Check out this well written message that helps us to defeat mccain and the RNC. 
I have been phone banking at the LA County Federation of Labor calling union 
members in Nevada, very interesting, the responses I got very supportive to no 
way; you should try it. I will also be doing a workshop (on Chicano Liberation) 
at the Mecha Statewide conference this Saturday at LA Valley College.



Carlos Montes
www.fightbacknews.org







Ten Reasons We Should Turn Out the Vote for Barack Obama

 

Eric Mann

 

This article was written to encourage strategic and tactical discussions about 
the election. The author strongly encourages comments to be posted at 
www.ericmannblog.blogspot.com.

 

For those of us who are in the Civil Rights, Immigrant Rights, Women’s 
Liberation, Environmental Justice, and Anti-War Movements, for those of us on 
the Left, the election of Barack Obama is of the utmost urgency. Voting for 
Barack Obama is not enough. In the next two weeks we need to put all our energy 
into getting out the vote to elect Obama and defeat McCain.

Because of his brilliant organizing, the possibility of an Obama victory is 
palpable. Because of the racism of this country and the strong reactionary 
elements of the general population, the threat of a McCain victory is only too 
real. 

The stakes leave no room for passive support. The Republicans coalescing 
against Obama are carrying out a calculated strategy to preserve and extend the 
victories of Reagan and Bush. If it can be imagined, they intend to take the 
country even further to the right.  They want to destroy what is left of 
democratic liberalism, destroy the Civil Rights and Black Liberation movements, 
destroy the Immigrant Rights, Women’s Liberation, LGBT, Anti-War movements, to 
destroy the Left.

To his credit, unlike Al Gore and John Kerry, Barack Obama is fighting back 
against the Right. Whether or not he cedes too much to them, which I believe he 
does, his election is a direct challenge to the neo-cons, the racists, and 
bellicose fascists who have controlled the White House, the media, and the 
political discourse in this country for decades. For all of us who consider 
ourselves “on the Left” and “organizers,” for those of us who have a base, for 
those of us who are working in low-income Black, Latino, Asian/Pacific Islander 
communities and doing anti-racist work in white working-class communities—this 
is a turning point in history. We understand the stakes of a racist McCain 
victory only too well, and we are the ones who can be pivotal in turning the 
tide for Obama. It is time for the antiracist Left to show the muscle of our 
community organizing and put that energy into the Obama campaign for the next 
two weeks. 

For some of us, we are already there. For others, you are needed. Obama needs 
and deserves our full support. As a strategist and tactician, you weigh all the 
arguments, all the options, but when the time comes, you must go into battle 
with great energy and enthusiasm. You must fight to win. Now is such a time.

We have to work for Obama’s election and fight to win. Right now the Obama 
campaign is calling for the most intense involvement by those of us who support 
his candidacy. Our job is very straightforward. The Obama campaign urgently 
needs us to contribute money, to phone bank, to protect the vote at ballot 
boxes where the Republicans will try to steal the election (that is, every 
ballot box), and to hit the ground in aggressive door-to-door organizing in 
swing states. For those of us who do not live in a swing state that means 
traveling to Florida, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Nevada, New Mexico, Virginia, North 
Carolina, Missouri, Indiana, West Virginia, Colorado and other states where the 
margins are still too close to call. 

 

I am an organizer, that is what I do. In this election, reflecting my own views 
on the subject, I am committed to working on two major campaigns.

 

The Strategy Center’s No on the Six Campaign. This is a state-wide campaign in 
California that opposes six reactionary ballot initiatives. We are doing 
citywide lawn signs, on-the-bus organizing, phone banking, and precinct walking 
to defeat The Six. Two initiatives, Propositions 6 and 9, would further 
criminalize Black and Latino youth. Two bond and sales tax proposals, 
Proposition 1A and Measure R in Los Angeles County, would pass regressive taxes 
and bonds for pork-barrel, environmentally dangerous rail and highway projects 
that would further attack the funding for a clean fuel bus system, the 
centerpiece of our environmental plan. Two propositions attack LGBT people and 
women. Prop 8 tries to overturn gay marriage, and Prop 4 threatens women’s 
reproductive rights through the onerous requirement of parental notification 
for minors. I work for this campaign through the Strategy Center in a broad 
coalition with many other progressive, grassroots groups. See 
www.noonthesix.org 

 

The Obama Campaign. I am working to elect Barack Obama president of the United 
States. I have attended a two-day training at Camp Obama along with 350 people 
in Long Beach, along with thousands throughout the state and tens of thousands 
throughout the country at similar trainings. Many people are going from 
California to Nevada, a neighboring swing state with five electoral votes, to 
turn out the vote for Obama. I am working with the phone bank team to make 
phone calls to Nevada to elect Obama. I will be spending the last long weekend 
of this month through Tuesday, November 4 splitting my time between the No on 
the Six and the Obama phone bank teams. 

 

Here Are Ten Reasons to Turn Out the Vote for Barack Obama 

 

1) Because Barack Obama is Black and qualified, Black and liberal, Black and 
can be elected the first Black president in the United States.  

