of vigorous lobbying by supporters of both Eugene McCarthy and Eldridge Cleaver. Gonzales, from neighboring Colorado, was nominated as VP with an almost favorite son admiration. The convention also nominated the singer Bruce "Utah" Phillips for the US Senate.

The final vote: Iowa 1,332 (5th place, 0.11%) and Utah 180 (a very distant 4th place, 0.04%)

Election history:
1962 - Colorado House of Representatives (Democratic) - defeated
1964 - Colorado House of Representatives (Democratic) - ruled ineligible due to residency requirements

Other occupations: boxer, poet, agricultural worker, author, tavern owner, bail bondsman, one of the founders of Cruzada para la Justicia

Buried: ?

Notes:
Testifying to his fiery personality as a youth, an uncle said of Gonzales, "He was always popping off
 like a cork. So, we called him Corky."
"It is important for us to realize that Chicanos did not immigrate to the United States, the United
 States came to us."--Corky Gonzales.
Inducted into the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame in 1988.
Retired from boxing in 1955 with 63 wins, 11 losses, and 1 draw.
His father came to the US from Mexico.
Active in La Raza Unida Party
"I am Joaquin,
Lost in a world of confusion,
Caught up in a whirl of a gringo society,
Confused by the rules, Scorned by attitudes,
Suppressed by manipulations, And destroyed by modern society.
My fathers have lost the economic battle and won the struggle of
cultural survival."



Friday, October 18, 2019

Judith Hollander Mage







Judith Hollander Mage, February 3, 1935 (New York, NY?) -

VP candidate for Peace and Freedom Party (1968)

Running mate with nominee: Eldridge Cleaver (1935-1998)
Popular vote: 217 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

Driven chiefly by Californians, the Peace and Freedom Party was organized in the mid-1960s and went national in an attempt to link together various contingents of the Left. At their Presidential nominating convention Aug. 17-18, 1968 in Ann Arbor, Mich. where Eldridge Cleaver was selected over Dick Gregory, a schism had already become obvious. Gregory would go on to outpoll Cleaver on Election Day.

Cleaver, the author of Soul on Ice and the Minister of Information for the Black Panther Party, had little patience for the serious bickering that took place at the convention. When it came time to nominate a Vice-Presidential candidate, Cleaver suggested Youth International Party activist Jerry Rubin-- an idea that went nowhere as many considered Rubin to be too erratic, uncontrollable, and part of the Far Right of the Far Left. As the convention wrestled over this and other issues, Cleaver walked out in frustration and the matter was eventually left up to each state to select his running mate.

A member of the Socialist Workers Party took notes at this event and concluded:

Some Generalizations 1) The P&F movement is in a state of serious disarray. 2) The "coalition" with the Panthers had been badly shaken. 3) If Cleaver doesn't extricate himself from this mess soon he will rapidly and thoroughly discredit himself in the eyes of black militants inside and outside the BPP.

In April 1968, prior to being nominated, Cleaver was involved in a police shootout. Shortly after the election he felt obliged to jump bail and flee to Cuba.

The New York Peace and Freedom Party nominated Cleaver and Doug F. Dowd as his running mate with the understanding Dowd would be a "stand-in." The sequence of events is not clear, but within the month the State of New York invalidated the Party's place on the Presidential ballot by virtue of the fact Cleaver was below the age of 35. Shortly before or after this took place, Dowd's name was replaced by that of Judith Mage, who at age 33 was also too young to meet the Constitutional requirement. Subsequent efforts to at least have the PFP Electors listed with a blank slate went nowhere.

Mage was a former member of the Socialist Workers Party who became well known in 1965-1968 as one of the leaders of a crippling strike held by the 7000+ member Social Service Employees Union in New York. At some point her political activity landed her behind bars for a spell. Mayor Lindsay called her circle, "a small irresponsible group that caused trouble for everybody." But it was an era of huge multiple strikes to hit New York City as the political climate was shifting.

