November 5, 2007: This website is an archive of the former website, traprockpeace.org, which was created 10 years ago by Charles Jenks. It became one of the most populace sites in the US, and an important resource on the antiwar movement, student activism, 'depleted' uranium and other topics. Jenks authored virtually all of its web pages and multimedia content (photographs, audio, video, and pdf files. As the author and registered owner of that site, his purpose here is to preserve an important slice of the history of the grassroots peace movement in the US over the past decade. He is maintaining this historical archive as a service to the greater peace movement, and to the many friends of Traprock Peace Center. Blogs have been consolidated and the calendar has been archived for security reasons; all other links remain the same, and virtually all blog content remains intact. THIS SITE NO LONGER REFLECTS THE CURRENT AND ONGOING WORK OF TRAPROCK PEACE CENTER, which has reorganized its board and moved to Greenfield, Mass. To contact Traprock Peace Center, call 413-773-7427 or visit its site. Charles Jenks is posting new material to PeaceJournal.org, a multimedia blog and resource center.
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Published March 9, 2005 by Traprock Peasce Center
with permission
Burlington Votes to Bring the Troops Home Now!
By James Marc Leas, Colleen McLaughlin, and
Ashley Smith
"A town
meeting revolt over the Iraq war" is what The Christian Science Monitor
called Vermont's historic votes for anti-war resolutions in 49 of 57 cities and
towns. The resolutions passed not only in traditional liberal strong holds, but
also in rural areas usually dismissed as conservative. The votes demonstrated
overwhelming anti-war sentiment.
In the state's
largest city, the Burlington Anti-War Coalition (BAWC) proposed a resolution
(full text below) that called for bringing the troops home now. It passed with
65.2% of the vote. It won in all the city's wards, including the two most
conservative. In the towns of Marshfield and Hinesburg (one of the more
conservative towns in Vermont) voters also considered and passed "Out
Now" resolutions by overwhelming margins.
However, only a
handful of the anti-war resolutions put forth in Vermont towns included the
word "now." Ben Scotch, former executive director of the Vermont
ACLU, sparked the statewide campaign and drafted the resolution used outside
Burlington, Marshfield and Hinesburg. That resolution calls for the Vermont
Governor to have more control over the state's National Guard, demands an
investigation into the impact on the state of the guard's large deployment, and
advocates the return of the troops in accordance with international
humanitarian law.
Both resolutions
were universally recognized as victories for the anti-war movement.
Nevertheless, the two resolutions flow from different perspectives within the
state's anti-war leadership on public opinion about the war, what demands we
should put forward, and what actions we should build.
On one side
several leaders thought that calling for an immediate end to the occupation was
too radical. They feared the resolution would be defeated in Burlington and
elsewhere if it included the word "now." This position was widely
shared among anti-war activists who concluded that in the wake of Bush's
victory in the presidential election, public sentiment had shifted to the right
and our task was to reach out to those who disagree with us with more palatable
language. They argued for presenting demands that would be acceptable to the
Democratic Party which, in their view, was the only viable vehicle for opposing
Bush's occupation.
BAWC respectfully
disagreed. In discussions leading up to its internal vote, members argued that
an "Out Now" referendum question would attract more popular support,
especially among military families who had much to lose from any delay.
As the March 3rd
poll in the New York Times demonstrates (http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/03/politics/03poll.html),
the US is sharply polarized, with half of the population opposed to Bush on
everything he stands for, including the occupation of Iraq. Instead of rallying
this fifty percent to oppose Bush, the Democrats offer only the mildest
criticism, ratify his nominees, support his saber rattling against Syria and
Iran, and refuse to call for an immediate end to the occupation of Iraq.
The votes in
Burlington, Marshfield and Hinesburg show we do not have to moderate our
demands and adapt to the pro-occupation Democrats. They demonstrated that
"Out Now" is a demand that can galvanize our side, win majority
support, and form the basis of a popular movement to end the occupation and
oppose Bush's future wars.
