Creating Change is the People’s Job
We—not just the
president—have to be the agents of change in our society. How do we extend our
electoral organizing beyond the elections?
by Deepak
Bhargava posted May 23, 2012
There is a grumble being repeated in some progressive circles.
It goes like this: “President Obama has been a disappointment. But what’s the
alternative?” It’s usually followed by a sigh and a plea for work to save the
“few minor” things we did get done in the last three years.
But this grumbling is largely wrong. Some of the disappointment is
understandable. For instance, on the President’s watch, thousands of immigrant
families have been torn apart by inhumane deportation policies
Even so, our achievements are by no means minor. The stimulus
contained the largest expansion of anti-poverty programs in a generation,
health care reform is already expanding coverage for millions of people, “Don’t
Ask, Don’t Tell” has been consigned to the history books, and efforts to slash
Medicare and Social Security have been held in check.
From where I stand, something more interesting is going on. We’ve
examined ourselves and found a fundamental weakness: We placed too much hope
and faith in the president. It was a mistake, but not because this president
has somehow betrayed us. He’s done what presidents do: governed under all the
stresses of competing pressures.
Abolitionists gave us abolition, not Lincoln. The civil
rights movement gave us voting rights for blacks. The suffragette movement gave
women the right to vote.
It was a mistake because we—not just the president—have to be the
agents of change in our society. Electoral victories without sustained
movements will never address inequality, poverty, or any of the major issues we
face. Abolitionists gave us abolition, not Lincoln. Powerful movements focus on
issues, not on presidents.
The civil rights movement gave us voting rights for blacks. The
suffragette movement gave women the right to vote. The gay rights movement gave
gays the right to marry and put an end to “Don’t Ask Don’t Tell.” Union
victories created the modern middle class.
Increasingly, those who are engaging in this more
interesting conversation are asking: How do we extend our electoral organizing beyond the
elections?
This is a far more exciting question because answering it correctly
will give us a chance at the real prize: building a society governed by
progressive values and policies that move us all forward together.
At the Center for Community Change, we’ve been doing
this with immigration policy. We are turning outrage over the administration’s
massive deportations into action to enhance the power of immigrants in our
society. Our “Change Takes Courage” campaign holds the White House accountable
for tearing families apart. At the same time, we send a clear message to all
those who oppose immigration reform by making our voter registration and voter turnout work be first and foremost about
raising the power of immigrants to make sure their voices are heard in all
ways, not just at the ballot box.
http://www.yesmagazine.org/issues/making-it-home/creating-change-is-our-job?utm_source=mayjun12&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=CreatingChange
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