Howie Hawkins
Howie Hawkins has been active in movements for peace, justice, the environment, and independent progressive politics since the late 1960's.
A former Marine, he helped organize opposition to the Vietnam War and was
a co-founder of the anti-nuclear Clamshell Alliance in 1976. He was a
co-founder of the
Green
Party in the United States in 1984 and currently serves on the Green
National Committee.
After attending Dartmouth College in the early 1970s, Howie worked as a carpenter in New England and helped start up a construction workers cooperative that specialized in solar and wind energy installations.
Howie moved to Syracuse in 1991 to be Director of CommonWorks, a federation of cooperatives working for an economy that is cooperatively owned, democratically controlled, and ecologically sustainable.
A member of Teamsters Local 317 and active in the national Teamster rank-and-file reform caucus, Teamsters for a Democratic Union, Howie presently works unloading trucks and rail cars at UPS.
Howie’s articles on social theory, cooperative economics, and independent politics have appeared in many publications, including Against the Current, Green Politics, International Socialist Review, New Politics, Peace and Democracy News, Peaceworks, Resist, Society and Nature, and Z Magazine. He is the editor of Independent Politics: The Green Party Strategy Debate.
Howie is committed to bringing the troops home now, a national health insurance plan for all Americans, and a new energy infrastructure based on clean renewables in order to create good jobs, build world peace, and stop global warming
"US military spending will be almost $660 billion in 2007, more than the rest of the world combined. It is a military budget for an offensive global occupation force, not for defending American soil." says Hawkins.
Howie Hawkins supports converting $300 billion a year of US military spending to a Global Public Works Program to rewire the planet for renewable energy in 10 years.