Progressive Democrats of America Defies Bush's "Mandate"

  • Bob Fertik's picture
    Bob Fertik
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I spent the weekend at the Progressive Democratic Summit hosted by Progressive Democrats of America, and I returned home fired up and ready to battle the Busheviks.

Here is the summary:

Over 500 Activists Plan to Support Electoral Reform, Fight Funding for Iraq War

WASHINGTON -- January 24 -- In spite of inclement weather that brought most activity in Washington D.C. to a standstill over the weekend, over 500 activists representing over 40 states and a variety of ages and ethnicities gathered in the city to strategize for the future of the Democratic Party.

Progressive Democrats of America (PDA) coordinated the Counter-Inaugural Summit to follow the inauguration of George W. Bush. The summit attracted an extensive team of progressive leaders to speak and participate in strategy meetings, ranging from policy analysts to grassroots organizers. Several of the panels will be rebroadcast on C-Span during the upcoming week.

Conference attendees resolved to move forward on a pro-democracy agenda with the following actions:

  • Continue to advocate for electoral reform, including:
  • Working toward passage of the Right to Vote Amendment advocated by Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr.
  • Advocating for public financing for elections.
  • Supporting instant runoff voting (IRV).
  • Work to cut the purse strings for funding the war in Iraq.

Progressive Democrats of America is building on the recent coalition successes in challenging the Ohio electoral vote certification in Congress. Various leaders from the voting reform movement spoke at the conference, including Green Party presidential candidate David Cobb, who praised PDA for its work on the issue, and Gary Flowers from the Rainbow Push Coalition.

PDA will regroup for its first regional meeting in Phoenix, Arizona on February 6, 2005. “It’s our first meeting outside the beltway, and it’s designed and organized by the grassroots, which is what we’re all about,” Said Kevin Spidel, Deputy Director of PDA.

In the meantime, Summit participants will return to their respective communities to continue to work on PDA’s pro-democracy agenda at a grassroots level. Most participants are leaders in their own regions, representing chapters of PDA and associated organizations. Many of the activists can’t wait to get home and put what they learned into action. “I’m energized,” said Judy Pope, of Northern California “These are some of the best panels I’ve ever seen.”

The overwhelming majority of progressive organizations in attendance felt that the PDA national conference was a watershed event in the progressive movement in this country. Tim Carpenter, Director of Progressive Democrats of America, noted, “Finally, the various branches of the progressive movement have made conscious decisions to cooperate with one another across differences in cultural and political ideologies in order to fight for ordinary families and citizens who desperately need quality healthcare, affordable housing, access to higher education, social security, enlightened foreign policy, and to cut the purse strings on Iraq.”

Here is an excellent report from Ted Glick of the Independent Progressive Politics Network.

Agitation Time
by Ted Glick
January 25, 2005

"Agitation: discussion meant to arouse or increase dissatisfaction with things as they are and produce changes; work of an agitator." Webster's New World Dictionary

Progressive Democrats of America (PDA), an outgrowth of the Kucinich for President campaign, just concluded a large, successful national conference in Washington, D.C. Over 500 spirited, determined activists from all over the country came to the University of the District of Columbia for 48 hours of speeches, panels (too many!), workshops and informal person-to-person networking. The panels, the heart of the conference, were focused on issues like Iraq, Israel/Palestine, voting rights/electoral reform, defending social security, universal health care, progressive media, racism, veterans issues and progressive spirituality.

There were no panels or workshops having to do with endorsing candidates. There wasn't even organized public discussion about the internal struggle going on within the Democratic National Committee to determine who will replace Terry McAuliffe as DNC chair, although the vast majority of the Democrats present, I'm sure, are hoping Howard Dean wins that battle.

There were non-Democrats present, including among the speakers: David Cobb, who got a clearly heartfelt, standing ovation for his campaign's recount challenge in Ohio, Pat LaMarche, the Green Party VP candidate, Diane Shamis, National Coordinator of IPPN, Medea Benjamin, Green Party activist, and Mark Dudzic, National Director of the Labor Party.

From what I observed, none of the third partyites present were seduced away into the Democratic Party. If anything, judging by the ovation given to Cobb and the discussions I heard and participated in, the Green Party could well gain some new recruits over time as a result of this conference.

Much more important, however, was the overwhelming sense of the conference that it's fightback time, that progressives of various stripes need to find the ways to work together around the issues and do so now. There was widespread agreement on our general approach towards the major issues among all present.

And it seemed as if we were in agreement that we need to use a range of tactics to advance our progressive agenda, from disruptive nonviolent civil disobedience to massive pressuring of Congress in a strategic way, from basic grassroots organizing to the running of progressive candidates. Though there was disagreement about what party line those candidates should run on, there was much support for building a stronger movement for instant runoff voting, proportional representation and other electoral reforms to open up our oppressive two-party system towards a genuine, multi-party democracy.

I was particularly struck by the vocal support for instant runoff voting not just from David Cobb but from others. Indeed, Howard Dean himself has publicly come out in support of it.

There's something happening here, something that needs to grow like wildfire throughout our movement.

