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Reply by: Shelley Schreiner
Date: 8/20/2008 3:48 pm
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Many of us felt that we couldn’t possibly lose to Bush—he was just so obviously bad for our country. At that moment, many of us felt like this could be it. This could be the election when we beat the Right, ended the Bush nightmare, and put a (decently) progressive candidate in the White House. We were wrong.

As we’ve seen Obama’s lead in the polls vanish over the past few weeks (the latest Zogby poll shows McCain with a 1 point lead), it’s a fitting reminder: this year’s fight will be at least as hard as ’04. You can follow the latest polls compared with the same week in 2004 by clicking here.


Part of what got us in trouble in 2004 was complacency: progressives saw Bush’s steady stream of blunders, and many of us didn't think that America would make the same mistake twice.  Because McCain is so much like Bush on the issues we all care most about, it’d be easy to fall into the same trap, to think the Democrats have this election wrapped up.

This time it’s our turn not to repeat our mistakes.  The blessing in disguise?  It’s not too late.  We just need to get moving.

It’s time for everyone to get into the fight.  Giving money is great.  But I think grassroots action will be even more important this election.  Obama's ads and speeches might remind people that Bush got us into this mess, show people that McCain can't get us out (not when he voted with Bush 95% of the time last year), and persuade people that Obama can provide the clean break that our country desperately needs. But personal persuasion works much, much better.

We need people to start e-mailing and texting our friends, knocking on doors, engaging our neighbors in discussion, getting our younger friends to register and turn out to vote, and delivering the truth -- face-to-face, person-to-person -- about the candidates and who can lead America in a new direction.

Barack Obama seems to get this. Look at where he came from. Look at how he's run his campaign. But as impressive as his grassroots operation has been, assuming that he's got the grassroots covered could be a big mistake. That's why we're running our own grassroots campaign to help elect Obama, with dozens of people going out in 11 battleground states to recruit volunteers and persuade undecided voters.

And, the same grassroots action that can put Obama into Oval Office can give him the support he needs (or stiffen his spine at times) in the face of the inevitable political, corporate and ideological opposition we can expect after next Jan. 20.

We have a base of volunteers spanning the nation, and we're organized to set you up with the volunteer opportunities and resources you need to do your part this political season. Sign up to make a difference this election; it's not in the bag, but it's not too late.

Re: This week in 2004: Kerry up by 4 points
Posted by: Elizabeth Plumley
Date: 8/21/2008 12:50 pm
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Did you see Saddleback?  Do you like being talked "about" with the other 150,000,000 other objects in this country.  Obama is losing because he stepped between women and their first real taste of power.  Good.  Why do you call yourself progressive, when the needs of women are irrelevant to you?  If one little old man and his little woman are in the white house with their bling ripped from the earth... You know what there is no reason to try and convince you that they are neither one, remotely progressive.  You obviously don't know what that term means.   I hope you someday live in a country where women are allowed to vote, without the DNC coming in to correct their votes for them. 
Reply by: Tiff
Date: 10/6/2008 6:21 pm
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This Hillary fan is sitting this one out. I can't bring myself to vote for someone who ran such a sexist and racist campaign. Besides Obama isn't ready to lead. I am persuading friends of mine here in PA to sit this one out, or vote for McCain as a slap to the Obama campaign. Hillary in 2112!

 

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Latest Update

96 Hours for Change Has Begun

Friday night, we kicked off 96 Hours for Change: Progressive Future's Obamathon. Working in Coalition with Environment America, we will mobilize thousands of volunteers to talk to tens of thousands of voters in the four days leading up to the polls closing on Tuesday evening.


The Recent Outrage

Spying on pacifists, environmentalists and nuns  12/08/2008

Among those labeled as terrorists: two Catholic nuns, a former Democratic congressional candidate, a lifelong pacifist and a registered lobbyist. One suspect's file warned that she was "involved in puppet making and allows anarchists to utilize her property for meetings."


News We Can Use

Generals Propose a Timetable for Iraq

New York Times | 2008-12-18

WASHINGTON — A new military plan for troop withdrawals from Iraq that was described in broad terms this week to President-elect Barack Obama falls short of the 16-month timetable Mr. Obama outlined during his election campaign, United States military officials said Wednesday.