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The Democracy Center works globally to advance social justice through investigation and reporting, training citizens in public advocacy, and leading international citizen campaigns.
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THE DEMOCRACY CENTER
ESSAY CONTEST

After Election 2004 – What Should Progressives Do Next?

After last November's election, The Democracy Center invited our readers around the world to contribute short essays in response to the question: Elections 2004, What Should Progressives do Next? The response we received was terrific and as the US and the world prepares nervously for President George W. Bush's second inauguration we bring you the five winners of The Democracy Center's essay contest. We aimed for a diversity of opinion and perspective and that is what we got.

The essays include wisdom from an advocacy veteran about how to handle Bush Supreme Court nominations, a proposal from an American living in Argentina about how progressives might reflect on the challenges ahead, a concrete policy idea for tackling the US health care crisis, an invitation from two young Republican conservatives to look for common ground, and a Catholic activist's call for progressives to take on the challenge of moral values head on.

Here are the winners of The Democracy Center's essay contest. We hope that you will read them, share them, and reprint them elsewhere if you like. We also hope that, whether they make you cheer or scream, they make you think more deeply about the challenges ahead.

Bush and the Supreme Court: What's at Stake and What We Can Do
By David Cohen, co-chair and co-founder of the Advocacy Institute in Washington and a veteran battler in judicial confirmation fights.

President Bush should be taken at his word. When he says he wants his appointees to the Supreme Court to think the way Justices Scalia and Thomas do we had better believe him. That is short hand for the President keeping his political promises to economic social Darwinists and religious fundamentalists at the same time. Read the whole essay.

"Retreat"ing Towards Victory: Moving Ahead with an Open Mind
By Margaret Carolla, a self-described "Yanki" from Missouri who lives in Buenos Aires, Argentina.

The Sunday following the elections, I had dinner with three of my best yanki friends in Buenos Aires. What we should do was the subject of the conversation. Over some stunning bottles of Malbec, my world-wise friend Erin pitched her idea. President Clinton famously attends what are called "Renaissance Weekends", where "accomplished individuals and families from a broad range of disciplines, backgrounds and political, economic and religious convictions came to learn from each other." Why not do the same? Read the whole essay.

Health Security for All Americans: A Straightforward Plan
By Joan Eisner of Fall Church, Virginia.

Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness - impossible to achieve without affordable, quality health care. Our next great moral civil rights battle should be to ensure that every American has the right to health care. Let's keep it simple. No individual or family should have to spend more than 10% of their taxable income on health care. Once that amount has been spent, they are eligible for advance, refundable Federal tax credits to pay their medical bills. Read the whole essay.

If You Can't Beat 'Em... : Making Common Cause With Progressive Conservatives Serves Liberal Ends Better Than Sour Grapes Opposition
By Heather and Benjamin Grizzle, two young, self-described progressive Republicans from Manhattan.

In the aftermath of the GOP's decisive victory this fall, both conservatives and liberals forget that while the two parties disagree about means, "progressive" ends like greater opportunity for immigrants, minorities, and the poor, a cleaner sustainable environment, and responsibility among the capable, remain a vision for many in both parties. If liberal progressives would thoughtfully understand and make common cause with conservative progressives, a GOP administration could be steered toward its best progressive instincts, rather than cast off to its worst elements. Read the whole essay.

Progressives and Moral Values: A Catholic Activist Urges Progressives to Keep the Faith
By Dan Moriarty, Social Justice Minister with, Campus Ministry at Seattle University in Seattle Washington.

Asking voters if we are most concerned about war, poverty, health care, the environment, or moral values was like asking if we are fans of classical, jazz, rock, r&b, folk, country, or good music. From Quaker abolitionists to Vietnamese Buddhist monks, Baptist civil rights leaders to Catholic nuns in Central America, people of faith have so often been the visionary leaders of progressive movements here and abroad. Read the whole essay.