Winning this vote
was surprisingly easy. First, activists participated in a democratic debate
inside BAWC, which voted to try to get the "Out Now" referendum
question on the ballot for a vote. We then pursued a dual-track strategy of
petitioning in the streets and in the City Council.
During the
coldest and snowiest days of January, we collected over 1,000 signatures on
petitions, and found an overwhelmingly positive response from Burlington
voters. While petitioning, we distributed a flier that made the case for
"Out Now."
At the same time,
we found allies on the City Council, one of whom, Jane Knodell, agreed to
sponsor a motion in the Council to put the resolution on the ballot. At two
meetings Democratic and Progressive councilors tried to amend the resolution,
objecting specifically to "Out Now" language. They argued that the
resolution should read, "Bring the troops home as soon as possible."
But BAWC and
Military Families Speak Out (MFSO) members spoke eloquently during hearings,
arguing that since the war was based on lies, not one more American or Iraqi
life should be sacrificed to maintain the occupation. The City Council then
voted twelve to one to preserve our "Out Now" wording and to place it
on the ballot.
As part of the
campaign, we helped publicize four public forums that made the case for
immediate withdrawal. These included: Colleen McLaughlin and Fernando Suarez
del Solar from MFSO; Jerry Colby, President of the National Writers Union and
steering committee member of United States Labor Against the War; Anthony
Arnove, co-editor with Howard Zinn of Voices of a People's History; Stephanie
Seguino, Chair of the University of Vermont Economics Department; and Elaine
Hagopian, Middle East expert and editor of Civil Rights in Peril.
One of the forums
was organized by Burlington Mayor Peter Clavelle and City Councilor Jane
Knodell. They invited representatives from the Vermont Congressional
Delegation and speakers on both side of the question to speak at Burlington
City Hall. The pro-war speakers declined the invitation, but the Vermont
Congressional delegation all sent representatives. We were delighted to hear
from Congressman Bernie Sander's representative that Sanders would vote in
favor of the resolution. But he and the representatives for Pat Leahy and Jim
Jeffords all made clear that they would not argue for that position in
Congress.
These forums
politically educated the core of anti-war activists on the case for immediate
withdrawal and how little help we could expect from the politicians. We tabled,
leafleted, stuffed mailers, and put up posters to help win the vote.
The issue now for Vermont activists is
how to transform the "Out Now" sentiment into a revitalized mass
movement. Referenda, public forums, petitions, and demonstrations have all been
vital means to build campaigns among military families, soldiers, and the
general population, and to create a renewed mass movement. Such mass movements
scored the major victories of the 1960s, forcing politicians to abolish Jim
Crow segregation and end the Vietnam War.
Further campaigns
are planned in Burlington. Local campus activists in Students Against War at
the University of Vermont are organizing counter-recruitment to stop the
military preying on working class students for their war machine. MFSO is
organizing a statewide speaking tour of anti-war military families to demand
immediate withdrawal. MFSO has also launched a campaign to secure government
services for returning soldiers. BAWC is planning a citywide anti-occupation
demonstration on March 20th.
Burlington
activists hope that our successful referenda will set an example. Particularly
needed is a national demonstration that can mobilize hundreds of thousands of
people demanding an immediate end to the occupation. The referenda showed that
"Out Now" is the right demand and commands enormous popular support.
Now we need to make that sentiment visible on a national and global level.
Full Resolution: "Shall the voters of the City of
Burlington advise the President and Congress that Burlington and its citizens
strongly support the men and women serving in the United States Armed Forces in
Iraq and believe that the best way to support them is to bring them home now?"
James Marc Leas is a member of the Burlington Anti-War Coalition
and was the 2004 Green Party Candidate for Vermont Attorney General; Colleen
McLaughlin is a member of the Vermont Chapter of Military Families Speak Out;
and Ashley Smith is a founding member of the Burlington Anti-War Coalition.
They can be reached at ashley05401@yahoo.com.