Obama is a Black man running for president in a white settler state. Regardless 
of how much or little he chooses to campaign on race or against racism—and in 
my view it is far more than some of his critics think—Obama is Black. Everyone 
knows he is Black and the Republicans are making it a referendum against Blacks 
and for white supremacy. 

The election of a Black president in a country built on conquest and slavery is 
almost unimaginable. And it cannot be imagined without the foundational work of 
Sojourner Truth and Harriet Tubman, Marcus Garvey and W.E.B. DuBois, Fannie Lou 
Hamer, Martin Luther King, Jr. Huey P. Newton, and Malcolm X, Rev. Jeremiah 
Wright; and it cannot be actualized after the election without the intervention 
of the Black radical and revolutionary perspective.  Obama is running as a 
Black man at a time when one million Black people are in prison.  He is Black 
at a time when the Black community is on the defensive and under siege, Black 
when many of its most gifted and dedicated organizers are tired, not 
discouraged, but exhausted from the assaults of the reactionary decades from 
Reagan to Clinton to Bush. Obama is Black as opposed to white, as in white 
supremacy, white racism, white chauvinism, white xenophobia, white fascism, 
white racist mobs, white McCain and white Palin.   

Barack Obama is a Black Harvard graduate, a president of the Harvard Law 
Review, married to Michelle Obama, a Princeton graduate. They gave up jobs in 
corporate America to do work among the urban poor and working class. He is 
charismatic, a great debater, and a man of intellect. He is so much better 
qualified than John McCain that it is a testament to the racism of the U.S. 
that McCain is still in a close race. This is a white man who is clearly 
unhinged even in a prepared debate and has nothing to run on but the “Abuse of 
the Day” against Obama and his family.  

Barack Obama is a gifted organizer who deserves the support of every dedicated 
organizer in the country. As a Black man in a white country, he out organized 
Hillary and Bill Clinton and their ostensibly unbeatable machine, a blow from 
which they may never recover. He is out organizing the Democratic Leadership 
Council, the anti-liberal caucus of Bill Clinton and Joe Lieberman that has 
dominated the Democratic Party since the defeat of Mondale and Dukakis. Obama 
has a very good chance of out organizing the entire white, Christian, 
conservative, aka fascist clique that has run this country since Reagan rose, 
Gingrich organized, Clinton capitulated, and Bush/Cheney took the dictatorship 
to its highest levels.  

Electing a highly qualified, brilliant Black man against a Neanderthal white 
man is a major step forward in history and a high stakes fight that we need to 
be part of. It will be a major setback to the forces of white racism in the 
country and a real encouragement of the broad anti-racist coalition that is at 
the core of the Obama campaign. Let’s turn out the vote for Obama. Now. 

 

2) Because a Black man is being attacked by a white lynch mob and we have to 
throw our bodies in front of them and beat them back. 

            The McCain/Palin campaign rallies are becoming Klan rallies. Shouts 
of “traitor,” “terrorist,” “treason,” “liar,” “Hussein” “kill him” and “off 
with his head” have rung from the rabid racists at McCain and Palin rallies. 
Palin whips them up and McCain sometimes doesn’t challenge them and sometimes 
goes through the motions, all the while praising them to the sky as “loyal 
Americans.” These are the very kind of people who have populated lynch mobs in 
the past. They are capable of carrying out their threats. What part of “off 
with his head” do we not understand?

If many in the Democratic Party in fact conciliate with this racism by refusing 
to call it by name, preferring to use the vague term “extremism,” Obama does 
not. At the last national debate he told McCain that some of his supporters 
have crossed a line by calling him a terrorist and proposing to kill him. 
McCain responded by saying how great and patriotic his supporters are. Do we 
really have to invoke King and Malcolm, Medgar Evers and Emmett Till, the 
Birmingham children and Bobby Hutton to understand that the assassination and 
lynching of Black people is deep in the DNA of white and U.S. culture and is a 
clear and present danger today? 

John Lewis, the civil rights veteran from SNCC and now a U.S. congressperson 
from Atlanta saw it clearly, 

What I am seeing reminds me too much of another destructive period in American 
history. Senator McCain and Governor Palin are sowing the seeds of hatred and 
division, and there is no need for this hostility in our political discourse. 
George Wallace [the racist governor of Alabama] never threw a bomb. He never 
fired a gun, but he created the climate and the conditions that encouraged 
vicious attacks against innocent Americans who were simply trying to exercise 
their constitutional rights. Because of this atmosphere of hate, four little 
girls were killed on Sunday morning when a church was bombed in Birmingham, 
Alabama.”

We cannot stand by while a rabid white mob attacks a Black man screaming 
“Hussein, Hussein,”  “the one over there,”  “the F-ing Harvard Graduate,” “the 
uppity one,”  “terrorist” and—we must take this very seriously—“kill him” and 
“off with his head.” The McCain forces are the forces of evil and must be 
defeated. 

McCain and Palin should be under arrest for encouraging, inciting, aiding, and 
abetting, racist hate crimes.  Let’s turn out the Vote for Barack Obama, Now.   

 

3) Because there are differences of life and death significance to our 
communities between Barack Obama and John McCain.

