Subscribe now and get a FREE calendar
Receive a full year of the print and digital versions of The Progressive for only $14.97.





THE PROGRESSIVE MEDIA PROJECT
The Progressive Media Project has distributed more than 2,500 op-eds that have placed over 10,000 times in large and small newspapers around the country. The Progressive Media Project has also hosted more than 40 skills-building op-ed writing clinics for foundation grantees, nonprofit organizations, activists and community groups. Download our 2006 Annual Report here.
FEATURED AUTHOR
Jim Abourezk is a practicing lawyer in Sioux Falls, S.D., and is a former U.S. senator from that state. Read Jim Abourezk's Op-Eds
RECENT OP-EDS

Government needs to reform auto industry

By David A. Love, November 25, 2008

Let's raise more healthy and happy black girls, like the Obama daughters

By Juleyka Lantigua, November 25, 2008

Thanksgiving without the history, please?

By Mark Anthony Rolo, November 26, 2008

Abandoning autoworkers and their communities is not the answer

By Mark Brenner and Jane Slaughter, November 21, 2008

Thirty years after Milk assassination, we need to further his vision

By Akilah Bolden-Monifa, November 20, 2008

Obama needs to reform the prison system

By Randy Jurado Ertll, November 19, 2008
MEDIA PROJECT FUNDERS

Obama should visit Latin America

By Randy Jurado Ertll, July 31, 2008

Sen. Barack Obama should travel to Latin America.

His much-publicized trip to Afghanistan, Iraq, the Middle East and Europe made him look presidential.

But by not going to Latin America, he is giving short shrift to this crucial region.

Not only is it one of the biggest trading partners of the United States, it has also borne the brunt of wrongheaded U.S. policies over the years.

Historically, the United States has propped up dictatorships and undermined democracies in Latin America. In the 1980s, the Reagan administration, for instance, supported a brutal government in El Salvador and waged an illegal war against Nicaragua.

Once the Cold War ended, many in the United States lost interest in Latin America, and U.S. aid to the region dropped off. One exception has been Colombia, since the United States has invested billions of dollars through Plan Colombia — ostensibly to combat drug trade but also to fight the rebels.

Voters have a right to know what Obama’s views are on Plan Colombia, as well as on other important issues, such as the North American Free Trade Agreement with Mexico, U.S. policy toward President Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and U.S. response to the resistance many Latin American governments have to neoliberal economic policies imposed from Washington.

Plus, Obama needs to understand the push factors that force millions of Latin Americans to migrate to the United States. These include high rates of poverty and the free trade agreements that adversely affect the poor and the middle class.

Obama still has the opportunity to make his case — especially if he wants to capture the Latino vote in the United States.

But he should beware. Sen. John McCain has already gone to Mexico and Colombia, and Obama cannot risk looking indifferent to the roots of tens of millions of Latinos living in the United States.

A visit to Latin America would do Obama good.

Randy Jurado Ertll formerly worked as a communications director/legislative assistant to a member of Congress in Washington, D.C. He can be reached at pmproj@progressive.org.

Copyright Randy Jurado Ertll

   

Support articles like this by making a tax-deductible donation to The Progressive. We are a non-profit, both legally and literally, and every dollar counts.

SHOW YOUR SUPPORT: Share this article
AddThis Feed Button View our community page at Disqus.com
Advertisement
War Resisters League
A Power Governments Cannot Suppress