======================================================================
Rule #1: YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
======================================================================


http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0910/41779.html

Anti-war groups battle for survival
By: Abby Phillip
September 4, 2010 05:37 PM EDT

As President Barack Obama formally declared an end to combat operations 
in Iraq this week, the anti-war movement that helped sweep him into 
office — and that worked for seven years to bring U.S. troops home — 
finds itself struggling for survival.

Several factors — war fatigue; a deep, lingering recession; and the 
presence of a Democratic president they helped elect — have drained the 
energy from organizations that led the fight against the Iraq war. Some 
of the most influential anti-war activist groups that once summoned half 
a million people to march against the Iraq war and the policies of 
former President George W. Bush are straining to raise the money and 
attention to fight what they see as Obama’s military entrenchment in 
Afghanistan.

“We don’t have a very vibrant anti-war movement anymore,” lamented Medea 
Benjamin, co-founder of Codepink, one of the anti-war movement’s most 
visible organizations. “The issues have not changed very much. … Now we 
have a surge [in Afghanistan] that we would have been furious about 
under George Bush, yet it’s hard to mobilize people under Obama. We have 
the same anti -war movement and not the same passion.”

MoveOn.org, which produced a 2007 anti-war newspaper ad labeling Gen. 
David Petraeus “General Betray Us” for the surge in Iraq, has largely 
been silent, despite a similar U.S. strategy in Afghanistan with 
Petraeus at the helm. Cindy Sheehan, perhaps the most famous anti-war 
protester, believes the peace movement is over. And United for Peace and 
Justice — once the largest of three major anti-war coalitions — has 
practically dissolved.

Leslie Cagan, UFPJ’s founder, resigned last year after nearly seven 
years leading the group.

“I was totally exhausted,” said Cagan, 63.  “I have a long history of 
anti-war activism — about 45 years — but the last eight or nine years 
have been totally intense. In a post 9/11 world, it’s just nonstop.”

Liberals demanding an immediate withdrawal from Iraq after the 2003 
invasion were largely ignored by the Bush administration, but their 
influence with Democrats and independent voters grew between 2004 and 
2008, the height of the war — and the time of Obama’s emergence as a 
presidential contender.  By 2008, the anti-war sentiment had fueled a 
surge in voter registration, while anti-war activists openly embraced 
Obama, whose early momentum was based largely on opposition to Iraq.

As Obama catapulted to the front of a crowded field of Democratic 
presidential candidates, his criticism of the Iraq war motivated 
thousands of volunteers to hit the streets for him. In turn, Democrats 
and war-weary independent voters surged to the polls, pushing Obama, as 
well as down-ticket Democrats, into office.

Now, that energy has all but vanished, leaving Obama and embattled 
congressional Democrats with one less ally when they need all the help 
they can get.

“That’s going to be a real headache for Obama coming down the road,” 
said Gary Jacobson, a political science professor at the University of 
California, San Diego.

“One of the major motivations for Democratic turnout in 2006 and 2008 
was the opposition to the Bush administration and their wars,” and that 
motivation is gone, Jacobson said. “It’s not going to send [activists] 
running after the next Republican candidate … but they might be less 
energized and less likely to participate and turn out [for Democrats] 
than before.”

Paradoxically, the anti-war movement has grown weaker even as public 
opposition to the Afghanistan war has grown stronger.  A recent Gallup 
poll found that 43 percent of those surveyed think the Afghanistan war 
was a mistake, compared with 30 percent in January 2009. But an anti-war 
rally in Washington in March 2009 drew fewer than 10,000 people — a 
fraction of the 500,000 activists who attended an anti-Iraq war rally in 
Manhattan in 2003.


After fighting the Bush administration for the better part of a decade, 
the anti-war movement can barely draw public attention to Afghanistan 
because of kitchen table issues like the worsening economy, the 
increasingly unpopular health care overhaul and high unemployment. 
Meanwhile, the leaders have kept their grumbling about Afghanistan 
mostly to themselves, to keep Obama’s sagging poll numbers from sinking 
further or jeopardizing the Democratic majority in Congress.

  “A lot of the people who were part of this movement have retreated,” 
Codepink’s Benjamin said. “They wanted to give up on the timetable [for 
withdrawing from Iraq]. Some are still reluctant to criticize a 
Democratic president now with the midterms coming up.”

The staggering economy has hit the movement hard: Just a few years ago, 
some groups raised millions of dollars in donations and mobilized 
legions of supporters to rallies in Washington and New York; now, UFPJ — 
which had a full-time, paid staff and a budget of more than  $1 million 
— relies on volunteers working without a headquarters and with less than 
$100,000 to spend.

“That says a lot about where our masses are when it comes to getting out 
against the wars,” said Michael McPherson, the co-convener of UFPJ. “If 
people are deciding between trying to figure out if you’re going to have 
a job and ending the war in Afghanistan … trying to figure out how to 
keep your job is going to win every time.”

But Sheehan, whose son died in Iraq and who kept vigil outside Bush’s 
Crawford ranch to protest the war, had long abandoned hope that the 
activists would fight as hard once Obama was elected. Groups like 
MoveOn.org, in particular, are more interested in politics than in 
peace, she said.

“I basically think that it’s over,” Sheehan said. “And the reason that 
it’s over is that so many of those same groups that you’re talking about 
supported Obama. … I just don’t think that if you’re anti-war you can 
support somebody who is for war.”

Nevertheless, many activists believe that momentum is building against 
the continued military presence in Afghanistan.

In July, 102 House Democrats voted against the $33 billion emergency war 
supplemental bill, compared with 32 who voted against it last year — a 
sign, activists say, that Congress is responding to falling public 
support for the Afghanistan war.  Activists took heart when House 
Speaker Nancy Pelosi said she would not whip progressive members to 
support this bill, and when House Appropriations Committee Chairman 
David Obey said he had “profound skepticism” about spending more money 
on combat in Afghanistan.

“I thought it was very telling that not a single member of Democratic 
leadership stood on the floor to defend the president’s Afghanistan 
policy during the supplemental debate,” said Tom Andrews, a former 
congressman from Maine who also is the national director of Win Without War.

Andrews said the anti-war energy is focused on Congress, with MoveOn and 
other groups using lobbying instead of protests to fight the war. 
Others, like Norman Solomon, an anti-war writer and founder of the 
Institute for Public Accuracy, say any resurgence of anti-war activity 
won’t look like the massive, Bush-era street protests, which proved 
largely ineffective.

“We weren’t able to affect policy" during the Bush administration, 
Solomon said. “We got bigger turnouts at rallies and had more vocal 
visibility that way, but that’s not something to yearn for.”

As Democrats in Congress begin to put pressure on the White House to 
leave Afghanistan, some say that move could help the anti-war movement 
regain some of its lost strength. Still, if outside groups can’t build 
on that momentum, “it would be a problem,” said Bob Borosage, founder 
and president of Institute for America’s Future.

But he said that he believes groups like MoveOn and labor unions will 
step up to the plate, especially since Obama has addressed other 
progressive agenda items like the health care overhaul and Wall Street 
reform. “I have many fears about these things, but I have no doubt that 
there will be a rising anti-war movement,” he said.

________________________________________________
Send list submissions to: [email protected]
Set your options at: 
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/options/marxism/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to