Monday, June 6, 2016

DIY Democracy


♫ Best Progressive House Mix 2016 Vol. #2 [HD] ♫

Illustration by Jem Sullivan

In my travels and conversations this year, Ive been encouraged to meet grassroots people of all progressive stripes: populist, unionist, liberal, environmentalist, feminist, civil libertarians, civil rights activists, and others. Over and over, the question I encounter is some variation of What should we do? How do we make Washington govern for all the people?

Thanks for asking. The number-one thing you can do to bring about change is to show up. Think of showing up as a sort of civic action, where you get to choose something that fits your temperament, personal level of activism, and your available time and energy. The point here is that every one of us can do somethingand every bit helps.

Simply being there matters. While progressives have shown up for elections in winning numbers, our movement tends to fade politely into the shadows after the polls close, leaving public officials (even those we put in office) free to ignore us and capitulate to ever-present, ever-insistent corporate interests. No more. Grassroots progressivesas individuals and through our groupsmust get in the face of power and stay there.

This doesnt require a trip to Washington, though it can. It can be done right where you livein personal meetings, on the phone, via email and letters, through social media (tweet at the twits!), on petitions, and any additional ways of communication that you and other creative people can invent.

Hey, were citizens, voters, constituents. We should not hesitate to request in-person appointments with officials back home (these need not be confrontational). We should attend forums where theyll be: local hearings, town hall sessions, speeches, meet-and-greets, parades, ribbon-cuttings, receptions. They generally post their public schedules on their websites. Go to their meetings, ask questions, or at least say hello, introduce yourself. Make them learn your name.

Okay, youre too busy to show up at all this stuff, but think about going to one every month or so. And you dont have to go alone. Get a family member, a couple of friends, a few members of the groups youre in to join you. Make it an excursion, rewarding yourselves with a nice glass of wine or a beer and some laughs afterward.

Then there are times (in the course of human events, as Jefferson put it) when citizens must come together in big numbers to protest, to insist on being heard. And when were shut out, a higher form of patriotism demands that ordinary folks surround a public officials district office or a high-dollar fundraising event to deliver a noisy message about the peoples needs.

This is especially necessary for officials who get a substantial, or even majority, vote from progressive constituencies but still stiff us on such major needs as increasing the minimum wage, overturning Citizens United, endorsing a Robin Hood Tax on Wall Street speculators, and prohibiting voter suppression. We have a right to expect them to respect our vote, and stand with us on the big issues. Weve been too quiet, too indulgent with such office holders, and they wont change until we start confronting them publicly.

Both in terms of having your own say and in demonstrating the strength of the grassroots numbers behind the policy changes we want, you and I are going to have to get noisier, more demonstrative, more out-front in demanding that elected officials really pay heed to those who elected them. Lets make 2016 the year of reintroducing ourselves and our expectations to policymakers. At their every turn, we should be there, becoming a personal human presence (even an irritant) that they cannot ignore.

Jim Hightower produces The Hightower Lowdown newsletter and is the author, with Susan DeMarco, of Swim Against the Current: Even a Dead Fish Can Go With the Flow.

Source: http://www.progressive.org/news/2016/06/188767/diy-democracy

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