Progressive Agenda
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End Imperial Foreign Policy, Redirect
Funding
All U.S. troops and military contractors must be safely withdrawn
from Iraq now with war funding redirected toward social needs at
home, and humanitarian and reconstruction aid to the Iraqi people.
Under our Constitution, Congress has the power of the purse to cut
off funding that prolongs the occupation of Iraq. The disastrous
war in Iraq must not be extended into an even more disastrous
attack on Iran.
U.S. foreign policy must be fact-based, committed to international
law and respect for the sovereignty of other nations, and aimed at
intelligently countering real threats, such as weapons
proliferation and transnational terrorism. Instead of producing
more advanced nuclear warheads and promoting weapons into space and
building missile shields, U.S. policy should lead by example in
non-proliferation by disarming our own nuclear stockpiles. Reducing
our nuclear weapons will facilitate negotiations with major powers
like Russia and new nuclear countries like Iran. U.S. policy must
be even-handed in the Middle East, aimed at justice and security for both Israelis and
Palestinians. U.S. foreign policy must shift from reckless
unilateralism toward cooperation and diplomacy with people of other
countries knowing us more by our helping hand than our slugging
arm. [home]
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Healthcare for All
It is immoral for a country as wealthy as ours to have 47 million
people with no healthcare coverage, and millions more with
inadequate, overly expensive coverage. Despite spending twice as
much as other industrialized nations on healthcare, our system
performs poorly because the private U. S. insurance bureaucracy
soaks up nearly one-third of all healthcare money in waste,
profits, paperwork and advertising. Poor health and poor healthcare
drag down the economy and job creation; healthcare expenses are a
factor in half of all personal bankruptcies. Nonprofit national
health insurance Enhanced Medicare for All could provide topnotch
universal coverage by negotiating drug and treatment costs, while
recouping $300 billion in administrative savings currently wasted
in private insurance bureaucracy. This kind of cost-effective
single-payer system is publicly financed, privately delivered
healthcare. [home]
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Economic Justice
The Bush Administrations enormous tax breaks for the wealthy must
be rolled back so that the richest 1 percent of our population
(with yearly incomes averaging $1.3 million) will not pocket $300
billion over the next few years. Tax burdens on the middle class
can be eased if the wealthy pay their share. Thirty seven million
people (equivalent to the population of California) are living in
poverty in the U.S. today. These immoral levels of poverty, which
disproportionately impact communities of color and women, can be
significantly reduced through concerted effort including a living
wage for all workers, expanded earned income tax credits, childcare
assistance and housing vouchers. The federal government must
fulfill its promise of resources to Hurricane Katrina survivors so
they can return to rebuild their communities in the Gulf
Coast.
Protecting the right of workers to form and join unions in the
U.S. is essential to preserving the middle class, as is federal
investment in job creation, such as the Apollo Alliance for
renewable energy, and investment in wireless Internet networks. We
need fair trade deals with other countries that protect workers'
rights and the environment not wage-reducing "free trade"
agreements that protect only corporate rights to globally exploit
unprotected labor. We need to begin by canceling NAFTA. Finally, we need humane and comprehensive
immigration reform, which insures a fair attainable path to citizenship and the rights of undocumented
workers in the workplace and affirms the dignity and integrity of
immigrant families. [home]
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Stop Global Warming
No issue reveals more clearly the flaws of the U.S.
political-economic system than global warming the triumph of greed
and corporate power over the public good, and the near-sighted
focus on the short-term over the welfare of future generations. But
the U.S. public is ready to take action to save the planet and
protect our remaining wild places from further degradation in the
pursuit of oil. We need elected leaders who will act boldly in
reducing our country's oil dependence and use of fossil fuels. This
can be done by raising auto fuel economy and imposing mandatory
caps on carbon pollution while investing in public transportation,
energy conservation technologies and alternative energy
development. (Such investments create good-paying jobs.)
[home]
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Reproductive Freedom/Civil Rights &
Liberties
A womans reproductive freedom, including the right-to-choose, is
essential to personal privacy and gender equality. Equal rights and
equal opportunity must be a guiding principle of society,
especially in view of historic and ongoing discrimination against
women and racial, ethnic and sexual minorities. Affirmative action
in employment and education is an important tool for racial and
gender equality. Lesbians and gays must be afforded equality,
including in marriage and military service. The Bush administration
has exploited the 9/11 tragedy to constrict precious Constitutional
rights of privacy, speech and due process. These rights must be
restored. Drug policy should emphasize treatment over
criminalization not a drug war that erodes Constitutional freedoms,
privacy and law enforcement resources. The prison-industrial
complex in which economic interests profit from incarceration must
be shrunk and capital punishment, with its racial and class biases,
must be abolished. [home]
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Clean, Fair, Transparent
Elections
The U.S. election system is in crisis, with voters facing political
and racial obstacles in casting votes and in getting their votes
counted. Big money and entrenched power deform the political
process, with incumbents unfairly insulated by district
gerrymandering and rules obstructing independent candidates and
parties. We need comprehensive campaign finance reform at the state
and national level, including Clean Money public financing of the
public's elections, plus free TV/radio time for candidates. We need
a ban on touch-screen (DRE) voting machines for counting votes,
paper ballots as the official records for deriving voter intent,
and rigorous mandatory audits of elections. We must end
racially-biased disenfranchisement of felons who've served their
time, and initiate reforms like "Instant Runoff"/proportional
voting, which assure more accurate and broader representation than
winner-take-all elections. [home]
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Media Reform
A half-dozen media conglomerates now sit on the windpipe of the
First Amendment, having seized the publics broadcast airwaves;
these companies helped facilitate the Iraq War. Giant phone and
cable TV companies threaten to transform the Internet from a free
forum fostering citizen action to a corporate-dominated medium
fostering profiteering. The Internet can be saved by legislating
Net Neutrality. Regulation and anti-trust enforcement can break up
media monopolies to diversify broadcasting and expand minority and
nonprofit ownership. Our country needs well-funded, genuinely
independent public broadcasting to replace the current corrupt
system of corporate underwriting and politicized White House
control. Government policy should promote nonprofit and public
access outlets, along with high-speed community Internet for
all. [home]
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