What Succeeds? + Action Switchboard: The Kickstarter For Activists — A New Organizing Tool
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In this week’s newsletter, we are going to report on recent actions that show the movement getting more sophisticated, effective and organized. Before we do so, we want to let you know about a new tool that could be very helpful in building your actions and making them more effective.
Action Switchboard: The Kickstarter + For Activists
The Yes Lab, which grew out of the creativity of the Yes Men, has developed a new tool that can be used to lift the work of all activists. They call it Action Switchboard and it allows you to post an action or campaign, which they call a Scheme, to the site so others can see it and provide whatever help you need. Action Switchboard is not a single issue tool but can be used to fight climate change, extreme energy extraction, racist policing, banking abuse, militarism – really every major economic, social and environmental issue we are confronting.
We really want to encourage you to use Action Switchboard. It is a tool that can lift your actions to a higher level. When you post a Scheme to Action Switchboard you can tell people what you need: skills, resources or funding. People can offer support or sign up to follow your Scheme and get updates so they can participate when they are needed. You can also create an internal group that can communicate in private.
Beyond these normal functions, they provide additional help when requested. For the last 15 years the Yes Men have developed a list of people who are activists with particular skills. This means if you need a certain type of skill, e.g. videographer, banner maker, PR person, in a particular part of the country they may have someone on their list who can help.
The Action Switchboard also has a page they call The Cookbook that helps you design your scheme from the initial brainstorming to its final success.
Check out Action Switchboard and start to use it.
Actions Demonstrating Our Increasing Capacity
Just in the last week there have been a variety of areas where we are seeing an escalation of the sophistication and effectiveness of direct actions campaigns. We review a few here that we can all learn from and that provide inspiration.
The Anti-Fracking Campaign in New York: Governor Andrew Cuomo banned fracking in New York this week. This would not have happened without the ongoing, multi-year campaign against fracking by New Yorkers Against Fracking and others, as well as the current campaign of We Are Seneca Lake. Commentators on the Cuomo decision described the campaign as “unrelenting” and “focused on Cuomo” and how they brought the research and science together with public pressure.
A key feature of this campaign was that it was ongoing. The campaign built over a six year period. Even on the day that Cuomo announced the ban, activists were preparing to protest the announcement they expected – pilot fracking projects in several parts of the state. Instead, they got a tremendous victory, which reminds us that we never know how close we are to success.
The campaign built a strong base of support that included residents who would be directly impacted by fracking, communities that voted to ban fracking and scientists and health experts who could factually explain why fracking was bad for New York. Cuomo was joined by governments in Quebec and New Brunswick in rejecting fracking this week. The tide is turning for anti-fracking campaigns. Let’s build on these successes and stop fracking throughout the country.
The Multi-State Coordinated Actions Against Pipelines: Last week four states joined together to protested a pipeline that would go through New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Rhode Island. The protests seek to stop the Algonquin Pipeline Extension and involves 14 organization. They called it “A Week of Respect and Resistance to Stop the Spectra Pipeline.” The week produced some great individual events and lots of phone calls and other contacts to elected officials.
We hope this kind of coordination between groups and across states continues. Even coordination intra-state is effective. A campaign in Massachusetts against a Kinder Morgan pipeline was successful in forcing them to re-route the pipeline. Now the campaign needs to block Kinder Morgan in New Hampshire. The Massachusetts campaign included a rolling protest from town to town ending in the Boston Common.
Protests Against Police Abuse: There have been many outstanding protests against police abuse after the grand jury decisions in Ferguson and Staten Island. We wrote about some of these protests in a recent newsletter highlighting the ability of mobilized people to shut down business as usual. Worth noting has been the significant leadership by women in these protests; indeed it was female leaders who took the stage from Al Sharpton’s DC rally demanding to be heard. This was an important protest of new black leadership separating itself from the inside-the-Democratic Party misleadership.
