Cross-Cultural Understanding
| www.ccun.org | Opinion Editorials, April 2008 | |||||||||||||||||||
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			What 
			is a US Peace Voter to Do? 
 
			By 
			Kevin Zeese 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			 
			
			The Election Year Should Not Divide 
			the Peace Movement -- Remain Advocates for a Real End to the 
			Occupation 
			Divisions among peace voters about the 
			presidential election are becoming evident in columns by peace 
			advocates and on discussion lists. The goal of ending the
			 
			 
			Elections are never easy for advocates 
			of real change on major issues. 
			The two parties tend to cloud their differences on the most 
			difficult issues.  Even 
			though bringing the troops home is supported by super majorities of
			 
 
			 While McCain was trying to sound like a peace candidate, Obama was sounding like a Republican. On March 28th Obama told an audience that his foreign policy would be like Reagan’s and George H.W. Bush. He praised George H.W. Bush and said: “The truth is that my foreign policy is actually a return to the traditional bipartisan realistic policy of George Bush's father, of John F. Kennedy, of, in some ways, Ronald Reagan.” 
			 
			The two Democrats have put forward 
			incomplete withdrawal plans promising to remove combat troops but 
			leaving tens of thousands of
			 
			 
			At the same time, the independent 
			political movement may have three of its strongest candidates in 
			years -- all opposed to
			 
			 Some 
			in the peace movement, like 
			
			Tom Hayden, Danny Glover, Bill Fletcher and Barbara 
			Ehrenreich, have urged 
			support for Senator Obama by the peace movement. 
			They see him as the most peace-oriented candidate who has a 
			chance of getting elected and urge the peace movement to accept his 
			withdrawal plan, recognizing that his plan is inadequate and not a 
			complete end to the occupation. 
			Others, like 
			
			Chris Hedges 
			the noted author on war and military issues and former N.Y. Times 
			writer, say that the only choice for peace voters is Nader or
			 
			 What is a peace voter to do? 
			 How someone casts their vote is a very personal decision. I’m not going to tell anyone how to vote. But things to consider: 
			 First, do not forget -- you don’t vote the Electoral College votes. Only 10 to 15 states are expected to be ‘in play’ in 2008. In the vast majority of states it is possible to predict right now where those Electoral College votes are going. The democracy manipulation actually frees you to vote your hopes and dreams. In ‘safe’ states your vote will show the two parties that they need to represent the vast majority of voters who oppose the war. A peace supporter wastes their vote in these states by voting for a militarist candidate. Voters in these states can act without concern for fear of the ‘greater evil’ candidate. 
			 
			Second, there is no need to decide now 
			how you are going to vote or to announce how you are going to vote. 
			If you remain undecided you can use the remainder of the 
			primary as well as the General Election to tell the candidate: “want 
			my vote you -- support the majority of voters and really end the
			 
			 Third, recognize your power is not only in your vote but what you do during the election. Peace voters can work together to push candidates to accept their position – no matter who they are going to vote for. Those who support peace can be pushed to make it a higher priority. Concerted effort by the peace voting bloc will push the agenda in our direction. Take action today and tell the candidates to make ending the occupation a top issue in the campaign. See Peace Voter Power at http://votersforpeace.us/peacevoterpower.html. 
			 Fourth, don’t be fooled by political rhetoric. A common reaction by people who think of themselves as peace voters when hearing Obama’s withdrawal plan is only a partial withdrawal is disbelief. People want to believe he stands for truly ending the occupation even though Obama has been clear that he does not plan to withdraw all troops even by the end of his first term. 
			 
			And, Senator McCain, saying he detests 
			war will not end the
			 
			 To help figure out what they will do if elected Voters for Peace maintains a collection of key speeches, news reports, columns and other materials on all of the candidates. This will be a continually expanding collection throughout the campaign. See http://votersforpeace.us/pvpcandidate.php. 
			 
			Fifth, recognize that the peace 
			movement is going to have to be bigger, stronger and more unified 
			when the election is over. 
			So, don’t burn bridges with your allies over the election. 
			We need to remember that elections in the
			 
			 
			Sixth, building the peace movement is 
			bigger than the
			 
			 Seventh, the peace movement needs an inside-outside strategy. There is a role for peace voters outside and inside the two parties. Outside the two parties we should support candidates and parties that clearly stand for an end to the occupation as well as an end to militarism. And, on the inside, the Ron Paul movement needs to grow in the Republican Party and the wing represented by Dennis Kucinich needs to grow inside the Democratic Party. Having an inside-outside strategy allows the peace movement to make a legitimate threat to their party as they have somewhere else to go. Peace voters should never be taken for granted. The life and death issue we advocate on is too important. 
			 
			The
			 
			 
			The peace movement needs to avoid 
			losing its energy in the election. 
			It needs to be protesting any candidate who does not call for 
			a complete withdrawal from
			 
			 Peace voters need to remember that president’s are not where change begins. Change begins from the grass roots and the government accepts the change if the movement gets strong enough to demand it. Elections are the time for peace advocates to demand peace. 
			 
			Kevin Zeese is 
			the executive director of Voters for Peace, see 
			
			www.VotersForPeace.US.
			 
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