Obama is advocating many positions that are conservative, and some, like his 
proposals to expand the war in Afghanistan and violate the sovereignty of 
Pakistan, that are reactionary. But there is still a profound Left/Right battle 
going, albeit within the confines of U.S. electoral politics and the two-party 
system in 2008. While he does not have a comprehensive progressive program, 
there are some key issues on which the difference between Obama and McCain are 
Black and white.  

Let’s look at some of the real choices Obama is making.

·  Economic Crisis, Housing Crisis. Obama has supported the $750 billion bail 
out for U.S. financial markets. This is a major setback for working people. He 
is now arguing, however, that now it is time to bail out not “Wall Street” but 
“Main Street.” He is calling for a 90-day moratorium on foreclosures by any 
bank or company that receives any U.S. government aid.  Is that enough? Of 
course not, but he is the only candidate even talking about helping people 
losing their homes in the foreclosure tsunami. If such a moratorium is imposed, 
it can lead to far more stringent demands to extend and expand that moratorium. 
By contrast, McCain is talking about letting the free market run its course. 

·  Woman’s Right to Choose. Obama vigorously defends a woman’s right to choose. 
When asked in the last debate if they would make Roe v. Wade a “litmus test” in 
the selection of Supreme Court justices, both Obama and McCain, after 
considerable dancing, said yes. McCain said that he could not imagine a 
qualified candidate who would not want to overturn Roe v. Wade and Obama said 
he could not imagine a qualified candidate who would not defend a woman’s right 
to privacy—making abortion a right. 

·  Unions, Third World. McCain said free trade was great and accused Obama of 
holding up trade with Columbia. Columbia is governed by one of the worst 
military dictatorships in world, propped up by the CIA, the U.S. military, and 
cocaine traffickers. At this time, I do not assume Obama wants to dismantle 
Plan Columbia. If he does not, that will be a major post-election confrontation 
with him we will have to have. But Obama did say that he could not support 
trade with Columbia while its government was imprisoning and murdering trade 
unionists. This is significant. Obama has campaigned for the right to organize 
unions for workers in the U.S. and proposed laws to encourage those rights. 
While that in itself is major, there is no history I know of for a U.S. 
presidential candidate to openly expose the murder of trade union organizers in 
a country that is allied with the United States and to call for their right to 
organize against U.S. transnationals. In the middle of a high-profile 
nationally televised event, just the mention of trade unionists existing and 
being under attack in the Third World is a moment of rupture in the imperialist 
ideological sphere. By contrast, McCain is a union buster at home and a 
supporter of terror, torture, and the suppression of unions and the Left abroad.

·  Equal Pay for Equal Work. Obama defends equal pay for equal work and McCain 
opposes it. In the final debate, Obama raised the example of a lawsuit filed by 
Lily Ledbetter, a woman who tried to sue her employer for paying her less for 
the same job that a male employee was getting paid more to do. Obama talked of 
working in Congress to extend the statute of limitations in Congress on her 
case so that it wouldn’t be dismissed. McCain snickered, What do we want to do, 
keep these cases going 20 or 30 years after the fact? 

·  International Relations. Obama talks about American exceptionalism, American 
power, and the “responsibility” of the United States throughout the world. In 
short, his view is imperialist and his objective is still U.S. world 
domination. But we should not underestimate what is at stake in his proposal 
for “unconditional conversations” with heads of states that the Bush 
administration has named in the “Axis of Evil.” Obama has held his ground on 
the importance of “conversations and negotiations” and has challenged the 
policy of sanctions and invasions. This is a clear signal to people in the 
Third World, and the European nations who disagree with the Bush doctrine. 
Under an Obama administration, there may be alternatives for people in the 
Third World to the decades of napalm, blockades, shock and awe, and invasions 
that they have suffered under Republicans and Democrats alike. Obama recognizes 
that the U.S. is a declining empire and is trying to signal that it can’t 
continue to throw its weight around in the failed policies, as he calls them, 
of Bush and McCain. Obama’s argument for greater use of negotiations and 
discussions—as well as some of his reservations about massive military 
deployments—is likely to reflect a tactical debate between pragmatic 
imperialism on his side versus neo-con messianic imperialism on that of McCain. 
Again, both share the imperialist goal of U.S. world domination and the control 
of the politics and economy of Third World nations.

 

            But that is a split in the ruling class that is of great importance 
to anti-war, anti-imperialist organizers in the U.S. and to governments and 
movements in the Third World. Let’s be clear. McCain supports “the surge” and 
future unilateral military aggression. He talks always about the hard line and 
views the solution of every problem through a military lens. We cannot allow 
his unstable hand anywhere near the nuclear button.  

I think that most Blacks, women, and trade unionists would argue there is a 
profound benefit for an Obama victory and a profound danger in a McCain 
election. I do not think that those who are working to overturn the rightwing 
clique controlling the Supreme Court that is ruling out of order every civil 
rights and civil liberties case will argue there is little difference between 
Obama and McCain.  I think trade unionists in Columbia, militants and 
governments in Venezuela, Cuba, and South Africa, as well as those governments 
and NGOs who witness the daily bullying and dictatorial practices of the U.S. 
at the United Nations—all see a profound difference between the candidates and 
are deeply invested in an Obama victory and a McCain defeat. 

