Take Action To Prevent Another Stolen Election
Call to Action
Join us in taking the No More Stolen Elections! Pledge of Action:
"I remember Florida 2000 and Ohio 2004, and I am willing to take action in 2008 if the election is stolen again. I support efforts to protect the right to vote leading up to and on Election Day, November 4th. I pledge to join nationwide pro-democracy protests starting on November 5th, either in my community, in key states where fraud occurred, or in Washington D.C.. I pledge: No More Stolen Elections!"
We can debate about how to define the change in which we believe.
But no change is possible if our democracy is broken.
That’s what happened in 2000 and again in 2004.
Just mention the names of two states – “Florida” and “Ohio” – and you have summed up one of the most dangerous barriers to change, and democracy, in America.
When the promise of a fair vote and fair count is denied, elections become meaningless exercises.
And when that happens, the status quo cannot be peacefully altered.
If we are serious about not just change but democracy, we must be serious about assuring that the 2008 presidential election is neither gamed nor stolen.
We must act against:
Voter intimidation and vote suppression
Ballot tampering and shortages
Broken voting machinery
Hackable voting machines
Suspect vote counting methods
Unreasonable barriers to ballot access and closed debates
Media announcements of “results” before the votes are cast and counted
Corrupt and partisan election officials
Suppressed and aborted recounts
The assault on American democracy in recent
years has been so extreme and so consistent that, months
before Election Day 2008, we already know what to
expect.
Millions of Americans will be denied the right to vote.
Millions more will be prevented from voting for the candidate of their choice.
And with Black Americans leading two presidential tickets, the intentional suppression of voter turnout in communities of color will continue to be not just a threat but a virtual certainty as those who cannot win the Black vote seek to suppress it.
Recent experience and mounting evidence tell us beyond any reasonable doubt that powerful interests are prepared, at the very least, to attempt to steal another presidential election.
There is nothing unreasonable, nothing radical about that statement.
After all, these same interests have already rigged the system in their favor:
They have stacked the deck with winner-take-all elections, partisan gerrymandering, and the Electoral College.
They have enacted laws designed to prevent people of color, youth, and the poor from voting.
They have undermined public financing of campaigns.
They have declared corporations entitled to free speech rights to invest in candidates and buy elections.
They have made it very difficult and expensive for new parties to form and run candidates.
Much of this explains why so many Americans believe
that their vote doesn’t matter and why the U.S. has one of
the lowest voter turnouts in the world. We are plagued by
undemocratic elections that result in the severe
under-representation in government of women, people of
color, youth, and working people. No wonder so many of
America’s social, ecological, and economic problems
persist.
Between the rigging and theft of elections, Americans are rightly concerned that history will repeat in 2008. We may hope for change, but we fear that once again we will find ourselves ruled by a non-elected, dangerously powerful President.
In 2000, we were caught unprepared, we mobilized too late, and the Supreme Court chose the President. In 2004, we prepared the “No Stolen Elections!” campaign, mobilizing tens of thousands of people across the country for what was to become the Ohio Recount.
In 2008, we’re ready to mobilize and demand much more.
On Election Day, November 4, we will be ready to protect the sacred right to vote. On the next day, November 5, regardless of the declared presidential victor, we will act.
A. If there is reason to believe that the election is likely to be stolen, as was the case in Florida 2000, we will act to prevent this from happening – pressing to prevent the theft and, if that is impossible, demanding a new honest election.
B. If it is unclear whether voting rights violation rise to the level of election theft, as was the case in Ohio 2004, we will mobilize everywhere to demand a full and complete count of the vote.
C. If it appears that the election result was defined by the rigging of the process, we will rally nationwide to press for progress in enacting democratic reforms.
We call on all concerned Americans to commit
yourselves to these efforts by signing the “No More Stolen
Elections!” Pledge of Action:
"I remember Florida 2000 and Ohio 2004, and I am willing to take action in 2008 if the election is stolen again. I support efforts to protect the right to vote leading up to and on Election Day, November 4th. I pledge to join nationwide pro-democracy protests starting on November 5th, either in my community, in key states where fraud occurred, or in Washington D.C.. I pledge: No More Stolen Elections!"
We understand
that the “No More Stolen Elections!” campaign is one
part of a far greater struggle for democracy, one that began
long before the 2008 election, and that will continue well
beyond it. Millions of our forbears personally risked
everything to make real the promise of American democracy.
In honor and respect for them, and for our own human
dignity, we pledge no less.
