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Personal Voices: Swinging the Vote, One Door at a Time
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
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Democracy and Elections:
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War on Iraq:
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Each afternoon, just outside Philadelphia, Penn, dozens of America Coming Together canvassers in matching blue T-shirts spill out of minivans into the hot, suburban sun. Armed with anti-Bush pamphlets, voter registration cards and Palm Pilots with the names of undecided voters, they scour the neighborhood trying to swing the vote their way, one door at a time.
America Coming Together (ACT) is one of the many organizations working to mobilize progressive voters and convince undecided folks to vote against Bush this November. In an effort to influence the election, thousands of people have been gravitating toward battleground states and many of them have been canvassing through such organizations as ACT.
Along with a group of grassroots enthusiasts from all walks of life, I was caught up in the migration to swing states this summer and I eventually found myself canvassing for ACT in Philadelphia. With nearly 1,500 canvassers employed around the country, this organization has become one of the largest voter contact programs in the US. It is operating in all seventeen swing states, has registered hundreds of thousands of new voters and has pledged to reach 17 million voters by Election Day.
Here in Pennsylvania, the organizations plan is to change voters minds a few at a time. Personal discussions about the issues most important to voters are emphasized, highlighting the harmful policies of the Bush administration. Such a strategy translates into long, hot hours spent making as much face-to-face contact with undecided voters as possible.
The canvassers I worked with had signed on for a variety of reasons. One was a union member who had traveled from northern New York to work in a swing state. Another was a woman whose mother had died because she could not afford proper medical attention through her health care plan. Others were students and recent college grads. Some canvassers hadnt been involved in political campaigns since McGovern ran for president in 1972; others were just looking for a part-time summer job before they left for college in the fall.
From the youth canvassers, there were similarities in their criticisms of the Bush administration. Most complained of rising tuition costs, a horrible job outlook, an enormous national debt, a lack of health insurance and a fear of being drafted to fight in a war they did not believe in. For many, it was their first time involved in a political campaign. We were a ragtag group of concerned citizens of different ages, ethnicities and political orientations, unified by our outrage at the Bush administration. What motivated many of us through the long afternoons and weeks of relatively low salaries was the big payoff we hoped would come in the end, with a new president.
The ACT headquarters was air conditioned, crowded and humming with activity from early morning until late at night. It was full of tables heaving with piles of fliers, maps and voter registration cards. The photocopier chugged away incessantly and the constant ringing of cell phones pounded at the air. Tired-eyed organizers stared into computer screens, gave directions to lost canvassers over the phone. People were constantly bumping into one another in the tiny space, conducting job interviews in the lobby, and having impromptu conferences in the hallways. It was an office bordering on chaos, the typical chaos of a campaign office.
Benjamin Dangl, 24, is a freelance journalist and editor of www.UpsideDownWorld.org an online magazine about activism and politics.
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