Let’s turn out the vote for Obama, Now.

 

4) Because John McCain is a war criminal.

How do you think McCain ended up in a POW camp in North Vietnam in the first 
place?  Did the North Vietnamese come to the Naval Academy to kidnap him? No, 
he was flying a mission over North Vietnamese territory, violating their 
sovereignty, dropping bombs on civilian populations in an attempt to destroy 
their power plants and utilities, impose terror from the air, and knowingly 
cause civilian illness, starvation, death and destruction.

McCain was part of a group of air pirates who flew missions of destruction over 
Vietnam. After already having bombed North Vietnam, as the L.A. Times reports, 
“In August 1967 the squadron he joined had destroyed a power plant in Hanoi. 
Two months later, the plant had been rebuilt and was back on the Navy’s sites. 
McCain begged for the mission. ‘The earlier raid was the pride and joy of the 
squadron. I wanted to destroy it again. I was feeling pretty cocky as well.’” 
He flew the mission and was shot down in his efforts to kill. He wasn’t feeling 
as cocky at that point. He was captured by the North Vietnamese. McCain is a 
war criminal for his actions; for he admits he begged for his mission and felt 
destroying the power plants of another country to be his “pride and joy.” 

His actions stand in profound contrast to the millions of people in the U.S. 
who dedicated and, in some cases, gave their lives to end the war in Vietnam. 
He is a disgrace to the many GI’s who refused to kill civilians, to those who 
resisted the draft and risked exile and imprisonment, to those who joined the 
Vietnam Veterans Against the War and who testified in the Winter Soldier 
hearings (see Clay Claiborne’s film Vietnam: American Holocaust), and to the 
courageous veterans today who are speaking out against the war in Iraq and 
Afghanistan.

The actions of the United States government, the U.S. Navy, and pilots of death 
and destruction like McCain led to the murder of three million Vietnamese 
civilians and one million combatants all trying to protect their country from a 
U.S. invasion. McCain was part of the force that inflicted poison gas, 
assassination squads, napalm, Agent Orange, rape, and premeditated murder 
against the people of Vietnam. The U.S. systematically committed crimes against 
humanity in Vietnam and John McCain was a willing, enthusiastic perpetrator. 
John McCain should be tried for war crimes in violation of the Nuremburg 
statutes.

Let’s turn out the vote for Obama, Now.

 

5) Because Sarah Palin’s election would turn the women’s movement on its 
head—Palin is a fascist, a racist, a white separatist, and a misogynist

There is nothing funny about Sarah Palin. (Tina Fey’s brilliant parodies are 
the  exception.) But do not laugh at Palin any more than you should laugh at 
Bush. She is not stupid. She is deadly serious, armed and dangerous. She is 
tied to extreme vigilante groups who want to secede from the United States 
because they feel it is too liberal and too multi-racial.  She uses oil 
revenues to buy the loyalties of people in Alaska, tying their futures to the 
global warming that will in fact destroy Alaska and the planet. 

She and McCain will cut social services, already hanging by a thread. They will 
ramp up the police state and the war on terror. She has broken with John McCain 
by proposing a constitutional amendment against gay marriage and is moving ever 
further to his right. Some speculate she is doing this out of a lack of 
discipline. Others think she wants to position herself even more strongly with 
the extreme Right base in case McCain loses and she wants to pursue other 
national elected positions. 

She has drawn the fascist mobs to the campaign and operates in the tradition of 
reactionary demagogues Father Coughlin and Lou Dobbs. She is the hit person 
against Obama, the warm-up act for McCain that gets the white mob into a racist 
rage. She will support a police state and will lock us up without a second 
thought. And the talk of her being one 72-year-old’s heartbeat away from the 
presidency is not a joke. She may be a future president of the United States if 
we don’t defeat McCain.

Governor Palin believes a woman who chooses to have an abortion is a sinner, 
period. She believes that such is the case even if the woman chooses to 
terminate a pregnancy forced on her through rape or incest. She is an enemy of 
the movement for reproductive rights.  Her message to desperate, working class 
women is that being a loyal wife is a woman’s best chance for escaping poverty, 
your subjugation is liberation. She appeals to misogynist men and assures them 
that their domination of the family is God’s will. While she has been able to 
get out of the house with five children to pursue a professional career, her 
gender politics will prevent most women from doing the same—locking women in 
the home as single parents or prisoners of their husbands—as she leads choruses 
of “Stand by Your Man.” Her election will be an attack of Roe v. Wade, women’s 
reproductive rights, and women’s liberation.

Let’s turn out the vote for Barack Obama, Now.  

 

6) Because the McCain campaign is an attack on the Left.

            The McCain campaign wants to kill the Left in the U.S. and 
internationally, kill social security, the social safety net, and anything 
“social” including even the hope of social-ism. Obama is being attacked as an 
enemy because he is Black and because he is a moderate liberal. The attack on 
the Left broadly defined must be met by a counter-attack against McCain and for 
Obama in the last two weeks of this campaign. 

