
Latino voters are among the fastest growing voting blocs.
Voter
education efforts such as this one in Idaho could have a huge
impact
in November 2004.
For those who respect good old American values, the JOBS!
strategy recenters the national debate on the value of hard
work.
John Russonello, a nationally recognized pollster, looks at the
core values that will motivate people on an issue.
He breaks them into primary values and secondary values. His
list of primary values, the values that trump all others, is
very short: individual responsibility, family security, honesty,
fairness, freedom, work and spirituality.
Russonello’s second tier of values includes the responsibility
to help others, compassion, personal fulfillment, respect for
authority and love of country.
“Jobs that pay a liveable wage are grounded in a number of
values, the value of work, the value of individual
responsibility, family security, and self-fulfillment,” explains
Russonello. “Getting on the wrong side of these values is not
where you want to be come election time.
“Jobs have played a pivotal role in presidential elections when
two things happen. You have to have both of these. One is when
the country is feeling the hardships of recession, not just in
the recession but feeling it. And two, when the Chief Executive
is viewed as not responsive to those hardships,” adds
Russonnello.
The pre-conditions for a JOBS! strategy exist. Look at the map.
Most of the country is still feeling the recession. And yet,
President George W. Bush blithely refuses to address this jobs
crisis.
To win the values debate, the JOBS! strategy is reduced to three
points:
First, working hard, meeting your individual responsibilities,
providing security for your family and achieving personal
fulfillment requires just one thing – a job worth fighting for.
Second, if a presidential candidate truly values hard work, then
he must value hardworking Americans and fight to save
manufacturing and transportation jobs.
Third, a candidate that values hard work must also value those
who want to work hard once again.
By creating new jobs and new industries, he can be the champion
of the unemployed.
A Winning Message
A presidential campaign that makes the JOBS! strategy its own
can win the values debate.
It can energize millions of registered non-voters to go to the
polls, and can lay claim to over 270 electoral votes.
JOBS! Worth Fighting For can be the rallying cry for 52 million
Americans marginalized by the powers that be.
So which presidential candidate will cure what ails a black,
bruised and bleeding America?
Will it be John Kerry, John Edwards or Howard Dean? Or will it
be George Bush?
The choice is yours.
Cover Story: Part 1 |
Part 2 |
Part 3 |
Part 4 |
Part 5
|
|