Interchange - Spring 2007
FCNL Annual Meeting
I would like to express my deep gratitude for the
financial support that made it possible for me to attend
the Annual Meeting of the Friends Committee on National
Legislation.
As in previous Annual Meetings I have attended, I
was amazed by the how much FCNL is able to accomplish
in a seemingly hostile political climate. From the
outside, it is tempting to view FCNL as an admirable,
principled organization with no real clout in a Washington
dominated by corporate lobbyists, big special interest
cash, and the risk-averse hawkishness of both major
parties. But at Annual Meeting one hears from staff
lobbyists who have built constructive relationships with
Congressional staff from both parties and played a key
role in stopping bad bills and even passing a few new
ones. My favorite handout of the many given to participations
was “FCNL’S Top Ten Congressional Accomplishments
in 2006.”
Although FCNL goes to considerable lengths to
remain nonpartisan, it was impossible to ignore the sense
of optimism created by the election returns days earlier.
In a session on engaging vocal outreach, attenders from
Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania discussed strategies
for engaging their newly elected Democratic Senators.
The spiritual basis of FCNL’s work often goes unspoken
(to the disappointment of some Friends), but
Earlham professor Michael Birkel’s Friday night address
took us deep into the writing of John Woolman in hopes
of bridging the divide between Quaker “contemplatives”
and “activists.” For me, political action among Friends
tends to be more fulfilling than in other contexts because,
in Birkel’s words, “our efforts grow out of a feeling
sense of the conditions of others.”
One significant disappointment of the conference
for me was Perry Cammack’s acceptance of the 2006
Ed Snyder Award on behalf of Senator Joseph Biden.
My disappointment at the Senator’s failure to attend
was compounded by his Iraq policy staff persons’ apparent
discomfort with the situation. He thanked the
gathered pacifists for their antiwar work and then proceeded
to detail the senator’s reservations about setting
a timetable to withdrawal from Iraq. Certainly honesty
is preferable to simply telling the crowd what it wants
to hear as politicians are so wont to do, but the dissonance
between Cammack’s comments and the antiwar
passion of the rest of the conference left myself and
other attenders wondering why FCNL has bestowing
its seal of approval on a lawmaker unwilling to take a
clear antiwar stand.
The answer, of course, is that FCNL is engaged in
a continual balancing act between what some have called
“the politics of moral witness” and “the politics of the
possible.” Senator Biden’s leadership is pressing for legislative
language barring the establishment permanent
U.S. military bases in Iraq was seen as a small but significant
step in the right direction. Quite understandably,
FCNL focuses much of its energies on pressing
for such incremental changes while at the same time
proclaiming a prophetic vision of the world we seek.
I am currently helping FCNL with year-end
fundraising by writing personally to lapsed donors. Although
no longer a member of the General Committee,
I intend to stay involved in FCNL by organizing members
of Sandy Spring Friends meeting for lobby visits
with Senator Ben Cardin and Representative Al Wynn
in the coming months.
Given the considerable cost of attending Annual
Meeting, in future years BYM should consider taking
the initiative in offered financial assistance to Young
Adult Friends who have been nominated to the FCNL
General Committee by BYM or by their monthly meeting.
This would be a great way for BYM to support
FCNL and Young Adult involvement.
Nathan Harrington,, Sandy Spring
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