It's rare that everyday Americans take
center stage in the presidential election.
News pundits and political consultants are
more concerned with the sex lives of the
candidates than the real stories and real
issues of voters. But this election,
everything will change. Real people and real
issues will be front and center. And if the
candidates listen closely, they'll hear a
new story of hope and possibility for the
future of America.
The American people are tired of the
politics of division and isolation. For too
many years, politicians on both sides of the
aisle have told us we're on our own, that we
have to pull ourselves up by our own
bootstraps, that it's an us-against-them
world and selfishness and greed are our best
defense. But the politics of isolation have
only led to a broken economy and a broken
social safety net, division between nations
and division between communities. We, the
people, have had enough. It's time for a new
politics in America.
This past Saturday December 1, in Des
Moines, Iowa, more than 3,600 people packed
a crowded hall in Des Moines, Iowa, to hear
everyday Americans tell their stories to
five of the top presidential candidates. At
the
Heartland Presidential Forum, Senators
John Edwards, Barack Obama, Chris Dodd and
Hillary Clinton and Representative Dennis
Kucinich did more listening than talking as
real people finally took center stage in
this election.
The regular people on the stage shared
stories with the candidates about immigrant
rights and health care reform and clean
elections -- but no matter the issues, the
theme was clear: Americans know we're all in
it together and want a president who will
put people over profits, communities over
corporations, inclusion over division.
Mayte Rodriguez, an undocumented Mexican
immigrant from the Southwest, told Senator
Hillary Clinton of being a hardworking
student, getting great grades, but fearing a
dead-end future as undocumented immigrant
with no path to citizenship and no means of
employment. Then Larry Ginter, a white
farmer from Iowa, talked about trade
policies that have hurt family farmers like
him and farmers in Mexico, too, forcing
migration.
Ahmed Rehab, an Arab American immigrant from
Chicago, talked about the discrimination
facing Arab and Middle Eastern men in the
United States today. Then Malik Whitaker, an
African American man from the South,
connected Ahmed's story to his own
experience of racial profiling in the
criminal justice system.
Community value voters know these issues and
communities are connected, that we don't
have to pit one group against another to get
ahead. Community values voters know that, in
our nation and in the world, we all do
better when we all do better. The American
story has been written by each of us looking
out for each other and lifting each other up
-- not keeping each other down and divided.
Our hyper-corporate, hyper-consumption
society hasn't changed a thing. As human
beings, we still need each other. As a
nation, we value all human beings equally.
The 3,600 people at the Heartland
Presidential Forum and the millions more
they represent in communities back home
across America know that the story of our
future is a story of hope and possibility
where we're all in it together. This
election, community values voters are
leading the way.
Community values voters are single moms who
know that the economy should work for all
families. Community values voters are
factory workers who want good jobs and wages
in America and in China, too. Community
values voters are doctors and nurses who
know that public programs can ensure high
quality health care for all of us. Community
values voters are homeowners who want the
dream of homeownership but not the nightmare
of exploited debt. Community values voters
are teachers and parents who want public
schools that work for all children.
Community values voters are all of us who
know that our nation can work for everyone,
not just a privileged few. Community values
are all of us who know that alone we can do
so little, but together we can do so much.
Community values voters are already the
lifeblood of our nation. This election, they
will be the pulse of our politics as well.
Sally Kohn is the Director of the
Movement Vision Lab. You can watch video
from the Heartland Presidential Forum
href="http://www.movementvisionlab.org/blog">here.