Look at McCain’s targets:

·        William Ayers, billed a “terrorist” by the McCain camp, worked against 
the war in Vietnam in which four million people were killed. Ayers is a symbol 
of the anti-war movement and its most militant wing. 

·        Reverend Wright. Reverend Wright is a respected theologian whose 
“crime” was saying that racism is “endemic” to the United States and that the 
U.S. sees the world through the eyes of an empire. 

·        ACORN is being attacked by the McCain campaign for registering 
Democratic-leaning voters.  ACORN may have gotten some bad names in the voter 
registration process but none of those people could vote or be counted. By 
contrast, the Republicans prevent people from voting who are registered to 
vote, deny valid signatures and voters, and close down polling places in Black 
and heavily Democratic districts. They defy the electoral process and have 
stolen state and national elections.  

·        Socialism. McCain has begun attacking as “socialist” Obama’s efforts 
to make income taxes more progressive and to use some of the wealth to help the 
poor. McCain said, “At least in Europe the Socialist leaders who so admire my 
opponent are upfront about their objectives. They use real numbers and honest 
language.”  McCain proposes cutting capital gains taxes and giving more 
subsidies to the rich. 

 

Obama’s ties to Ayers were minimal and nothing to apologize for. His ties to 
Reverend Wright were profound and his disassociation from his mentor 
deplorable. Obama’s distancing himself from ACORN reflects weakness. But, as 
Reverend Wright pointed out, Obama is a politician running for office; he makes 
his tactical moves according to his strategic aim of getting elected. I wish 
that Obama would defend socialism but he is not a socialist and if he were, he 
would not be the Democratic nominee for president.

Whether or not Obama chooses to disassociate, denounce, or distance himself 
from the anti-Vietnam war movement, from the rhetoric and analyses of the Civil 
Rights and Black Liberation Movements, from grassroots voter registration, and 
from socialism—those of us on the Left have our own interests in this election 
that include but also go beyond Obama’s objectives. 

Whether Obama chooses to identify with or to renounce these connections, we on 
the Left need to grasp that these attacks from McCain are against us, not just 
Obama. If McCain is elected, what do we think he will do to those of us who 
fought against the war in Vietnam and are fighting to end the U.S. occupation 
of Iraq? What will he do to those who will continue to speak and act against 
the endemic racism of the United States, or to those of us who would study and 
advocate socialist alternatives to capitalism? I fear for those on the Left who 
do not see the writing on the wall. 

Let’s turn out the vote for Barack Obama, Now. 

 

7) Because an Obama victory will be a defeat for the Clintons. 

Hillary and Bill Clinton have been treacherous opponents of Obama. They are 
threatened by his possible victory and are doing very little to help him. At a 
white tie dinner John McCain told a great joke. He brought down the house when 
he observed, "Even in this room full of proud Manhattan Democrats, I can't 
shake that feeling that some people here are pulling for me. I'm delighted to 
see you here tonight, Hillary!" Obama understood only too well the truth of 
that statement.

The Clinton’s opened up the floodgates of racism against Obama during the 
Democratic primaries. I made the argument then that Hillary Clinton was forming 
a white bloc with John McCain to defeat Barack Obama. I wrote an article that 
documented this in great detail: Hillary and John: The White Bloc That Must Be 
Stopped.

Throughout Hillary’s campaign she argued that only she and McCain were 
qualified to be president and Obama was not. She ran that ridiculous ad 
campaign, “Who do you want to answer the phone at 3 in the morning?”  She told 
the press that she and John McCain had the standing to be commander and chief 
and Obama did not. As she realized her dreams of victory were slipping away, 
her campaign reached its moral nadir. She told voters in Pennsylvania, West 
Virginia, and throughout the country that she did not think that “working, 
hard-working Americans, white Americans” would vote for Obama. Hillary and Bill 
Clinton have opened up the door for the racism of the McCain/Palin campaign, 
aiding and abetting their “dear friend” John McCain. 

Hillary also made continued false claims that Obama was not supportive of women 
(meaning her). Only when it was absolutely clear she was losing did she come 
out as a born-again feminist, a white feminist, attacking Obama. In so doing 
she set the conditions for “her friend” John McCain to pick Sarah Palin to mine 
the anti-Obama sentiment Hillary had agitated among Democratic white women 
voters. Fortunately, Obama is winning more and more women voters.  Needless to 
say these women include the Black, Latino, Asian/Pacific Islander, and 
Indigenous women among whom he is also polling strongly. Women recognize how 
important is his defense of choice and his support for equal pay, and they are 
impressed with the way he relates to the women in his life, a strong Black 
partner and his daughters. 

The Clinton’s, when they were in office, brought us the end of welfare, the 
Anti-Terrorism Act, the Effective Death Penalty Act, and the Illegal 
Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act. They typify cynicism and 
opportunism. Hillary has demanded the vice-presidency and now has demanded an 
appointment to the Supreme Court as the price of her jaded support. Obama has 
refused.

