| INFLUENCE
YOUR LEADERS
Do not hang back from involvement in addressing the problems
of the world, waiting to become an expert. You are expert
enough. Take your part in the great dramas and the great
struggles now still in their opening acts in this world.
It is the part where you storm on stage with a confused
but mischievous look and the audience cheers you madly.
Don't wait to know the part too well, or the moment
will pass without you.
- Doris "Granny D" Haddock,
93, is the chairwoman of the "Our Town Votes"
project. She walked across the U.S. in 2000 to support
cleaner campaigns with fewer strings attached to special
interests and is a personal "shero" of the
MAU Founders!
Declare it
in our houses of government…
This is perhaps our most important role—when
we stand in our houses of government and prove we are
a force to be reckoned with. US policies affect every
child on earth and touch every corner of our lives.
It’s time mothers* have a hand in shaping these
policies. Our government legislators have been hired
to spend our tax dollars and make decisions that will
affect all of us for generations to come. They depend
on our feedback to let them know what we want! Never
be sheepish about speaking up on an issue, even repeatedly;
that is our job in a democracy. Remember: you are their
ally—build a relationship with them. FYI: respect,
tenacity and accurate information go a long way toward
being heard.
Search
for the truth. With all these candidates vying for your
favor, how to separate the schmooze from the truth?
The speeches all sound good, but you have to ask yourself-
“Is this guy kissing my baby because he likes
my baby, wants my vote or because he’s committed
to funding programs that support kids?” REALLY
good question! Visit their Websites and watch the paper
for an opportunity to see them in the flesh. Spend one
hour checking out their backgrounds, issue positions,
voting records and campaign finances.
For all the links you need to
get informed>
Voice
your opinion. Contact your government leaders. Your
first call to the White House may be scary (in truth,
the White House has the world’s nicest comment
line operators), but after that you’re a pro.
Memorize the White House comment line telephone number
and ring it up every time you see an issue in the newspaper
that you are drawn to. The operators keep a tally of
yeas and nays and send them to the President at the
end of the day.
This same call-in process works for US senators, Congressional
members, state legislators and city council members.
They really pay attention to how many calls they have
received in favor (or not) of an issue!
WHITE HOUSE COMMENT LINE
1-202-456-1414
CAPITOL SWITCHBOARD 1-202-224-3121
(US Legislators)
Calls are always important, emails less so, but LETTERS
are terrific. A HANDWRITTEN
letter has more influence than a computer-generated
one with words like, “therefore” and “inasmuch”
and “whereas." A personal letter lets your
representatives know that there’s a real person
out there who knows what’s up and can (gasp!)
organize. Fax your handwritten
letter, as the mail can be pretty squirrelly these days.
Get to know
your elected officials. It’s time to let your
candidates know you are passionate, courageous, and
informed and you VOTE!
After you have a few calls and letters under your belt,
it’s time to deepen your relationship with the
folks who do most of the work – the aides. Call
your legislators’ offices and ask for the aide
who focuses on children’s welfare. Tell them you
are a Mother* Acting Up and would like to be sent all
information regarding the candidate’s stand on
children’s welfare. YOU ARE ALLIES—know
their names, passions and point of view. Ask for them
in the future. A good relationship with an aide can
get your voice heard in that office. ”Getting
to know you, getting to know all about you…”
Hum along….
Field trips
are fun! Are you up for a visit? Now that you have a
working relationship, and even if you don’t, taking
a trip to your elected representative’s office
can be very powerful. Organize a group of mothers* and
children to discuss specific and timely issues. We did
this after the start of the Iraq war so that children
could ask their questions—going directly to the
source—to key decision makers. Children tend to
be more straightforward in their questioning and often
demand this same response from their leaders.
For the tools you need to declare
it in your houses of government >
|