Pubdate: Thu, 17 Aug 2000 Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Copyright: 2000 San Jose Mercury News Contact: 750 Ridder Park Drive, San Jose, CA 95190 Fax: (408) 271-3792 Website: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Author: Cheryl Devall, Mercury News Los Angeles Bureau Bookmark: MAP's link to shadow convention items: http://www.mapinc.org/shadow.htm Note: Shadow Convention websites: http://www.drugpolicy.org/ http://www.shadowconventions.com/ SHADOWS BRING ISSUES TO LIGHT Unconventional Gathering Appeals To Range Of People At the Shadow Convention 2000, three blocks and a world away from the Democratic National Convention, people can walk into Patriotic Hall from the street, engage in political arguments and listen to plain talk about difficult issues. The four-day event, the second to coincide with the major party conventions, is bringing together people from across the political spectrum to talk about the issues that organizers believe the major parties have shied away from -- the need for campaign finance reform, the persistent gap between rich and poor, the failure of the war on drugs. In Philadelphia and in Los Angeles, these parallel forums have become places for political activists to build networks, strategize and realize that they're not alone. Some of the debate even involves people who are offering very different messages to their partisan constituencies, said Arianna Huffington, a political pundit who is one of the organizers. She heard the Rev. Jesse Jackson and U.S. Rep. Charles Rangel of New York speak both to the Democrats at the Staples Center and to the Shadow Convention. ``Their speeches here were so much more powerful than the ones they gave to the Democrats. Jesse was talking about the moral center, but here he really did address the moral center,'' she said. ``It's as though you have to check your passion at the checkpoints at Staples Center.'' Linda Hawthorn of Nevada City came to recruit people to her idea of taking the U.S. Constitution at its word, allowing any citizen to petition the government for the redress of grievances. ``I thought this is where I need to be,'' she said. She liked the egalitarian spirit of the Shadow Convention, where suits and sandals mingle. ``If I were a contributor at the Democratic convention, I'd be afforded all kinds of privileges,'' said Hawthorn, a paralegal. ``I'm a contributor here, and I stand in a line like everybody else.'' So do high-profile speakers such as former independent presidential candidate John Anderson, rock icon David Crosby and satirist Al Franken. Their overarching concern, similar to that of the many protesters who move between the streets and the Shadow, is that corporate financing and influence have corrupted the political process to the point that the needs of citizens are ignored, or worse. This alternative event is paid for through foundation grants, individual donations and contributions from sponsoring think tanks. There's reason for the Democrats to speak boldly on these matters, Shadow Convention organizers said, noting that GOP presidential candidate George W. Bush and Green Party candidate Ralph Nader threaten Vice President Al Gore's hold on California. ``These are Democratic issues, and the Democrats aren't talking about them,'' said one staffer, suggesting that the Gore-Lieberman ticket has much to gain by going after the constituency that's been attending the Shadow Convention. The alternative gathering focuses on the human faces behind the issues. The walls inside Patriotic Hall are covered with color photographs of people sentenced to long prison terms for drug convictions. The speakers' panels include people anguished over gun violence or pesticide poisoning or the unequal distribution of life-saving medicines, and angry at the political influence of the firearms, agribusiness and pharmaceutical lobbies that they say buy off legislative efforts to reform their industries. ``We want to really get these issues much more in the mainstream,'' said Huffington, a well-known conservative who seems to be undergoing a very public shift to the political left. ``We want the question about the casualties of the drug war to be one of the 50 questions reporters ask when they cover the candidates. We want campaign finance reform to be one of the top five questions.'' And the Shadow Convention organizers want ordinary people feeling left out of the political process to start talking about these matters too. People like Lizette Hernandez and Margie Francia, who walked over on their lunch hour to listen. They heard about the Shadow Convention from a friend who came and bought a lot of books from the tables in the basement. ``I wanted to hear a little bit more about the supposed war on drugs,'' said Hernandez, who works at an affordable-housing non-profit organization in Los Angeles. She said she liked that this forum was taking place parallel to the Democratic National Convention, adding, ``too bad it's not in the convention.'' The Shadow Convention is streaming events live through today at: www.shadowconventions.com Cheryl Devall can be reached at: or (323) 293-7818. - --- MAP posted-by: Eric Ernst