Background
Cavlan was born in San Jose, California, but spent most of his childhood and adolescence in Northern Ireland with his Roman Catholic family.
Cavlan was born in San Jose, California, but spent most of his childhood and adolescence in Northern Ireland with his Roman Catholic family.
Cavlan"s run ended almost as soon as it began when he lost the contested Green primary. The contest was the only primary for the Green Party. This was one of the only primary races for the Green Party in Minnesota.
His primary opponent was a former Mayor of Street Louis Park for the Democratic Party.
Following the disputed Ohio election in 2004, Cavlan went to that state to help with the Green Party"s effort to recount Ohio"s votes after the 2004 election. Cavlan announced his 2006 candidacy to run for Senate in October 2004 on the Green Party ticket.
Shortly after the election, Cavlan announced his candidacy for the 2008 Senate election. However, at the 2008 Minnesota Green Party convention, he failed to gain the nomination by one vote.
A decades long peace activist, Cavlan has called for immediate troop withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Among other issues, he is pro-choice, opposes the death penalty, drug prohibition, and school vouchers, and supports gay marriage. During his 2006 Senate campaign he declared:
I"m seeing our nation proceed in very, very dangerous directions. We have had a culture of corruption envelop our government and, actually, a culture of bigotry and intolerance and, unfortunately, the response to this has been a culture of cowardice.
I plan to change that
Foreign the 2012 Minnesota United States. Senate election, he ran as a candidate for the Minnesota Open Progressive party.
2006 election for United States. Senate - MinnesotaAmy Klobuchar (Doctorate), 58%
Mark Kennedy (R), 38%
Robert Fitzgerald (I), 3%
Michael Cavlan (G), 0.5%
2012 election for United States. Senate - MinnesotaAmy Klobuchar (Doctorate), 65.23%
Kurt Bills (R), 30.53%
Stephen Williams (Independence Party), 2.59%
Tim Davis, (Grassroots), 1.07%
Michael Cavlan (Minnesota Open Progressives), 0.49%
Write-in, 0.09%.
Cavlan"s first attempt at electoral politics was a run for the state legislature in 2002 as a Green Party candidate. He almost failed to achieve party endorsement when he refused to disavow support for the use of violence by the Provisional Irish Republican Army.