When Bill Clinton was on David Letterman, Chris Rock was also a guest. During 
Clinton’s interview with Letterman he barely could say anything good about 
Obama and kept referring to McCain as “my friend” and “a war hero.”  After 
Clinton left, Rock went off on him, “Is it me or does Clinton have a problem 
saying the name Barack Obama? He doesn’t get it, he keeps talking about 
Hillary. Hillary lost! Hillary lost. It wasn’t sexism. She ran against a Black 
guy nobody ever heard of and he beat her. She lost.”   

If Obama wins in spite of the Clintons’ treachery it will strengthen his hand 
against the Democratic Leadership Council that they control—the hard core of 
conservative center-right Democrats. It is good to see Hillary Clinton 
campaigning for Obama. She has no other choice. She too fears eight years of a 
McCain/Palin ticket and fears her own isolation in the Democratic Party. The 
Clintons are a Trojan Horse inside the Obama campaign. But Obama is beating the 
Clintons, Yes He Can. An Obama victory would weaken the Clinton oligarchy.

Let’s turn out the vote for Barack Obama, Now. 

 

8) A victory for Barack Obama will usher in a revolution of rising 
expectations.  

            If Obama is elected he will do so with the support of 95% of the 
Black vote and the highest Black vote in U.S. history, along with enormous 
numbers of white, Latino, Asian, and Indigenous peoples. He will attract a very 
large and energetic white vote with a strong anti-racist orientation. He will 
win over the majority of young people who are more influenced by the victories 
of the Civil Rights Movement than the crimes of the Klan and the White Citizens 
Councils. 

Listen to how in every talk, besides his recitation of the obligatory “the 
American people” a dozen times, he goes out of his way to say, “My election is 
for everybody. The red states and blue, for the middle class, for Blacks, 
whites, Latinos, Asian/Pacific Islander, and Indigenous peoples.” The 
mentioning of specific oppressed nationality peoples and cultures is in itself 
a major breakthrough in the public discourse of race in the country. Notice 
that the Republicans and most Democrats will never acknowledge that those 
communities even exist because to do so creates a momentary awareness that 
whiteness is not the norm, that whites are not the boss. It also creates 
support for group-specific demand development among oppressed nationality 
peoples.

            After an Obama election the entire field of “community organizing” 
will get a major boost. I was there when Kennedy was elected and Johnson beat 
Goldwater. Those elections raised hopes that helped the Civil Rights Movement 
and the New Left and later the Black 

Liberation, Women’s, LGBT, and Environmental Justice Movements. Obama will have 
to decide, after he is elected, what policies he wants to carry out. If he 
betrays his best promises or carries out his worst, I believe he will receive 
significant organized opposition with demands that he change his policies.

I was also there when John F. Kennedy moved to invade Cuba at the Bay of Pigs 
and tried to assassinate Castro.  I was there when Lyndon B. Johnson initiated 
and then tried to disband the poverty programs, when Johnson escalated a 
genocidal war in Vietnam. These actions by Kennedy and Johnson led to more 
protests, not less.  They led to the emergence of some very principled left 
liberal Democrats, and the radicalization of many formerly Democratic liberal 
students who came to see that more radical, structural, revolutionary change 
was needed. 

I hope that Barack Obama understands that the U.S. is a declining superpower in 
a multi-polar world.  I think he knows full well the economic crisis facing 
U.S. and world imperialism. I think he may propose a less bellicose and a less 
aggressive foreign policy if only to protect the system itself. Regardless, my 
argument is not that we work to elect Obama based on an ability to predict all 
of his actions or choices.

I think every successful organizer has to have an independent program and an 
independent grassroots base. I am part of the Labor/Community Strategy Center, 
and the Bus Riders Union. I work in alliance with thousands of grassroots 
groups reflected, in one instance, by the 12,000 social movement organizers who 
attended the first U.S. Social Forum in Atlanta in 2007. 

            I hope that Obama, as a former community organizer, will understand 
pressure from his left. Even if he does not always respond to our specific 
demands, it will be the job of the movements to assess his response and figure 
out our best tactics to win our demands. 

I hope that we can make sure that Obama respects the civil rights and civil 
liberties of protestors and reigns in the campaign of terror against protestors 
by local police, the National Guard, and the U.S. military. An Obama 
administration cannot sanction the level of brutality and repression against 
demonstrators that the Bush police state has perfected.  Under pressure from 
the Left, I believe he could expand civil rights and civil liberties and expand 
the rights of protest and demonstration, which in turn would help the movement 
further. Can I guarantee that? Of course not, but I do believe that the entire 
climate for anti-racist, anti-poverty, environmental justice, immigrant rights, 
anti-police state, anti-war organizing will be radically improved by an Obama 
victory.

Let’s turn out the vote for Barack Obama, Now. 

 

9) Because I have faith in the Obama supporters, faith in the Black community, 
faith in the grassroots Left. 

