Progressive Party Voter Pamphlet Statement


Vote for Candidates with “Progressive” or “PRO” next to their names.

The Peace Party of Oregon was formed by voter petition in 2008.
We changed the name from Peace Party to Progressive Party to reflect a boader agenda:  economic justice, human rights, environmental protection, and grassroots democracy, as well as avoiding military adventurism.

We are very different from the Establishment parties.

Democratic

Republican

Progressive

Oppose Wall Street bailouts

NO

NO

YES

End wars in Iraq and Afghanistan

NO

NO

YES

Oppose use of mercenaries

NO

NO

YES

Cut military spending

NO

NO

YES

Single Payer comprehensive health care

NO

NO

YES

Equal rights for all; same-sex marriage

NO

NO

YES

Real campaign finance reform

NO

NO

YES

Increase minimum wages to living wages

NO

NO

YES

Oppose NAFTA & WTO; encourage local sourcing of products & services

NO

NO

YES

Oppose spying on American civilians

NO

NO

YES

End occupation of Palestine

NO

NO

YES

Oppose offshore drilling

NO

NO

YES

Clean energy; no nuclear

NO

NO

YES

Repair, improve infrastructure (transportation, water systems, etc.)

NO

NO

YES

End the drug war

NO

NO

YES

End “corporate personhood”

NO

NO

YES

 OREGON ISSUES

1)  We have worked for real campaign finance reform, not the phony bills promoted by the Democrats and Republicans, both of which opposed the 2006 Oregon campaign finance reform ballot measures.

2)  We want a State Bank to invest in jobs for Oregonians and to stop the State Treasurer and the Oregon Investment Council from jumping into bed with corporate raiders and fast-buck artists who lavish luxury travel and gifts on State employees.

3)  We want fair taxation.  Oregon has the 4th highest income taxes of any state on lower-income working families and is still at the bottom in taxes on corporations.  

4)  We want to stop government promotion of gambling (including video poker and video slots) and stop giving away $100 million per year in ridiculously high commissions to shops with video machines.

5)  We want to make the initiative and referendum again available to grass-roots efforts, instead of making it so complicated and expensive that only corporations and unions can afford to use it.

6)  We want to improve K-12 public education by giving parents and teachers more rights  to manage their neighborhood schools.

7)  We want social justice systems that are inclusive and that promote responsibility, safety, trust-building and equality.

8)  We advocate abolishing the Oregon Senate, leaving the 60-member Oregon House of Representatives.  Splitting the Legislature into two bodies allows both of them to play games and avoid responsibility.