Sunday, October 5, 2008

Obama embraces MDGs

I believe that it is vital for America to have a positive voice in the world, and that working with the United Nations and entire UN System can facilitate important international achievements. The global economic crisis, climate change, the increasing need for renewable energy and sustainable development, nuclear proliferation, worldwide poverty where a billion still live on less than $1 a day -- can only be solved with worldwide cooperation. With good political leadership and through partnership, we can make a major difference in the world we leave to our children. We can set important goals, and work together to meet them. Good scientific and technological research, strengthened education of our children, conservation, investment in the future and imagination will be stimulated by such leadership.

During the High-Level Segment of the UN General Assembly, Senator John McCain and his running mate visited the UN to meet world leaders. Despite this high-profile visit, McCain's policies seem to side-step the United Nations itself, and focus instead on bringing together only "democracies." Now, just a month before the presidential election, I am asking our readers to write to Senator McCain to ask him to support the United Nations, the UN MDGs, and to set forth a coherent policy that will give voters an understanding of his position and his global vision.

By contrast, in a speech to the Clinton Global Initiative on September 25, 2008, Senator Barack Obama embraced the UN Millennium Development Goals with the following statement:

"We all have a stake in reducing poverty. There is suffering across the globe that doesn’t need to be tolerated in the 21st century. And it leads to pockets of instability that provide fertile breeding grounds for threats like terror and the smuggling of deadly weapons that cannot be contained by the drawing of a border or the distance of an ocean. These aren’t simply disconnected corners of an interconnected world. That is why the second commitment that I will make is embracing the Millennium Development Goals, which aim to cut extreme poverty in half by 2015."

That said, I heard Senator Obama in a televised speech state that his plans for foreign assistance may need to be spread out over several years, because of the current economic crisis.

It is important to stay informed about the candidates' attitudes and policies toward global issues and their vision of the role of the UN. Sen. Obama has answered questions submitted to him by UNA-USA and the Better World Fund; you can see his replies here: http://www.unausa.org/site/pp.asp?c=fvKRI8MPJpF&b=3879851

Sen. McCain has not responded, but perhaps with encouragement from the public, he, or perhaps his running mate, would reply. It's time to press for this and to help American citizens understand the candidate's views related to the UN in this important election.

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