 

Obama supporters

I spent a weekend at a Camp Obama training program in Long Beach and have since 
been going to phone bank at the local Obama headquarters. They are a wide 
variety of folk coming from many different points on the political spectrum. 
They are decent, hard working, motivated, and wonderful people. There is a 
movement atmosphere among the group. I was deeply moved by the 350 of us who 
came to the Obama training.  We worked together from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. 
Saturday and Sunday in a very intensive organizer training program. On every 
break I asked people, What is the most important thing about an Obama victory 
for you? I was surprised by the number and diversity of answers. “Because he is 
so intelligent. I am sick of having a stupid president.” “He is the most 
ethical, the most humane.” “He will defeat Karl Rove.” “He is the most 
qualified Black man.” “Because he will help me not be ashamed to be an 
American.” “Because I was involved in the Civil Rights Movement and had lost 
hope. This brings me from ‘We Shall Overcome’ to ‘Yes We Can.’” “Because I want 
my children to see we can elect a Black president.”

Of the 350 people who attended, 100 were Black, 15 were Asian/Pacific Islander, 
15 were Latino, and more than 200 were white. This election is drawing a line 
of demarcation among white people that is very profound—a civil war within a 
larger civil war, the anti-racist whites versus the racist whites. Just as in 
the Civil Rights Movement, a large anti-racist white bloc is consolidating 
itself as a critical ally of communities of color. Remember, these are white 
folk voting for a Black man for president of the United States. We should not 
underestimate the good intentions and high levels of activism and sacrifice of 
the Obama camp and their critical role in history in the years ahead.

 

The Black community 

The Black community is driven like nothing I have seen since the March on 
Washington, the fight against segregation in the South, the fight against 
racism and police brutality in the North. The Obama campaign has a mass 
character to it that is unprecedented in U.S. politics, having sprung from the 
traditions of Black protest, Black rebellion and Black organizing. In the past 
months I have spoken with many Black members of the Obama Campaign and the Bus 
Riders Union. Having grown up in Jim Crow segregation, many say how hard it is 
to believe that Black people could come from slavery to the possibility of 
electing the first Black president of the United States. While that makes them 
very hopeful, in the same sentence they also talk of wanting it so badly they 
cannot acknowledge it. They do not want to get their hopes up and let the white 
racist voters crush them. They fear something bad happening to Obama. They fear 
the white backlash and fear another set of hopes dashed against the rocks of 
racism by this country. They are working with all their heart and soul for 
Obama but do not want to acknowledge how much this election means to them 
because, if he loses, they don’t know if they can bear the pain.

            There is no community stronger and tougher than the Black 
community. It has suffered more pain in America than at times is humanly 
imaginable. Today more than a million Black men are in prison and millions more 
are being hunted down by the police as we speak. And yet, the Black community 
has a power and resilience that is legendary, a long history of leading the 
anti-racist and Left movements in this country.  Its capacity to recover and 
fight back is admired by friend and foe alike. Still, we cannot let a McCain 
victory happen, we just cannot. An Obama victory will raise the spirits and 
fighting capacity of the Black community.

There are some who worry that Obama will co-opt the Black community. They think 
that Black people who are against the growing police state or the occupation of 
Iraq and Afghanistan will look the other way if those policies are carried out 
by Obama. Some have expressed a fear that Black people will protect and defend 
Obama in a way that brooks no criticism, giving him a free pass at a time of 
crisis. But while that is possible, it would contradict everything I have seen 
in 40 years of organizing.  My experience says that it all depends on how you 
organize and how well you grasp and assert your own independence and initiative 
in the united front.

 I have been in social movements that helped elect and then challenge mayor of 
Newark Kenneth Gibson, and Los Angeles mayors Tom Bradley and Antonio 
Villaraigosa. Obama is a brilliant organizer, a brilliant politician. He has 
his own program, his own priorities, and he will fight to win support for them. 
Cooptation is not the most helpful concept, taking the focus off our own role. 
Obama will do what he has to do. It is for those of us who are organizing in 
low-income communities of color, those of us who consider ourselves good 
strategists, good tacticians and organizers—it is for those of us who have a 
grassroots base to drive our own programs, our own demands, and to develop the 
tactical plans to win those demands.

 

After the election, in just two weeks, thousands of grassroots groups that have 
been working on life and death issues for decades will be in the much stronger 
position of being able to place their demands on a more receptive Obama 
presidency. As just a few key examples of structural demands we must raise: 

·        Dramatically cut the $400-billion military budget. Massively expand 
social services and direct transfers of money to the unemployed, the poor, and 
those facing foreclosures and evictions.

·        Release the vast majority of the one million Black and 500,000 Latino 
prisoners incarcerated in the U.S. gulag. Provide humane treatment for those 
who remain, including plans for parole and rehabilitation.

·        Remove all combat and occupation forces from Iraq and provide support 
for the self-determination of the Iraqi people. End the U.S. occupation of 
Afghanistan. End the military threats against Iran, and Pakistan.

·        Provide free, safe, and legal abortions for women.  Do not impose 
parental notification. Provide U.S. funds for birth control and sex education 
in the U.S. and Third World.

·        Pass a new provision of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, strengthening Title 
VI, that will allow grassroots parties to sue government agencies over racial 
discrimination and to block federal funding to racially discriminatory projects 
based on disparate racial impacts.

·        Stop the environmental disaster of “clean coal” ethanol and nuclear 
power. Dramatically expand clean fuel bus transportation and dramatically 
restrict the auto.

·        Stop the ICE raids and surveillance on the 12 million immigrants in 
the U.S. Offer them amnesty. Take down the wall with Mexico.

