It’s the last week before the elections. It’s the moment when potential voters are most focused. It’s the time to nail down organizing for GOTV and get it started, especially in early voting states.
It’s the time for action. And if you need a few words to keep you going, I suggest these: Guard the Change.
Because when you strip away the side issues, that’s what this election is about.
President Obama said it in September: “The last election was a changing of the guard. Now we need to guard the change.”
Part of the electorate is discouraged that the change isn’t faster. Part of the electorate is going to scapegoat the President and blame the party in power for bad economic times. But the energy on the GOPer side is coming primarily from those who are afraid of change.
They are mostly white people who are feeling overrun by demographic change. They are afraid of Mexican immigrants and Muslims. They see President Obama as the leader who is taking away everything from whites and giving it to blacks and browns. They want their country back.
These voters are being managed with complete cyncism by corporate interests and their millions, who must hide themselves to retain credibility. They really want their country back.
This energy is coming also from people who see liberals as lording over their lives, anxious to take away the last of what they have–their SUVs, their big screen TVs–with the excuse of global warming.
The importance of the change underway can be measured by the extremism of the opposition. Many of the GOPer candidates don’t even pretend to know very much, or base their actions on anything more than discredited ideologies and narrow religious faiths.
We know the political change that has begun will benefit everyone in this time of inevitable stresses, and especially that it is crucial to a decent future.
It’s time to guard the change.
Some voters can still be persuaded, because many extremist zealots running for the House haven’t been sufficiently exposed for what they are. I suspect most voters would prefer that the people they elect to be the government are competent.
But the most important task is to get Obama voters of 2008 to vote in 2010. This message is particularly potent for them: Guard the change.
What GOPers fear most is that black voters, Latino voters and young voters who believed in Obama will rally to his defense, to guard the change he began. That’s why they are busily engaged in the voter intimidation tactics for which they are so justly infamous.
Change is hard. Political change is messy and often ugly. President Obama at USC:
“But I told you this was going to be hard. Power concedes nothing without a fight.
Inch by inch, day by day, week by week, we’ve been grinding it out. That’s the nature of change in a big complex democracy. And it seem so distant from those wonderful times [of 2008 and the Inaugural.] We haven’t gotten everything that we hoped for. Maybe a neighbor is out of a job, but don’t let anyone tell you that our fight hasn’t been worth it, or that we’re not making a difference.
Because of you, there are people right here in CA who don’t have to choose between cancer treatment or going bankrupt. There are women who can look their children in the eye and say, yes you are going to college. Businesses able to keep their doors open during a recession. 100,000 brave men and women home from Iraq. We will continue to fight to end Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. We will have an energy policy for the future of America.
So don’t let them tell you that change isn’t possible. Here’s what I know. Change is always hard. And if your parents, if our gradparents, if our great-grandparents had listened to the cynics, we wouldn’t be here today.”
This election is important, if only for this one reason:
Guard the change.