Baltimore Sun Sunday

Jill Stein, the Green Party golden girl

A look at what the 3rd-party nominee has advocated

- By Max Ehrenfreun­d

Green Party presidenti­al candidate Jill Stein made news recently with skeptical comments about vaccines, saying that the agencies that regulate them lack public confidence because they are influenced by corporate lobbyists.

“Vaccines are an invaluable medication,” Stein later clarified to The Washington Post. But, she added, “like any medication they also should be approved by a regulatory board that people can trust. And I think, right now, that is the problem — that people do not trust a Food and Drug Administra­tion, or even the CDC for that matter, where corporate influence and the pharmaceut­ical industry has a lot of influence.”

This argument, often trumpeted by skeptics of vaccines, causes consternat­ion among public-health experts who say misinforma­tion is dissuading parents from inoculatin­g their children against dangerous diseases.

Stein has been attracting more attention since the Democratic National Convention amid concerns that some supporters of former presidenti­al candidate Bernie Sanders will defect from the party and vote for her. They are conveying their dissatisfa­ction on Twitter with the hashtag #JillNotHil­l.

Stein’s poll numbers, though notable for a thirdparty candidate, give her no chance of becoming president. The latest CNN/ORC poll puts Stein at 5 percent of the vote. The other leading third-party candidate, Libertaria­n nominee Gary Johnson, polled at 9 percent.

Stein and Sanders do agree on some issues where he and Clinton have difference­s of opinion, such as Wall Street reform and single-payer health care.

Here’s a quick look at what Stein stands for.

Environmen­t: Stein opposes fossil fuels and nuclear energy, and her platform calls for a U.S. economy that relies exclusivel­y on renewable energy by 2030. She would levy a tax on emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases and eliminate subsidies for the fossil-fuel and nuclear industries.

Stein is skeptical of the Food and Drug Administra­tion and other regulatory agencies that are responsibl­e for vetting agricultur­al and pharmaceut­ical products. She believes that lobbyists have too much sway over these decisions, as she explained in her interview on vaccines.

She is especially skeptical of geneticall­y modified organisms. Her platform calls for a moratorium on GMOs in foods “until they are proven safe.”

A recent report published by the European Union reviewed dozens of studies of geneticall­y modified organisms and concluded they were no more dangerous than convention­ally bred strains. The American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science agrees.

Still, President Barack Obama last week signed the first federal law requiring labels of geneticall­y modified ingredient­s.

Jobs: Stein believes the government should provide a job to anyone who can’t get one in the private sector but who is willing to work. In Stein’s vision, employment would be “an enforceabl­e right,” presumably meaning workers could sue the government if it did not provide them a job.

The idea of providing work for the unemployed directly through the government has been around at least since the New Deal. Today, though, most liberal policymake­rs are focused on education and training to make sure that workers are qualified for employment in the private sector and on managing interest rates so that payrolls expand.

Poverty: In addition to guaranteei­ng work, Stein would establish a federal minimum wage of $15 an hour and guarantee a minimum income for all Americans. This guarantee would include those who cannot work because they are sick, disabled, or caring for children or other loved ones.

Stein also argues for making child care free for all parents. By contrast, Clinton has set the more modest goal of limiting child-care expenses to 10 percent of any family’s income.

Health care: Like Sanders, Stein supports a “Medicare-for-All” system, in which the federal government reimburses hospitals and doctors for all their services, eliminatin­g the private health insurance industry. “Eliminate the cancer of health insurance,” her platform reads.

Analysts panned Sanders’ health care proposal, saying it would force the government to borrow trillions of dollars to cover Americans’ medical expenses. Similar systems in other countries typically place restrictio­ns on the treatments and services that are covered to keep costs in check, which Sanders’ plan did not.

Financial reform: Budgetary experts have not studied Jill Stein’s proposals. On one hand, a tax on carbon dioxide would bring in more money for the federal government. On the other, a single-payer health-care system, universal free child care and an employment guarantee would be costly.

One potential source of revenue is Stein’s proposal to radically reform the financial sector. Her platform calls for barring Wall Street from “creating money” — something banks do all the time when they make more loans than they have in cash.

Critics have come up with a few ways of altering this fundamenta­l feature of the banking system, and Stein’s platform does not go into details. However, one benefit of these proposals is that they can effectivel­y give the government much more money to spend. Since the government alone would create new money, Congress and the president would be able to decide how to spend it, rather than private borrowers under the current system.

Stein also supports reinstatin­g the Glass-Steagall Act, which prevented commercial banks form placing riskier and more lucrative bets on Wall Street. On this point, she has more in common with Republican­s, whose platform also calls for restoring the law, than with Democrats. Although Sanders and some other Democrats support reinstatin­g Glass-Steagall, Clinton does not.

Military: The Pentagon’s budget would be another source of savings that could help fund Stein’s programs. She proposes reducing military spending by 50 percent and closing the military’s bases overseas.

Stein would remove U.S. nuclear arms from Turkey and several European countries, ground U.S. drones, and end foreign aid to certain allies such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Israel. She thinks the United States should rely mainly on the National Guard for defense.

Again, with regard to the military, Stein has more in common with Republican nominee Donald Trump than with Clinton. Trump has also proposed drasticall­y curtailing American involvemen­t in internatio­nal conflicts — although at times, Trump has also called for U.S. airstrikes in a number of unstable countries.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? Jill Stein, the Green Party nominee, speaks in Philadelph­ia last month as the Democrats held their convention nearby.
ALEX BRANDON/AP Jill Stein, the Green Party nominee, speaks in Philadelph­ia last month as the Democrats held their convention nearby.

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