The Cobb-LaMarche Campaign
Working to Make Every Vote Count!
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----- Forwarded message from Ted Glick -----
Date: Sat, 1 Jan 2005 13:03:06 -0500
Future Hope column, January 1, 2005
Happy New Year, 2005?
By Ted Glick
It's hard to even write the words, much less say
them. The staggering toll of dead, injured and devastation
wrought by the Christmas tsunami in south Asia is
heart-breaking. And this is on top of the Bush electoral
"victory," the war in Iraq, recent U.S. obstruction of
international efforts to rein in global warming, plans to
privatize/decimate Social Security and more.
It reminds me of a line from a poem I once
wrote:
"Where do we look
for strength
in times like these-
hard times,
struggling times,
fighting-seemingly-
insurmountable-odds
times?"
I had some answers in the poem:
"To one another. . .
"Spiritual traditions. . .
"Children, grandchildren, neighbor children,
friends' children, students. . .
"And some of us
just muddle along,
doing the best we can,
learning from history,
understanding
the historical truth,
the law of physics
that for every action
there is a reaction-
that oppression
breeds resistance-
that,
as Dr. King said,
'The arc
of the universe
is long,
but it bends
toward justice.'"
As I write we are seeing concrete evidence of
this "law of physics."
For the last two months, since right after the
seriously flawed Presidential election and John Kerry's
seriously problematic immediate concession speech, a
grassroots, pro-democracy movement has been growing. There
were two initiatives that gave leadership to this movement:
the citizen's hearings on voter disenfranchisement in
Columbus, Ohio on November 13th organized by the League of
Pissed Off Voters, Common Cause and the Election Protection
Coalition, and the Green Party's Cobb-LaMarche campaign
which initiated, raised money for and provided the
organizational muscle for the (seriously flawed) Ohio
recount. Without these two efforts, it is likely that the
mushrooming pro-democracy movement would have stalled at the
starting line.
Since that time a growing number of important
developments have taken place:
-the active leadership and involvement in this movement by
Representative John Conyers and Rev. Jesse Jackson;
-the very successful Progressive Dialogue III meeting in
D.C. which founded United Progressives for Democracy and
called for a Winter Democracy Campaign;
-the actions by Electors in at least five states, Vermont,
Massachusetts, Maine, California and North Carolina, who,
for the first time in history, turned the heavily scripted
and ritualized electoral college proceedings December 13th
into a forum calling for congressional investigation and
legislative action;
-the national organizing by No Stolen Elections and other
groups to put pressure on U.S. Senators to get them to join
with members of the Congressional Black Caucus on January
6th, refusing to automatically pass through the Ohio
Electoral College vote;
-the organization of demonstrations on January 6th in D.C.,
beginning with a rally at Lafayette Park in the morning,
followed by a march to Capitol Hill to link up with another
rally there;
-the Save Our Votes March from Baltimore to D.C. January 4th
to 6th organized by 51capitalmarch;
-and, last but by no means least, the announcement just
yesterday by We Do Not Concede that disenfranchised voters
from Ohio will board a bus and/or caravan, leaving from
Columbus early on the morning of January 5th and going to
Washington, D.C. to lobby Senators and join with the January
6th demonstrators.
Those who are feeling depressed and pessimistic
about the political situation should join with this
mushrooming, hopeful, grassroots-driven, pro-democracy
movement.
We should all be doing everything we can on
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of this week to put
heavy pressure on U.S. Senators. By Thursday they should be
feeling like they must have felt back in October of 2002
when a tidal wave of grassroots pressure led to 156 members
of Congress voting against the legislation giving Bush the
green light to invade Iraq.
The U.S. Senate needs to be hit this week with
the equivalent of a political tsunami. If it is, come
January 7th, Bush's "political capital" may have taken a
major hit, and the political terrain for advancing the
pro-democracy agenda and all other progressive issues will
have been improved, perhaps significantly.
This is no time for cynicism or despair. It's
time for action. This week, every day. And it's time for
people to make last-minute plans to get to Lafayette Park in
D.C. on the morning of the 6th. History is calling. Let's
start the new year off right.
For contact information for U.S. Senators call
the Capitol Hill information number, 202-224-3121.
For a calendar of all the events happening this
week go to:
http://fairnessbybeckerman.blogspot.com/2005/01/calendar-of-upcoming-events.html.
To learn more about what happened with the Ohio
recount go to www.votecobb.org.
Ted Glick is the outgoing National Coordinator
of the Independent Progressive Politics Network
(www.ippn.org) and is very active with the Winter Democracy
Campaign. He can be reached at futurehopeTG@aol.com.
----- End forwarded message ----
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