"Think globally, act locally" is still one of the best slogans progressives ever slapped across the backside of a vehicle. But the leap from bumper-sticker admonition to political reality has proven difficult, as the movement to challenge economic globalization has come to realize that even the most colorful street demonstrations are not enough to halt the forward march of corporate capital. That recognition should serve as the inspiration for a serious rethinking of how the movement will approach the next stage in what must be seen as a very long struggle. It is time to stop waiting for the next Seattle and to start thinking about how US activists can most effectively contribute to global justice: by adding the considerable weight of this movement to tipping the balance in a Congress where the biggest globalization fight of 2001 was decided by a single vote.
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Noted.
Third-party gains, good times for Wal-Mart, the Minnesota recount and what's next for Howard Dean.
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The First 100 Days
If Democrats can succeed in improving people's lives, the electorate won't care whether the Obama administration governs from left, right or center.
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Noted.
Reactions to the Obama victory from London and Nairobi.
"The corporate influence is so constant on these trade issues--all the corporate jets flying in, all the corporate CEOs walking the halls of Congress--that the only way we can beat them is with an outpouring of citizen opposition on these issues," says Representative Sherrod Brown. "Members have to start feeling the heat at home on these issues." What issues? Congress votes on dozens of trade and international economic issues every session: In addition to fast track, legislation involving trade with China, Jordan and Vietnam gained Congressional approval last year, and key debates over restructuring US support for the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank are in the offing this year. A global justice movement that turns up the hometown heat on politicians who continually vote the corporate line has a real chance of connecting with broad constituencies who, thanks to NAFTA, understand that trade agreements negotiated in secret are not being written for workers and farmers. And a movement that builds support for alternatives to inhumane IMF and World Bank policies--including debt relief proposals that have already achieved bipartisan backing in Congress and plans to force the IMF to stop demanding that developing nations cut social spending and abandon environmental protection as a condition of assistance--will find allies in faith and international solidarity communities.
Can a tighter focus on US legislative matters really make a dramatic difference? Consider: Among the twenty-one Democrats who sided with Bush on fast track were California's Susan Davis and Utah's Jim Matheson, both elected in 2000 with strong labor and environmental group support. Had stepped-up hometown pressure caused one of them to switch their vote, activists from the Tundra to Tierra del Fuego would have gained time to increase the pressure on their own countries to make labor, agricultural and environmental protections central to FTAA negotiations.
But fast track is just one fight. There will be dozens more, as the Bush Administration seeks to put in place trade, agricultural, development and foreign aid policies favored by the country's elites. Thus, it is time for those who have done so much to educate and agitate on global issues to get serious about acting locally--and aggressively. These fights will be central to the question of whether another world is possible.
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