Cobb & LaMarche, Green Party Presidential Ticket, Calls for Living Wage and Health Care to Honor American Workers
David Cobb and Pat LaMarche, the Green Party's presidential and vice presidential candidates, said the best way to celebrate Labor Day is to provide a Living Wage and single-payer, universal health care.
(PRWEB) September 7, 2004
The Green PartyÂs presidential and vice presidential candidates today called for a Living Wage and single-payer, universal health care for all American workers.
ÂThe way to honor the American worker on Labor DayÂand everydayÂis with a Living Wage and affordable and accessible health care, said Pat LaMarche, the Green PartyÂs vice presidential candidate.
The most recent U. S. Census reports that approximately 46 million Americans do not have health insurance.
ÂThe United States is one of the only industrialized countries in the world which does not provide health care for its citizens. While the establishment party candidates propose tinkering with a broken system, we call for its complete overhaul. The Green Party supports single-payer, universal health care which will cover everyone and cost less than our current inadequate and profit-driven system, said Green Party presidential candidate David Cobb.
The recent Census also reported that the poverty rate rose in 2003 and the income gap between rich and poor widened.
ÂWe are the only national political party representing the working people of this country. Working people should be able to provide for their families with full-time work and not have to resort to public assistance or second or third jobs just to feed their families and pay their bills. American workers need and deserve a Living WageÂa wage which will provide for their basic needs, said Cobb.
The Cobb-LaMarche platform calls for a federal Living Wage of at least $10 an hour to be adjusted for inflation; the right of workers to organize; abolishing federal subsidies and tax breaks which favor huge corporations over small businesses; and creating millions of good-paying jobs by developing renewable energy.
Both Cobb and LaMarche have their roots in poverty. Cobb was raised in a home in Texas without a flush toilet; LaMarcheÂs family was living in public housing when she was born.
ÂI donÂt think that either of the Yale-educated millionaires representing the two old parties have a clue what the average American faces on a daily basis, said LaMarche.
Cobb will join the Humboldt County Central Labor Committee for a Labor Day celebration in Eureka, California. LaMarche will spend the holiday campaigning with Jeff Spencer, a Green Party candidate for the state legislature, in Portland, Maine.
For more information about the Cobb-LaMarche campaign, see http://www. votecobb. org (http://www. votecobb. org). Information about the Green Party of the United States can be found at http://www. gp. org (http://www. gp. org).
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