A Peace Primary?
If the presidential primaries were decided based on candidates' positions on war and peace, the frontrunners would be quite different. Dennis Kucinich, Ron Paul, and Bill Richardson would score points for supporting immediate withdrawal from Iraq. John Edwards, Barack Obama, and Bill Richardson would merit consideration based on their pledges to work towards eliminating nuclear weapons.
Of course, this is not going to happen. Other factors will intercede, from positions on other issues to money for advertising. But there is a "peace primary" of another sort, designed to promote organizations that have a long-term commitment to fighting for peace and justice. Without these kinds of organizations, the candidate commitments mentioned above will not mean much.
Sponsored by the Ploughshares Fund, a long-time supporter of work towards nuclear disarmament and other peace issues, the primary has twelve "candidates" -- organizations like the American Friends Service Committee, Peace Action, and Women's Action for New Directions (full listing available at www.peaceprimary.org).
The primary is a one-dollar, one-vote affair (i.e., votes are based on contributions to one of the groups, with twenty-five dollars equalling twenty-five votes, for example). The organization receiving the most votes will receive a $100,000 grant from the Ploughshares Fund.
This may seem like small potatoes (paging Dan Quayle -- please spell check this for me!) compared to the tens of millions that are being expended in the presidential primaries. But a little funding goes a long way in the world of non-governmental organizations. Polls close on October 31st -- vote early and often, as they used to say.




















Love the idea, hate the $10 minimum donation.
Sometimes, at the end of the month I have a dollar or two, or three, but most organizations will not take that, so I'm not picking on you here, although you did quote it as "one-dollar, one vote."
Maybe I'm in the minority here, but with all the good causes to go around, $10 or even $5 a pop can really add up.
DS
October 16, 2007 7:22 PM | Reply | Permalink
“1 dollar = 1 vote for peace,” according to the PeacePrimary site. Candidates and elected officials might be more interested in how many registered voters voted with bucks for an organization's platform. I hope that PeacePrimary will release the number
of voters for each organization as well as the dollar totals. As staleync discusses above, a ten-dollar minimum can deter some who care about the issues; the number of voters, then, won't equal the number of persons who care. In the end, the number of PeacePrimary voters will be too low, while the dollar totals alone won't reveal the number of registered voters agreeing with the respective platforms of the organizations.
October 17, 2007 3:28 PM | Reply | Permalink