Last Saturday I went knocking on doors in Lancaster, Penn., with the
AFL-CIO to talk about the election. We knocked on only union household
doors, but a tragic 34 percent of union members who voted in 2000 voted
for Bush, and recent polls have shockingly suggested no change in that
figure. So I didn't know what to expect.
Every single person who told me and my door-knocking partner who they
were voting for was for Kerry, and all of their household members were for
Kerry.
No one was for any third party candidate. One kid whose parents weren't
home thought they were for Bush.
But a handful of people wouldn't say who they planned to vote for or
said they were undecided. And several of those who said they were for
Kerry only said so after we'd made clear that we were for Kerry. The usual
assumption would be that most of those who wouldn't say were for Bush. But
I suspect that some of them were afraid to say they were against Bush.
Several of the people who told us, with various degrees of enthusiasm,
that they were for Kerry also told us that they were the only Democrats in
the neighborhood. It was always enjoyable to tell them that we'd already
talked to a dozen Kerry supporters right on their street. One woman, who
was not from a union household but lived next-door to a house we knocked
at, said she always voted Democrat but kept her registration Republican
because "When in Rome you do as the Romans do." We told her some
things about Rome (in this case, Lancaster) that she didn't know but that
we'd learned in the course of one quite enjoyable day.
I once gave a ReDefeat Bush bumper sticker to a woman on the Metro in
D.C.
who wanted to know if it was legal, and then hid it quickly in her bag
and accused me of trying to get her into trouble. I misunderstood her
until I realized that she was afraid. There is a tremendous level of fear
in the country that we don't all recognize. We know that the Bush
administration has used fear to sell an illegal war and a shifting of
wealth to the wealthy, but how much thought have we given to the effect
that fear may have on the election? Bush may not need phony felon lists or
even direct intimidation to keep voters away, not if everyone is scared
already.
Many of us do not know all of our neighbors. We know the people we work
with, the people we hang out with, but not all of the people who actually
live closest to our homes. If you want to do something for your country,
I'd recommend that you make up flyers about a Vote-Bush-Out Party at your
house on any evening in the near future. Then take the flyers around
knocking on all of your neighbors' doors, every single one, even the ones
you are certain are Republican. Tell them that anyone who wants to vote
Bush out or is undecided should come. Talk to whoever is home and give
them your flyer. Leave the flyers beside the doorknobs of those not home.
When the people come to your house, have a stack of voter registration
forms available as well as information about the candidates. There are
plenty of good fact sheets available on the internet, for example from the
AFL-CIO.
I suspect that in many cases you will be surprised at how much company
you have.
David Swanson's website is