This is the second major national meeting that was characterized by a broad cross-section of progressives successfully addressing issues, addressing our urgent reality, and doing so in a way which led to productive, positive results. The first was Progressive Dialogue III in early December, which led to the founding of United Progressives for Democracy and its successful Winter Democracy Campaign, still on-going.

Could it be that we really, really are getting it together this time? Could the urgent threats we are facing under a second Bush administration be the impetus for a powerful, unified, independent political uprising?

And what about Bush's inauguration? At least 15,000 people, possibly more, came out to make their presence felt along Pennsylvania Avenue on January 20th. This is as many if not more than did so in January of 2001. Late that night, watching the parade on C-Span, I was amazed at how many people with anti-Bush signs were scattered along the length of the parade route. I saw with my own eyes the crush of lovers of justice around 13th, 14th and 15th streets, some who got inside the heavy security and next to the street and others who were back a ways but who were vocal and defiant.

I was speaking with a respected leader in the African American community yesterday as the PDA conference wound down. He made the comment that he has been around Washington, D.C. for a long, long time, and he couldn't remember there ever being a conference like this so soon after a Presidential election, a resistance conference, a conference full of people who were not defeated, not depressed, not disillusioned, who were preparing themselves to do political battle and doing so in a unified and mature way.

Perhaps the author Starhawk was prescient in something she wrote soon after election day: "the way ahead will be hard and stony, but. . . it may turn out to be steeper but shorter than the easier path." It is our job to do everything within our power to make it so, by the way we reject sectarian approaches that divide, work constructively with those with whom we're in agreement on the issues, discuss our differences in a healthy way, and build a powerful, coordinated resistance movement as a result.

In the words of Frederick Douglass during another difficult time, "agitate, agitate, agitate!"

---
Ted Glick is the former National Coordinator of the Independent Progressive Politics Network (www.ippn.org) and is currently active with U.P. for Democracy's Winter Democracy Campaign. He is available to do public speaking and can be reached at indpol@igc.org or P.O. Box 1132, Bloomfield, N.J. 07003.

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Kennedy Assails Iraq Policy, Rice's Role

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    Sharon Kay Kennedy
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Tuesday, January 25, 2005
WASHINGTON - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and other Democrats assailed President Bush's decision to go to war with Iraq Tuesday and declared they would oppose Condoleezza Rice's nomination as secretary of state as a principal architect of a failed policy.
Kennedy, of Massachusetts, keyed the Democratic attack with charges that Rice, as Bush's national security adviser, provided Congress with "false reasons" for going to war. Had she not, he said in a speech, "it might have changed the course of history."
Sen. Mark Dayton, D-Minn., following up, accused the Bush administration of lying and said he was voting against Rice's confirmation as a way of trying to stop mistruths.
And Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., charged she concealed the Central Intelligence Agency's skepticism that Iraq was trying to obtain uranium for a nuclear weapons program from Africa.
Rice claimed there was a "consensus" within the administration on on Iraq's activity when the Department of Energy and the State Department had reservations. "She exaggerated and distorted the facts," Levin said.
On what was shaping up as a long day for the nominee and the president who promoted her to chief U.S. diplomat, Sen. Evan Bayh, D-Ind., said "we have a moral obligation to provide better leadership."
"Those in charge must be held accountable for mistakes," Bayh said, even while saying the administration was attempting to do the right thing in Iraq.
On the other hand, Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson, R-Tex., agreed that while mistakes were made it was wrong to rehash them. She lauded Rice for a "steady hand" in staying the course on the war on terrorism.
"I think Condoleezza Rice is the most qualified person" for the job, she said.
Rice's confirmation as Colin Powell's replacement appeared not to be in doubt. Sens. Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia and Barbara Boxer of California are among other Democrats lined up to get their licks in Tuesday, even though many Democrats may wind up in Rice's column when the vote is taken.
Two Democrats, Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut and Ken Salazar of Colorado, spoke in Rice's favor before the Senate took a luncheon recess.
Republicans rallied behind Rice - and President Bush - with briefer speeches. Nine hours have been set aside for the debate, divided equally between the two parties.

Byrd and Boxer, opponents of the war from the outset, had one-hour speeches scheduled. They consider the war a mistake and Bush's postwar strategy inadequate as determined insurgents take a rising toll of American casualties. They hold Rice at least partly responsible, since she was Bush's White House national security adviser during his first term.
On Wednesday, a brief series of statements by senators is expected, setting up the vote to put Rice in charge of U.S. diplomacy.
"We are talking about the safety and security of this country, so I very much and very quickly want to move with Secretary Rice," Senate Republican leader Bill Frist of Tennessee said Tuesday. Frist said he was disappointed by the delay and was confident the Senate would confirm her on Wednesday.
The White House had been confident that Rice would be approved last week, and State Department officials were alerted to show up Friday morning to greet her with smiles and applause.
During two days of sometimes testy hearings last week, Rice acknowledged some bad decisions on Iraq by the Bush administration and that desertions and poor leadership within Iraqi security forces were hampering the country's defense.

http://home.peoplepc.com/psp/newsstory.asp?cat=news&referrer=welcome&id=...

I think we got through

  • vince's picture
    vince
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This is encouraging. Maybe the "Get a Spine" campaign had some effect. Maybe our emails got through. Lieberman has now shown his true colors. We need to get through to Feingold and Obama.