This week we were particularly impressed by a well-organized protest in Oakland that shut down the police headquarters for 4 hours and 28 minutes. Four hours for the time Mike Brown was left in the street, and 28 minutes because every 28 hours in the US a Black person is killed by police, military, security or vigilantes. The protest was led by African American groups and supported by Asian and White groups. It featured large banners, climbing a flag pole to fly a flag of people killed by police, blockades of roadways and entrances and powerful chants making clear political points. The groups working together showed exceptional solidarity and coordination. This is definitely an event others can learn from.
Editor’s Note: This article was published before the shutting down of the Mall of America in Minneapolis on Sunday, December 21.
Another important aspect of the police abuse and racism protests is their ongoing nature. Protests are being planned for January around Martin Luther King, Jr.’s birthday and weekly Justice Monday protests are planned at the US Department of Justice.
Immediate Reaction To Denial Of Universal Healthcare in Vermont: We were very pleased to see the immediate reaction from the grassroots to Governor Shumlin’s announcement that he would not be going forward with the universal healthcare plan in Vermont. (Note: We do not call this single payer because it was always a less efficient and more costly multi-payer system.) The Vermont Workers who were the grassroots support for the push to provide healthcare to all in Vermont, immediately responded to Shumlin’s announcement. The next day they were at the State House protesting outside and inside. They called it a “Shame On Shumlin” protest and went to his office to tell him “Your career is toast.”
We’ve always been impressed by the grassroots organizing of Vermont Workers. It was important for Shumlin to immediately hear the unforgiving voice of people who had been promised that their human right to healthcare would be recognized. Politicians who do not fulfill their promises need to be held accountable and told that their decision will impact their career. Shumlin has also seen protests over pipelines in Vermont.
Ensuring the Future of an Internet For All: In a previous newsletter wereviewed the campaign to save the Internet. Popular Resistance was part of this campaign along with Internet advocacy groups. The coalition has been able to make the politically impossible inevitable – reclassifying the Internet as a common carrier under Title II of the Federal Communications Act. Reclassification is essential to putting in place net neutrality rules as the courts have said, without reclassification the FCC does not have the authority to prevent a tiered Internet based on fees and equal access for all through net neutrality. We have not won yet so sign up to stay involved in this campaign to bring it to its ultimate successful conclusion.
Here are important lessons we can learn from each other:
The importance of solidarity: we need to work across geographic areas, coordinate nationally, work across issues and unite despite differences in race, age, sex and class. We are stronger when we are united.
Ongoing campaigns build our power: Change is not going to come from one event; it takes a series of events that are part of a campaign. Campaigns allow us to build and create power among mobilized people.
Linking street action with the facts: The facts are on our side on every issue we are working on but the facts alone are not enough. The people are also on our side, but they need to be mobilized. When we combine people power and the facts, we have the ingredients for success.
Hold people accountable, personalize protest: Those in elected office or other positions must be held accountable for their actions. By focusing on Governor Cuomo, the fracking campaign in New York put consistent pressure on him so wherever he went he knew there was opposition. Vermonters have started the process of holding Governor Shumlin accountable for not fulfilling his promise of universal healthcare – which is a basic human right. If they build this into a campaign, they can turn this decision around, or if necessary, elect a new governor who will ensure their healthcare needs are met.
Spectacle protests builds our movement: We are building a transformative mass movement. For every action we should keep in mind that the goal is to draw more people to the movement, show them that what we stand for will benefit them and their families as well as highlight the failures of current policy. People need to know that there are others working for positive change and if we join together we can win.
In recent years, the movement for social, economic and environmental justice has built a foundation on which to grow. We are hearing from activists on a variety of issues – police abuse, fracking, climate change, economic justice among them – that 2015 is a year to escalate. We are also hearing, consistently across all issues, people need to unite and recognize we are one movement of movements.
We are on the right path to shaping our own destinies, despite the deep corruption of dysfunctional government and an unfair economy. People mobilizing can build their power and shape the future.