The hopelessness of attaining a spot in the New York ballot did not prevent Mage from campaigning. On Oct. 7, 1968, Democratic VP candidate Sen. Edmund S. Muskie encountered the most energetic heckling of his campaign while attempting to give a speech in Syracuse, NY. The chief instigator was named as the megaphone-wielding Judith Mage, who the newspapers said challenged Muskie to a spontaneous debate as VP to VP but the Senator declined.

Meanwhile, on the other side of the country, Mage was apparently considered Cleaver's VP in Arizona. The Grand Canyon State did not list VP candidates on the ballot, but other sources give Mage as the running mate in that jurisdiction. Their very distant 5th place finish of 217 votes amounted to 0.04% of the popular vote there, but they still outpolled the Socialist Workers and Socialist Labor parties.

Election history: none

Other occupations: welfare caseworker, President of the Social Service Employees Union, local family planning educator for Planned Parenthood, community activist

Notes:
Sometimes listed as Judith M. Mage.
Currently registered as a Democrat and still active for progressive causes in her community in upstate
 NY.
Attended Antioch and was active with the SWP there with her then-husband Shane Mage.

Thursday, October 17, 2019

Douglas Fitzgerald Dowd



Douglas Fitzgerald Dowd, December 7, 1919 (San Francisco, Calif.) - September 8, 2017 (Bologna, Italy)

VP candidate for Peace and Freedom Party (1968)

Running mate with nominee: Eldridge Cleaver (1935-1998)
Popular vote: 0 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

Driven chiefly by Californians, the Peace and Freedom Party was organized in the mid-1960s and went national in an attempt to link together various contingents of the Left. At their Presidential nominating convention Aug. 17-18, 1968 in Ann Arbor, Mich. where Eldridge Cleaver was selected over Dick Gregory, a schism had already become obvious. Gregory would go on to outpoll Cleaver on Election Day.

Cleaver, the author of Soul on Ice and the Minister of Information for the Black Panther Party, had little patience for the serious bickering that took place at the convention. When it came time to nominate a Vice-Presidential candidate, Cleaver suggested Youth International Party activist Jerry Rubin-- an idea that went nowhere as many considered Rubin to be too erratic, uncontrollable, and part of the Far Right of the Far Left. As the convention wrestled over this and other issues, Cleaver walked out in frustration and the matter was eventually left up to each state to select his running mate.

A member of the Socialist Workers Party took notes at this event and concluded:

Some Generalizations 1) The P&F movement is in a state of serious disarray. 2) The "coalition" with the Panthers had been badly shaken. 3) If Cleaver doesn't extricate himself from this mess soon he will rapidly and thoroughly discredit himself in the eyes of black militants inside and outside the BPP.

In April 1968, prior to being nominated, Cleaver was involved in a police shootout. Shortly after the election he felt obliged to jump bail and flee to Cuba.

The New York Peace and Freedom Party nominated Cleaver at their convention but struggled over the VP nominee decision which included Carl Oglesby who was a SDS leader and Jerry Rubin of the Youth International Party (Yippies). Enter stage Old Left, Doug F. Dowd a Cornell economics professor and mentor to Daniel Ellsberg, as well as one of Henry Wallace's 1948 Progressive Party managers.

As Dowd later recalled:

I just happened to be in New York the weekend on which they were having their convention, on the east side of New York ... And I thought, "well, as long as I'm here I may as well drop in on the goddamn convention before I go to Ithaca." So I go to the convention, which is a tawdry kind of thing in some creepy old hotel ... I walk in there: "Jesus Christ, Doug. Thank God you've come! You've got to be vice president!" "What are you talking about? .. I not only don't got to run for vice president, as I've told you I don't believe in this thing at all." "If you don't do it, Rubin's going to get it. Do you want Rubin to be running for vice president?" And they knew damn well I hated Jerry Rubin ... So I said, "Jesus, you've got to find someone else." "No, we can't find anybody else. It's too late. You've got to do it, Doug." So in order to keep Jerry Rubin from getting on this goddamn [ticket], I said "OK."

Rubin's supporters openly questioned whether a man who was in "a pinstriped suit with a martini in his hand" could be on the ticket. For his part, Dowd said the convention brought to mind "a bunch of little kids, high school kids, playing mayor for a day or convention for a day."

