The following appeared in the LA Times and is a great example of how ordinary people can get involved in effecting policy.
Natalie Sugira usually reserves Friday nights for family. But recently, she abandoned her husband and three children for the evening and drove 120 miles to spend less than two minutes with presidential hopeful John Edwards. She wanted to discuss world hunger and Africa and its miseries, subjects that Sugira -- a political refugee from Rwanda -- knows well. "It's simple," Sugira said, her eyes steady on Route 150. "I speak out because I can."In August, she quit her job at the University of Northern Iowa and took a pay cut to join the One campaign, a group co-founded by U2 rock star Bono to press lawmakers to fight poverty, and promote education and healthcare around the world. In doing so, Sugira joined a small army of activists swarming Iowa and New Hampshire this election season, representing causes as varied as the White House contenders they court: taxation, education, Darfur, gay rights, global warming, defense spending, chronic illness.
Holding placards and wearing T-shirts promoting their cause, issue advocates are easy to spot as they trail the White House hopefuls from one event to the next. They scour the crowds for recruits, and compete to quiz the candidates or encourage their supporters to do so: "How would your administration work to reduce the number of people without adequate food and water?" "How would your administration make children's health a priority?" The aim is to get attention, build a public following and have candidates promise action, so that whoever wins the race feels obliged to follow through once in the White House. "When candidates go to events and people everywhere are asking about global poverty, they understand it's not just the same five people who care," said Libby Crimmings, Iowa director of the One campaign.For Sugira, 42, involvement in the One campaign is a way to repay her good fortune and help those she left behind -- including two brothers and two sisters. Sugira's mother and three other siblings also died in 1994 in the Rwandan genocide. "This country is a country of possibilities," she said of America and her work for the One campaign. "I feel I should take that opportunity to do good and try to help others. . . . My job is to tell people how it is back home." Sugira seems impossibly upbeat, given the horror she knows. "I'm not naive," Sugira said. "I don't think tomorrow millions of poor children are suddenly going to be able to go to school. But if even five children can get an education because of our efforts, then it's worth it."
The One campaign was founded in May 2004, with splashy celebrity endorsements and strong support from Democrats and Republicans alike. No one favors poverty, hunger or disease. The problem, said Jessica Vanden Berg, a strategist at the group's Washington, D.C., headquarters, is that most people -- and most political candidates -- don't spend a whole lot of time thinking about the issue.
So the organization has sought to build awareness by promoting the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, which aim, among other things, to halve the rate of extreme poverty, reduce child mortality and stop the spread of HIV/AIDS by 2015. The One campaign claims more than 2.4 million supporters nationwide, including 24,000 in Iowa. All the major presidential candidates have endorsed its goals; One campaign staffers have even been invited onstage to promote their cause. "They do wonderful things all over the world," Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona told a Waterloo audience before handing the microphone to Sugira. "Thank you for being here."
The ONE's Iowa headquarters is near the state Capitol in Des Moines' East Village. Most of the staff arrived with skills honed in other campaigns. Crimmings, who comes from a family of staunch Democrats, began planting yard signs as a girl. A Democratic colleague worked for the state party. Two 20-something Republicans were hired after cash-strapped McCain cut back his Iowa office, and a third volunteered on President Bush's 2004 reelection effort. Several were attracted by the chance to set aside party labels and "fight jointly for a cause that everyone should care about," as Michele Meyer, a 21-year-old Republican staffer, put it. "The work is political, but it's not just about politics."
When they're not chasing candidates, they reach out to religious groups, college campuses and political activists across the state, seeking volunteers and scouting for concerts, church services, sporting events and other activities to attend. "There are only so many pictures you can take with the candidates," Crimmings said as she drove to Ames for a political action week rally put on by Iowa State University, her alma mater. On campus, Crimmings handed out brochures: "Ever hear of the One campaign? Want a quick and dirty version?"
Sugira clutched a microphone and spoke over the caroling bells of the nearby campanile. She told how her husband arrived from Rwanda in 1989 as a Fulbright scholar, allowing her to join him a year later. How their relatives were killed and the couple received political asylum. How they settled in Cedar Falls, where Sugira's husband, Pierre-Damien Mvuyekure, teaches literature at the University of Northern Iowa. Sugira earned a master's in community health education and worked in the admissions office before joining the One campaign. "I'm living proof that U.S. generosity works," she concluded, as about two dozen students ate pizza on the grassy quad, paying little mind. Edwards proved more attentive a few days later. Sugira waited until after he had finished speaking -- and a student supporting the One campaign asked about world hunger -- before she approached the former North Carolina senator during his stop at Upper Iowa University. "Do you feel poverty is a national security issue?" she asked. "Absolutely," the Democrat replied. For about 90 seconds, the two discussed poverty in Africa, the work of the One campaign and efforts to bypass corrupt governments by delivering aid directly to the poor.In all, the round trip took about 6 1/2 hours. Sugira returned home to cold chicken and a chilly reception. Her husband and children don't appreciate her time away. But Sugira said missing family night was worth it.
"Sometimes," she said, "you have to sacrifice."




Comments
Re: Where candidates go, activists follow
The next President can offer a bold new vision for American Leadership in the world. So it’s very important for us to cast our votes wisely. I am getting so anxious because it’s less than one week until Election Day. Whoever we elect as president will be representing us for at least the next four years. One aspect of the election race that I have never paid any attention to are the “political polls,” which flood news broadcasts on TV and online. The polls always sound official, and are supposedly conducted by reputable news sources like the Associated Press, NBC, CBS, ABC, and Reuters. What most people don’t realize is that a poll that indicates that two-thirds of Americans support Barack Obama could be completely inaccurate. Obama lacks political experience, has an extremely left-wing socialist agenda, and even wants to eliminate financial choices like cash advance stores. I’m sure more than one-third of Americans realize Obama’s shortcomings, but the two-thirds that the poll is talking about, represents two-thirds of that particular poller’s viewing audience—not the nation as a whole. Get it now? So, when casting your vote, don’t believe everything you hear on TV or read in the paper; get the real information about the candidates.
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