The Green Party's Jill Stein has clinched her party’s presidential
nomination after celebrating a major victory in yesterday’s California
primary, winning 49% of the vote against her chief contenders,
television comedienne Roseanne Barr and public servant Kent Mesplay. The
California win followed other recent Stein victories in Michigan,
Florida, and Iowa.
With 182 delegates required to win the nomination, and 194 delegates
now in hand, Stein will go into the Green Party convention in Baltimore,
July 12-15, with a clear majority of delegates. She has won over 66 percent of all delegates allocated, and 27 of 29 Green Party primaries, with the next nearest candidate, Roseanne Barr, at 22%.
Stein,
a medical doctor who once ran against Mitt Romney for Governor of
Massachusetts, is proposing a Green New Deal for America that will
create 25 million jobs, end unemployment, and transition our country to a
green economy. Her proposals will also guarantee public higher
education and Medicare for all, break up the big banks, and end
corporate domination of elections.
"Voters will not be forced to choose between two servants of Wall
Street in the upcoming election,” said Stein. “Now we know there will be
a third candidate on the ballot who is a genuine champion of working
people."
Dr.
Jill Stein is a mother, housewife, physician, longtime teacher of
internal medicine, and pioneering environmental-health advocate. As a
respected health expert and public interest advocate, she has led
numerous initiatives advancing health, green jobs, and stronger
democracy.
Stein is the co-author of two widely-praised reports, In Harm's Way:
Toxic Threats to Child Development, published in 2000, and Environmental
Threats to Healthy Aging, published in 2009. The reports promote green
local economies, sustainable agriculture, clean power, and freedom from
toxic threats.
Dr. Stein played a key role in the effort to update fish advisories
in Massachusetts and beyond to better protect women and children from
mercury contamination, which can contribute to learning disabilities and
attention deficits in children. She also helped lead the successful
campaign to clean up the "Filthy Five" coal plants in Massachusetts, an
effort that resulted in getting coal plant regulations signed into law
that were the most protective at that time. Her testimony on the effects
of mercury and dioxin contamination from the burning of waste helped
preserve the Massachusetts moratorium on new trash incinerator
construction in the state. She led referendum fights in 11 legislative
districts calling for local green jobs, and in 2011 she co-led the
alliance of the Black Empowerment Coalition and the Green-Rainbow Party
that successfully doubled the seats representing communities of color in
the Massachusetts legislature, reducing historic racial gerrymandering.
Jill Stein represented the Green-Rainbow Party in the race for
Massachusetts State Representative in 2004 and for Secretary of State in
2006. In 2006 she won the votes of over 350,000 Massachusetts citizens,
the greatest vote total ever for a Massachusetts Green Party candidate.
Stein was born in Chicago and raised in suburban Highland Park,
Illinois. She graduated magna cum laude from Harvard College in 1973,
and from Harvard Medical School in 1979. Dr. Stein enjoys writing and
performing music, and enjoys long walks with her Great Dane, Bandita.
She lives in Lexington with her husband, Richard Rohrer, also a
physician. They have two grown sons, Ben and Noah.
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