by Ann Wright,
t r u t h o u t | Perspective
I am in San Francisco this week before the election, campaigning for Cindy Sheehan. She is running against both the
Republican and Democratic establishments, but more specifically against Democratic Speaker of the House of
Representatives Nancy Pelosi.
As speaker of the House, Pelosi represents and leads the Democratic Party that failed to end the war in Iraq, failed to
hold the president and vice president of the United States accountable for the lies in the war in Iraq, taking
impeachment out of the constitution and "off the table," knowing about the torture program and refusing to make it
public and stop it, voting for FISA eavesdropping on American citizens, OK-ing the $700 billion bailout and a lot more.
She knew these things and didn't stop them.
In the summer of 2007 while we were in hot, dusty Crawford, Texas, for the third summer in a row protesting Bush's
continuation of the war in Iraq, Cindy decided to challenge Pelosi for taking impeachment off the table. In one of her
first statements upon becoming speaker of the House of Representatives in January 2007, Pelosi had said impeachment
hearings would be too divisive for America. As recently as yesterday, October 29, she has said there is no evidence of
wrongdoing by the administration. (Congressman Dennis Kucinich spoke for hours on the floor of the House of
Representatives about the administration's criminal acts and many books have been written on the subject.)
In July 2008, Cindy announced that she was giving Pelosi ten days to put impeachment back into the Constitution. In
those ten days, Cindy and a team numbering from 20-60 persons from Camp Casey traveled from Crawford to Washington, DC,
stopping at towns and cities along the way to talk about the lack of accountability for criminal acts by government
officials while in office (war in Iraq, kidnapping, torture, illegal eavesdropping.) When we arrived in Washington, DC,
400 persons joined us to march from Arlington National Cemetery to the House of Representatives, where we sat all day in
the hallways around Pelosi's and House Judiciary Committee Chair John Conyers' offices.
Cindy, the mother of Casey Sheehan (who was killed in Iraq in April 2004); former CIA presidential briefer and US Army
Captain Ray McGovern, and minister and ex-US Air Force Captain and Chaplain Rev. Lennox Yearwood, met with Conyers for
over two hours, urging him to begin Congressional hearings that could lead to the impeachment of President Bush and Vice
President Cheney.
They emerged from Conyers' office visibly shaken after Conyers told them that the Democrats were more concerned about
winning the 2008 presidential election than about ending the war in Iraq or about holding Bush and Cheney accountable
for their criminal actions.
Upon hearing the results of the talk with Conyers, 47 of us surged into Conyers' office and refused to leave until
Conyers called for impeachment hearings. About 8 o'clock that night, the Capitol police came into his office and
arrested all of us.
Since Pelosi had not put impeachment back onto the table, while in Washington, DC, Cindy announced that she would run
for Congress against the speaker of the House.
In January 2008, Cindy moved from her home close to the Bay area to Pelosi's district in San Francisco and began her
campaign for Congress. She relentlessly spoke at hundreds of civic events in San Francisco and attended meetings of
virtually every organization in the city. In a short time, she became a visible presence in the city.
Running as an independent, she had to collect 10,000 signatures to be on the ballot, and despite all odds, she became
only the sixth independent candidate for Congress from California to raise the required number.
Then the Democratic Party and corporate media machine kicked into gear. No mainstream media in San Francisco covered
her official announcement for Congress and none have covered her race against Pelosi. Suddenly, the "peace mom" whose
talks and appearances had been covered extensively in San Francisco around the country by the media - was iced out.
Print, TV and radio interviews dried up. Only internet news media would publish her writings and cover her active
campaign in San Francisco.
This week I joined the many volunteers from all over the country who have knocked on doors, held signs on street
corners, passed out issue position papers and talked to voters about why Cindy is challenging the woman in the
leadership position of the House of Representatives.
It turns out that the voters in San Francisco are just as angry as Cindy is about Pelosi's refusal to stop funding war,
her knowledge about torture from briefings of the administration and her refusal to hold Bush and Cheney accountable for
their criminal acts. From the informal polls I have taken this week of voters coming out of the City Hall's early voting
station, Cindy's campaign against Pelosi has triggered a strong response against Pelosi.
It has been very interesting to see the expressions of longtime Democrats who work in City Hall as we ask them to
consider voting for Cindy. They have the same expression, the "stink eye" on their faces, as the Republicans with whom
we have argued in Congress over the past five years about the war in Iraq and torture.
In those moments, the "stink eye" reflex to accountability and to standing up to the existing political system reveals
the real challenge - forcing the two major political parties that have been tacitly working together to promote and
continue war and to hold no one accountable - to move over for real change in our political system.
VOTE CINDY FOR CHANGE!
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Ann Wright is a retired Army Reserve colonel and a 29-year veteran of the Army and Army Reserves. She was also a
diplomat in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia, Afghanistan and Mongolia. She
resigned from the Department of State on March 19, 2003, in opposition to the Iraq war. She joined Cindy Sheehan and
12,000 others in the ditches of Crawford, Texas, in August 2005 to protest President Bush's war on Iraq. She is also the
co-author of the book, "Dissent: Voices of Conscience."