The newspapers reported that Dowd was a "stand-in" nominee who did not plan to campaign or serve in office if elected. But he did defend Cleaver in at least one long letter to the editor. As it happened the State of New York rejected the Peace and Freedom Party ticket from the ballot in late September on the grounds that Cleaver was too young to serve in office if elected. Around the same time the ticket had been invalidated, the name of Judith Mage replaced Dowd's in the court appeals.

No doubt the Cleaver/Dowd team earned some write-in votes in New York, but these were not recorded.

Election history: none

Other occupations: soldier (WWII), economist, university professor, author

Buried: ?

Notes:
"Most of the people of all the rich countries now work very hard – even harder – to pay for things that add little to the meaning or satisfaction of their lives. In doing so they contribute to a socioeconomic global system that has already ruined countless lives and that threatens to end all life. Many thoughtful and decent people think there is no reasonable alternative. But there is. And if not now, when?"--Douglas F. Dowd.

Wednesday, October 16, 2019

Lawrence D. Hochman






Lawrence D. Hochman, October 18, 1929 (Detroit, Mich.) - January 25, 2009 (Livonia, Mich.?)

VP candidate for New Politics Party (1968)

Running mate with nominee: Eldridge Cleaver (1935-1998)
Popular vote: 4,585 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

Driven chiefly by Californians, the Peace and Freedom Party was organized in the mid-1960s and went national in an attempt to link together various contingents of the Left. At their Presidential nominating convention Aug. 17-18, 1968 in Ann Arbor, Mich. where Eldridge Cleaver was selected over Dick Gregory, a schism had already become obvious. Gregory would go on to outpoll Cleaver on Election Day.

Cleaver, the author of Soul on Ice and the Minister of Information for the Black Panther Party, had little patience for the serious bickering that took place at the convention. When it came time to nominate a Vice-Presidential candidate, Cleaver suggested Youth International Party activist Jerry Rubin-- an idea that went nowhere as many considered Rubin to be too erratic, uncontrollable, and part of the Far Right of the Far Left. As the convention wrestled over this and other issues, Cleaver walked out in frustration and the matter was eventually left up to each state to select his running mate.

A member of the Socialist Workers Party took notes at this event and concluded:

Some Generalizations 1) The P&F movement is in a state of serious disarray. 2) The "coalition" with the Panthers had been badly shaken. 3) If Cleaver doesn't extricate himself from this mess soon he will rapidly and thoroughly discredit himself in the eyes of black militants inside and outside the BPP.

In April 1968, prior to being nominated, Cleaver was involved in a police shootout. Shortly after the election he felt obliged to jump bail and flee to Cuba.

In Michigan Cleaver was not nominated by the Peace and Freedom but rather the New Politics Party, a very short-lived Michigan group. It is difficult to ascertain if this organization was more closely affiliated with the Peace and Freedom Party, the New Party, or anyone else. For VP they nominated Larry Hochman, an associate professor of physics at Eastern Michigan University.

There was also a New Politics Party in Indiana that found themselves with a blank slate when their proposed Eugene McCarthy/John Lindsay ticket turned them down, so they replaced them with Dick Gregory/Mark Lane. Whether the Indiana and Michigan New Politics parties were related is unclear, like most everything else about the 1968 election!

On a campaign budget of merely $944.09, the Cleaver/Hochman electioneering activity was severely limited.

The national vote for Cleaver was 36,571 (0.04%). Of those votes 4,585 (0.14%) came from the Cleaver/Hochman choice in Michigan where they placed 4th. Hochman expressed disappointment that they did not reach one percent, meaning that next time they would have to achieve ballot status once again by employing the onerous task of gathering petition signatures. He said he doubted he would run again.

Election history: none

Other occupations: physics instructor, attorney, author

Buried: ?

Notes:
Part of the Burdick-Hochman political family in Michigan.
Hochman stated his nomination and other Leftist activity was the reason why Eastern Michigan
 University denied him a permanent position. He and two other Leftist professors in the same
 situation sued and EMU settled in 1971.
Lived in a Hashomer Hatzair kibbutz in 1951.