News
David
Moats
Equality
Vermont Sets Legislative Priorities for 2004 Session
Nine
Parts for a Party
Meeting and Greeting
with Peter Clavelle
R.U.
12? Gets $27K Cyber Center Grant
The
Rest of Our World
Features
Views
Editorial
Letters
to the Editor
Columns
Arts
Community
Compass
Comics
|

| Meeting
and Greeting with Peter Clavelle |
 |
by Euan
Bear
Although
his official gubernatorial campaign kick-off isn't until February 7
in Winooski, Burlington Mayor Peter Clavelle is clearly out there running.
Last month OITM caught up with him at a "meet and greet" house
party at the home of Caledonia County Democratic Justice of the Peace
Linda Markin and artist and teacher Marie Lapre Grabon.
Clavelle told the gathering of at
least 50 people, including lesbians, gay men, and straight folks, that
to date he had visited 11 of Vermont's 14 counties and 30 towns, and
that his campaign had enrolled 300 volunteers. By way of introduction,
he went through the familiar tale of his working class background, the
grandchild of French-Canadians who came to work in the Winooski woolen
mills. "I want you know," he said, "where I'm coming
from and who I represent."
On the political front, no
one was surprised when he announced, "I am repulsed by the Republicans
at both the national level and in the state. The Republicans represent
the wealthy and the powerful." Clavelle combined criticism of the
Bush administration's policies with potshots at those of the Douglas
administration. "But I'm not running against Bush," he said.
In a brief review of his past accomplishments,
Clavelle joked about the "voter-inspired sabbatical" he was
"granted" from 1993 to 1995. The mayor was defeated at the
polls in what was widely viewed as a backlash against Clavelle's institution
of domestic partnership benefits for same-sex couples.
Among his issues, he said, is "sustainable
development, and by that I mean thinking about the future, about how
our decisions affect our kids and grandkids. I want to take an integrated
approach to development, including education, jobs, equity, and the
environment."
He expects, he said, to have a spirited
campaign, because "Jim Douglas is no slouch" at campaigning.
But, he added, he intends to take the "high road" and criticize
the policies and not the person.
"The Republicans are on the
wrong road on health care," Clavelle declared, citing the elimination
of community ratings as providing too much profit for insurance companies.
Likewise Clavelle critiqued the Douglas administration's "poor
excuse for an energy policy" as "an embarrassment," lacking
any mention of renewable sources of energy.
Clavelle added the traditional Democratic
issues of education equity - including opposition to extending school
choice through vouchers ("It is important that we build strong
communities through our schools."), and the promotion of sustainable
economic development ("Walmart is not sustainable economic development.
We need jobs that pay livable wages.")
The candidate-to-be invited questions
from the assembled voters. The questions covered a range of issues,
beginning with elder care. Clavelle suggested that reimportation of
drugs from Canada could not wait for permission from the FDA: "The
FDA is not part of the solution, they're the problem," he said.
Other questions touched on mental
health care, the exorbitant cost of tuition at state colleges, global
warming's impact on Vermont's ski resort economy, opposition to the
impact of wind farms on the landscape and birds, safe schools, and how
Clavelle would get to 50 percent at the polls.
Asked about "the elephant in
the room," potential primary opponent Peter Shumlin, Clavelle said
he and Shumlin had both appeared earlier that day at an AFL-CIO meeting
in Barre. "He's gotta decide. My gut says he wants to [run]."
Clavelle denied any knowledge of whether Progressive Anthony Pollina
would run again for statewide office.
"The media have given Governor
Jim Douglas a free ride," Clavelle charged. "The only credible
poll, done by WCAX, shows that if we were in a head-to-head contest
right now, 44 percent would vote for Douglas and 33 percent for me.
I am an underdog, it's a position I relish."
To learn more about Peter Clavelle's campaign, click on his website
ClavelleforGovernor.com
|