There's a line of thinking I keep running into
that goes something like this: Because John Kerry supports Bush's
illegal and unpopular war, we should stop focusing on the election
and concentrate on building a grassroots movement. This argument
has a number of variations in which it's maintained that we should
focus on building a third party, or changing the system to allow
third parties to be built, or threatening to withhold our votes
from Kerry until he adopts humane and popular positions.
One important objection to the recommendation that we shift our
focus to building a grassroots movement is that we've already built
an enormous movement that under probably any previous administration
would have had a significant impact. We don't lack a movement.
What we lack is someone we can move with it.
The past four years have witnessed unprecedented
anti-war rallies including the largest ever, and including huge
rallies prior to
the start of the war. We've seen the largest women's rights march
ever, almost certainly the largest rallies ever against welfare
cuts and tax cuts, an endless series of massive protests against "free
trade," and the development of an enormous immigrants rights
movement that last year held a series of rallies and freedom rides
across the country.
We've seen civil disobedience targeting the government and corporations.
We've seen coordinated efforts combining visits, phone calls, faxes,
Emails, rallies, and civil disobedience aimed at swinging the votes
of key congress members and senators. We've seen huge gains in
traditional community organizing, the development of internet organizing,
the building of alliances among our many organizations, and the
gradual awakening of labor to the need for militant popular opposition.
We've seen local and state government rebellion
against the federal government in the form of law suits and simple
refusal to implement
policies. We've seen hundreds of cities pass resolutions against
the" PATRIOT Act" and the war. Pollution, education,
and GLBT rights are all arenas of rebellion.
Bush, Cheney, and their cabinet members are hounded by protesters
everywhere they go in this country and outside of it. Anyone who
doubts that a movement has been built should have been in New York
City at the time of the Republican Convention. And it's important
to be at these events, not trust the media to tell you about it.
The media are the same people who haven't told you about the
entire movement that's been built.
OK, but won't the movement go away as soon
as Kerry is elected? And if it does not, won't Kerry ignore it
just as the DNC has ignored
it, just as the Democratic Party Platform Committee has ignored
it? I think there is good reason to hope otherwise. For one thing,
on many issues the votes of Democrats in Congress have been responsive
to people's needs during the time that Nancy Pelosi has been minority
leader. Kerry's own voting record in the Senate, with some glaring
exceptions, has been better than his campaign rhetoric of recent
weeks. While some of us would argue that his campaigning to the
right is politically foolish, there is also reason to hope that
some of it is dishonest or at least malleable. During the primaries,
Kerry moved left. He did not say during the primaries that he would
have voted for the war even "knowing what he knows now." Kerry
has moved to the right because that has been the Democratic Party's
strategy for losing elections for a quarter century and because
popular pressure on him to move left has evaporated.
Yes, we should bring that pressure back and
do so now for Kerry's own good in hopes of attracting new voters,
but I don't believe
that's going to happen in a significant enough way to break through.
What I do think will happen, if Kerry is elected, is a massive
movement beginning November 3rd to make Kerry a progressive president.
I think the same could have been done with Clinton – but
we didn't even try. I think we could have nominated a progressive
Democrat in place of Kerry – but we didn't even try (OK,
there were some limited efforts). I think we can move Kerry to
positive positions once in office, and I think we're prepared to
try. New organizations like Progressive Democrats of America have
made that their focus, and when the labor movement is restructured
next year it will not be in a way to make it less politically aggressive.
Electing Kerry is on everyone's minds, but so is pressuring Kerry
from day one.
Despite my claim that we have formed an impressive movement, there
are always ways in which it could be better and always disagreements
on how to focus it. My recommendations would be as follows. First,
between now and Kerry's arrival in the White House focus our energy
on electing him and on preventing the stealing of the election
with machines that produce no meaningfully recountable paper records.
Now is the time to demand simple paper ballots from your county
wherever you live. Nothing else is more important for the next
two months.
Second, whatever our primary interests are, we should come together
to look beyond Kerry and make our number one demand of him now
and after the election the institution of instant runoff voting
in all federal elections before 2006. Kerry can be brought to understand
that IRV can boost turnout and help the Democrats, and help Kerry.
Progressives who despise the Democrats can understand that IRV will
give life to third parties and provide a powerful lever to move
the Democrats to democratic positions or in the long term create
a strong new party.
Third, and this should not be an issue until after the election
for obvious reasons, we must all push for media reform, as well
as continuing to build our own media. If we do not, we will not
win on our other issues, including war and peace, trade, health
care, civil rights, the environment, campaign finance reform, and
on and on. As long as the media locks us out we will not know our
own strength, and therefore we will not have any strength.
Yes, we could build an even bigger movement that could win changes
even under Bush, but it would be very very difficult, and many
of us would suffer horribly. Yes, electing Kerry in and of itself
does not go nearly far enough. But if we elect Kerry and also build
a bigger, tougher, more coordinated movement - if we demand endlessly
that Kerry be our friend rather than our trying to be his - there
will be hope, encouragement, and new life in this country and the
world.
David Swanson's website is www.davidswanson.org
|