·        End the blockade of Cuba and stop U.S. subversion of the Venezuelan 
revolution.

·        Support self-determination for the Palestinian people and protect 
their right to a viable homeland.

 

Those of us who see ourselves in a united front alliance with Obama and with 
his millions of supporters should carry out a policy of simultaneous alliance 
and challenge, defending his candidacy and challenging some of its key 
policies. The Right is like a pack of attack dogs.  They will not stop even 
after Obama is elected.  If they lose the election, they will begin attacking 
the Obamas the day they take office. They will try to subvert his presidency at 
every turn. We want to build an alliance with Obama against the Right, a united 
front against racism and fascism that never loses sight of our unities with him 
and with our stand against the barbarians at the gate. At the same time, we 
want to build stronger grassroots movements to his left that can carry out 
their own independent programs and tactical plans. For grassroots organizers we 
are working with millions of other Obama supporters who can be won to a broader 
progressive and Left agenda in the process of fighting for an Obama presidency. 
We need organizers who do not sit on the sidelines of history but see their 
participation in this historical battle as a major development that can expand 
the chances for more radical and revolutionary changes in U.S. society. 

Let us be able to rejoice in an Obama victory and then face the inevitable 
challenges together. I am convinced that many of the people who are working so 
hard for Obama—who are making millions of phone calls, contributing their 
money, and going door to door for his election—will expect the most of him. 
They will not go quietly into the night if he betrays their trust. Obama has 
argued to his supporters that he expects us to keep up the organizing to keep 
him on track, that the role of those who work to elect him will be to organize 
to push him once he is elected. There are millions of people working their 
heart out for his election who will be there to take him up on his 
post-election offer. 

Let’s turn out the vote for Barack Obama, Now. 

 

10) Because it’s time to act. Here is what you can do. 

 

There are at least four major ways you can take positive action in the next two 
weeks to elect Obama and defeat McCain:

 

·        Contribute funds to the Obama Campaign. Over three million people have 
donated already. Obama raised $150 million in September from 632,000 people, an 
average of $86 per contribution. My wife Lian and I have contributed to his 
campaign and plan to do so again in the next few days. Whether you give $25, 
$50 or $100, consider that another 600,000 people will be doing the same. If we 
each do this, we can raise another $150 million in the next two weeks to elect 
Obama and defeat McCain. Last minute ads to counter last minute attack ads from 
McCain are needed and funds are essential. Every McCain ad is an ad against 
liberals, against the Left, against Black civil rights leaders, against 
socialism, against any progressive future. 

 

·        If you are in a swing state, plug into the Obama Campaign now.  For 
the next two weeks, get involved with phone banking and precinct walking.   On 
the weekends before the election and on Election Day, volunteer with Get Out 
The Vote (GOTV) operations.

 

·        If you are not in a swing state, phone bank into swing states with 
your local branch of the Obama Campaign. Also consider volunteering to travel 
to your nearest swing state the last weekends before the election or whenever 
you can to go door to door turning out voters. The more experience you have, 
the better, but the Obama campaign is good at plugging you in.

 

·        Become a poll worker. There are millions of people who will vote for 
the first time or vote after years of absence. The polls will be jammed. The 
Republicans will commit any crime under the books to deter voters in Democratic 
districts and Black voters in particular. We need election protection. People 
who have signed up as poll workers in L.A. are already saying that South L.A. 
and East L.A. are under-staffed. We can assume that communities of color will 
need special attention and that this is a critical job.

 

There is work to be done, and it is great to be an organizer, not a bystander. 
Obama is making history and so should we. It our job to be part of this 
historic movement and to come home with a victory in hand. 

 

 

* * * *

 

A respectful acknowledgment of the historic presidential campaign of 
Congressperson Cynthia McKinney. 

The candidate with whose views I most agree is former Congressperson Cynthia 
McKinney, a dynamic Black woman running on the Green Party ticket. I know many 
people of good faith and good politics who are working for her. I encourage 
them to carry out their plan to its fullest and wish her campaign the greatest 
success. She should be encouraged for what she is doing. At this point this is 
not the choice I am making in my own tactical assessment of the best way to 
confront racism and empire. When the election is over, whether Obama is elected 
or McCain, we all have to work together in a broad united front against the war 
in Iraq and racism at home. Any tactical disagreements on this election, no 
matter how profound, should not divide us in our broader long-term objectives. 
At the end of the day, we are sisters and brothers in the struggle.

 

 

This article was written to encourage strategic and tactical discussions about 
the election. The author strongly encourages comments to be posted at 
www.ericmannblog.blogspot.com.

 

______________________________________________

 

Eric Mann, a veteran of the Congress of Racial Equality, Students for a 
Democratic Society, and the United Auto Workers, is the author of: Comrade 
George: An Investigation into the Life, Political Thought, and Assassination of 
George Jackson, Dispatches from Durban: Firsthand Commentaries on the World 
Conference Against Racism, and Katrina’s Legacy: White Racism and Black 
Reconstruction in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. He is working on his next 
book, The 25 Qualities of the Successful Organizer. 

 

 

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