Please join us in pledging yourself to action to protect our elections, and to heed the call to mobilize on November 5th. Please sign the pledge now and join the growing U.S. democracy movement:
INITIAL
SIGNATORIES
(*all organizations listed for identification purposes only)
Michael Albert, Z Magazine
Aimee Allison, KPFA Radio
Andy
Gussert, trade activist
Austin King,
director, Financial Justice Center
Barbara
Ehrenreich, author, Nickled and Dimed
Ben Manski, executive director, Liberty Tree Foundation for the Democratic Revolution
Bill Fletcher, American Federation of Government Employees
Blanche Wiesen Cook, professor, author, Eleanor Roosevelt, Vol. I, II, III
Bob Fertik, Democrats.com
Camilo
Mejia, chair, Iraq Veterans Against the
War
Charlie Derber, professor and
writer
Daniel Ellsberg, Truth-Telling
Project
David Cobb, initiator of 2004 Ohio
Recount
David Rovics, musician
David
Swanson, AfterDowningStreet.org
Doyle Canning,
SmartMeme
Emma's Revolution, Sonny O and
Pat Humphries, musicians
George Friday, national coordinator, Independent Progressive Politics Network
George Martin, national co-chair - United for Peace & Justice
Glen Ford, executive editor, BlackAgendaReport.com
Greg Coleridge, American
Friends Service Committee, Ohio
Frances Moore
Lappé, author, Democracy's Edge
Frances
Piven, professor, author, Why Poor People Don't
Vote
Head Roc, www.head-roc.com, Capitol Resistance
Holly Near, musician, activist
Jamala Rogers, national organizer, Black
Radical Congress
Jane Anne Morris, author,
Gaveling Down The Rabble
Jane Slaughter, Labor
Notes
Jerome Scott, co-director, Project
South
Jim Hightower, radio
personality
John Cavanagh, Institute for
Policy Studies
John Nichols, author, The
Genius of Impeachment
John E. Peck, executive director, Family Farm Defenders
John Stauber,
executive director, Center for Media and
Democracy
Jonathan Simon, executive director,
Election Defense Alliance
Jonathan Tasini,
executive director, Labor Research
Association
Kaitlin Sopoci-Belknap, director,
Democracy Unlimited of Humboldt County
Karen Dolan, director, Cities for Progress
Kevin Martin,
executive director, Peace Action
Kevin Zeese,
executive director, TrueVote.US
Leslie Cagan,
national coordinator, United for Peace and
Justice
Lori Price, managing editor, Citizens for
Legitimate Government
Makani Themba-Nixon,
executive director, The Praxis Project
Manning
Marable, director, Center for Contemporary Black History,
Colombia University
Marcus Raskin, co-founder,
Institute for Policy Studies
Matt Nelson,
Freedom Now! Collaborative
Matt Rothschild, editor, The Progressive
Maude Hurd, president,
ACORN
Medea Benjamin, co-founder, Global
Exchange
Michael Dolan, activist
Mimi Kennedy, actress, activist
Mike Ferner, author,
Inside the Red Zone: A Veteran For Peace Reports from
Iraq.
Mike McCabe, executive director,
Wisconsin Democracy Campaign
Norman Solomon,
activist, author
Pabitra Benjamin, Rights
Working Group
Patrick Reinsborough,
SmartMeme
Rabbi Michael Lerner, chair,
Network of Spiritual Progressives
Rev. Jesse
Jackson, civil rights leader
Rev. Lennox
Yearwood, president, Hip Hop Caucus
Robert
McChesney, professor, author, The Problem of the
Media
Rahul Mahajan, author, The New Crusade:
America's War on Terrorism
Randy Shaw, editor,
BeyondChron.org
Rev. Osagyefo Uhuru Sekou,
Middle Collegiate Church
Ronnie Cummins,
founder, Grassroots Netroots Alliance
Sarah
Manski, DemocracySquare.org
Sharon Lungo,
Ruckus Society
Sissy Farenthold, attorney
at law
Starhawk, Earth Activist
Trainings
Steve Cobble, activist
Sue
Udry, Defending Dissent Foundation
Ted Glick,
climate change activist
Tim Carpenter,
executive director, Progressive Democrats of
America
Tom Hayden, activist
Van
Jones, founder, Green for All
Victor Wallis, editor, Socialism and Democracy
Please join us in pledging yourself to action to protect our elections, and to heed the call to mobilize on November 5th. Please sign the pledge now. Thank you.