Want Out of Iraq? Call Your Senator

By Medea Benjamin

May 22, 2007

Some people get up early to have a leisurely breakfast and read the newspaper before going off to work, while others fly out the door with their coffee cup in hand. Whatever your morning routine, let me suggest a thirty-second addition that could help stop the war in Iraq: Call your two senators and tell them to bring the troops home in 2007.

To call the US Senate, dial the Congressional switchboard at (202) 224-3121 and ask for your senators by name.

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Earlier this year, I virtually moved from my home in San Francisco to Washington, DC, to pressure Congress to end the war. I've learned a few things in these last few months:

• Both branches of Congress are conservative, but the Senate is downright Jurassic. While the House of Representatives is sprinkled with women and blacks and Latinos, the Senate is stocked with one dark-gray suit after another. Rich white men still compose about 80 percent of the Senate, their average age is 60 and even those who call themselves Democrats often think and act like Republicans.

• Active constituents around the country tend to know their House Rep but have little contact with their senators. House members are up for election every two years and feel obliged to mix with the masses from time to time (town hall meetings, community events). Senators are much more isolated and elitist.

• While neither branch of Congress has fulfilled the will of the American people to stop the war in Iraq, senators have been the worst. In the House, there is the Out of Iraq Caucus, the Progressive Caucus, a plethora of bills to stop the war; in the Senate, it has fallen virtually to Russ Feingold to lead the charge to get out of Iraq.

• When House and Senate bills go to joint conference to hash out the final bills, the House bills get watered down by the more conservative Senate. With the first version of the 2007 supplemental war spending bill, the House had a fixed timetable for withdrawal, the Senate version sent to Bush dropped the fixed timetable. The same will be true of the second supplemental bill that will be presented to Bush: The Senate version will take out any remaining House restrictions and allow this war to drag on and on.

• The series of call-ins, sit-ins and other pressure campaigns aimed at Congressional Reps have had an impact in the House: 171 Representatives (169 Democrats, 2 Republicans) voted for Congressman Jim McGovern's bill for withdrawal to begin within ninety days of enactment and be completed in 180 days. It didn't pass, but the vote represented a significant 73 percent of Democrats. By contrast, a similar bill introduced by Senator Feingold to bring the troops home by April 1, 2008, got only twenty-nine votes in the Senate, representing merely 57 percent of Democrats and no Republicans.

• Several Republican senators have expressed misgivings about the war and even protested the surge--Chuck Hagel, John Warner, Susan Collins, Norm Coleman--but they all voted for continued war. Twenty-one Republican senators are up for re-election in 2008 and many of their seats-- such as Gordon Smith of Oregon and Susan Collins of Maine and the retiring Wayne Allard of Colorado, are extremely vulnerable. The time is right to go after Republican senators up for re-election.

While most of the Senate is deaf to the cries of the majority of Americans to bring our troops home quickly, some senators are listening--those running for President. All the Democratic senators running for President supported Feingold's bill to bring the troops home by April 1, 2008: Christopher Dodd (a co-sponsor), Joe Biden, Barak Obama and even onetime hawk Hillary Clinton. Their votes don't represent their great antiwar convictions but rather the tremendous pressure they are getting on the campaign trail.

In fact, whether in the Senate or not, all the Democratic presidential candidates are falling over themselves to be more antiwar than the next. John Edwards has apologized for his 2002 vote authorizing Bush to invade Iraq and has been taking out full-page ads in major newspapers saying "Support the Troops, End the War." He supported the Feingold bill but said it should go further by beginning withdrawal immediately and pulling all troops out in a year. Bill Richardson calls for troops out in 2007. Congressman Dennis Kucinich, the only one who doesn't have to beef up his antiwar credentials, has now one-upped the others by adding the impeachment of Dick Cheney to his platform.

It's obvious that these Democratic candidates, who are out among the public day after day, feel the pulse of the nation and are taking antiwar positions to win votes. Unfortunately, other senators aren't feeling that same kind of pressure.

If we want to end the war, this must change. Our senators--especially the seventy-one who failed to support Feingold's bill--need to hear from us on a regular basis. So why not add to your morning routine a call to your senator with a simple reminder to bring our troops home in 2007? If enough of us make those calls, perhaps the senators will actually wake up and smell the coffee.

About Medea Benjamin

Medea Benjamin is Founding Director of Global Exchange and Code Pink: Women for Peace. For over twenty years, Benjamin has supported human rights and social justice struggles around the world. Benjamin was the Green Party candidate for US Senate from California in 2000. Benjamin is a key figure in the anti-sweatshop movement, having spearheaded campaigns against the giant sports-shoe company Nike and clothing companies such as the GAP. She is author of eight books, including Bridging the Global Gap, The Peace Corps and More and the award-winning Don't Be Afraid, Gringo: A Honduran Woman Speaks from the Heart. She has helped produce various TV documentaries such as the anti-sweatshop video Sweating for a T-Shirt. more...
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