http://votersforpeace.us/index2.php
  What is a Peace Voter to Do?
The Election Year Should Not Divide the Peace Movement -- Remain  
Advocates for a Real End to the Occupation
by Kevin Zeese / April 1st, 2008     CRITIQUES?

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 Iraq occupation and ending militarism is  
bigger than this election, so we should not let partisanship divide  
the peace movement. The key to unity is advocating for a real end to  
the Iraq occupation, pressuring all candidates in that direction, as  
well as pushing for an end to the militarist foreign policy of the US.

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 US voters according to recent polls as well as by US  
troops and Iraqis, none of the candidates from the two established  
parties are calling for a complete withdrawal, but they are all trying  
to play to the peace voter.

Even the most hawkish candidate, John McCain, gave a speech defining  
his foreign policy saying “I detest war” and called for working with  
other countries not dominating them, and not solving every problem  
with the military. Sounds good. But, rather than withdrawal from Iraq,  
McCain says peace will be achieved only through victory. He seems more  
likely to get the US into a war with Iran then get us out of  
Iraq . . . while detesting war.

While McCain was trying to sound like a peace candidate, Barack Obama  
was sounding like a Republican. On March 28th Obama told an  
audiencethat his foreign policy would be like Reagan’s and George H.W.  
Bush’s. 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 US combat troops but leaving tens of thousands of  
troops in Iraq. Combat troops would remain in the region to conduct  
strikes in Iraq. Obama has a 16-month timetable to withdraw combat  
troops. Hillary Clinton has no deadline but a similar pace of removal.  
Obama would leave tens of thousands, perhaps more than one hundred  
thousand, civilian security contractors in Iraq. Clinton has very  
recently spoken in opposition to private security contractors,  
seemingly to out-peace Obama on an issue she had been silent on. Both  
keep the military option against Iran on the table, and seek to expand  
the US military by nearly 100,000 troops.

At the same time, the independent political movement may have three of  
its strongest candidates in years — all opposed to Iraq and critical  
of militarism.
Two former Democrats and one former Republican have joined third  
parties and are either running or considering a run for president.  
This includes Cynthia McKinney, the former Democratic congresswoman as  
the likely Green Party nominee; Mike Gravel, the former Democratic  
senator and presidential candidate, now seeking the Libertarian  
nomination; and Bob Barr, a former Republican congressman considering  
a Libertarian run. And, the Nader-Gonzalez team is seeking the  
presidency through an independent run. All of these candidates are  
solidly opposed to the war, oppose war in Iran and seek a less  
militarist foreign policy.

Some in the peace movement, like Tom Hayden, Danny Glover, Bill  
Fletcher and Barbara Ehrenreich, have urged the movement to support  
Senator Obama. They see him as the most peace-oriented candidate with  
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 NY Times writer, say that  
the only choice for peace voters is Nader or McKinney (he wrote before  
Gravel and Barr announced their intentions) because the Democrats will  
continue the occupation. And Naomi Klein and Jeremy Scahill urge peace  
advocates to take a new approach — push the peace agenda and do not  
accept the deficient withdrawal plans of Clinton and Obama.

What is a peace voter to do?

How someone casts his/her 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? — support the majority of voters  
and really end the Iraq occupation.” This demand will make the  
candidates stronger as you will pull them toward the majority anti-war  
viewpoint in the US.

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 todayand tell the candidates to make ending the  
occupation a top issue in the campaign. (See Peace Voter Power)

Fourth, don’t be fooled by political rhetoric. A common reaction by  
people who think of themselves as peace voters when hearing that  
Obama’s withdrawal plan is only a partial withdrawal is disbelief.  
People want to believe Obama stands for truly ending the occupation  
even though he 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 Iraq  
occupation. His record speaks more loudly than his rhetoric.  
Similarly, Senator Clinton’s effort to re-make herself as an opponent  
of the war is held down by the anchor of her voting record. With all  
candidates, how they vote, who funds them and who their closest  
advisers are tell us more than their rhetoric and advertising campaigns.

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.

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 US are manipulated by the two major parties, the  
concentrated corporate media and by funding from US business elites.  
Peace voters are already manipulated to vote against their interests;  
let’s not let this faulty democracy divide us. The peace movement will  
need to be unified to end the occupation and prevent future wars no  
matter who is elected.

Sixth, building the peace movement is bigger than the Iraq war; it is  
building a political bloc that can defeat the military-industrial  
complex in future debates on war and military budgets. While our  
founders opposed standing armies and foreign intervention, made it  
difficult to start war by vesting that power in Congress, and did not  
want the US to become an empire, the US has developed a tradition of  
militarism in the 20th Century and foreign policy based on military  
and economic domination. The Cold War, serving as the world’s  
policeman, and now the war on terror has resulted in a permanent arms  
industry that consistently saps more than half of the federal  
government’s discretionary spending — no matter what the needs of the  
American people are. We must build a peace voter bloc that is strong  
and unified so it can eliminate the permanent arms industry.

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 Iraq occupation is going to continue to be a top issue during the  
presidential campaign. The surge is unraveling. Attacks and deaths  
inside the US Green Zone have led to the need to hide inside buildings  
within the fortified zone. American and Iraqi casualties are  
increasing. Baghdad is locked down in curfew. And it is becoming more  
evident that the cost of the Iraq war is not only the loss of life, or  
increase in anti-Americanism, but of the US economy, which is now in  
what some call the Iraq recession or depression.

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 Iraq and who is not calling for a reduction  
in the US military. Movements cannot stop and start or take a year  
off. Taking time off for an election year will make it difficult to re- 
start again in 2009.

Peace voters need to remember that presidents are not where change  
begins. Change begins from the grassroots, 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 director of Democracy Rising and co-founder of Voters  
For Peace. Read other articles by Kevin, or visit Kevin's website.
This article was posted on Tuesday, April 1st, 2008 at 4:59 am and is  
filed under Activism, Anti-War, Democracy, Democrats, Elections, Right  
Wing Jerks. Send to a friend.

2 comments on this article so far ...
Comments RSS feed
Rich Griffin said on April 1st, 2008 at 5:36 am #
How any pro-peace voter could support Barack Obama simply boggles my  
mind. He has articulated his conservative core belief on this matter  
and no amount of wishful thinking is going to translate into better  
policies once elected. My concerns are also what he has had to say  
about Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the Israel-Palestine positions he has  
taken. For me, there are two candidates I could support, and it’s a  
question of who will garner the most support (McKinney or Nader),  
since I basically agree with both of them on most issues.
Eric Patton said on April 1st, 2008 at 10:55 am #
 > 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.
Anyone whose IQ is larger than their shoe size knows what any U.S.  
president is going to do: preserve and enhance U.S. power in privilege  
in the world. Yes, right-wingers are more likely to try doing so  
through bombing, while liberals (left to their own devices) are more  
likely to try squishing offending third-world countries economically.
But anyone who’s not completely new to the left and doesn’t yet  
understand how U.S. administrations operate vis-a-vis foreign policy  
(sans a mass popular movement) just isn’t that smart — and needs to  
read more William Blum, John Pilger, and especially Noam Chomsky.
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/2008/04/what-is-a-peace-voter-to-do/
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