Richardson: “We Won’t Forget About Africa”

September 6th, 2007 at 12:20 pm | posted by Virginia Simmons

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“We won’t forget about Africa.”

Governor Bill Richardson made this promise at a campaign stop in Florence, South Carolina, yesterday. The presidential hopeful also thanked the ONE Campaign for coming to his event and encouraged members of the audience to speak to us and find out more about ONE, which they did.

Richardson also told the crowd “the ONE Campaign wants to push the idea that America needs to lead the way in so many ways.” He continued to wear the band we gave him for the entire event and proudly showed it to everyone in the room.

His Political Director in South Carolina, James Dukes, also came to the event wearing his white band. We thanked Governor Richardson for supporting ONE and making Africa a focus of his political platform.

-Mekell Mikell, SC Co-Field Director

Africa in the News, and Not for Poverty

August 9th, 2007 at 1:53 pm | posted by Porter McConnell, ONE Policy and Coalition Coordinator

The Washington Post ran an excerpt today from Beyond Humanitarianism: What We Need to Know About Africa and Why it Matters, a new book from the Council on Foreign Relations.

The piece makes the case for Africa’s strategic importance, beyond humanitarian disasters. Africa is a major oil producer, the continent along with India and Brazil has taken a principled stand against protectionist trade policies of developed nations in the Doha Round, the Al-Qaeda attacks in Kenya and Tanzania have brought Africa into the terrorist stage, and the continent is at the epicenter of the growing concern over global health.

An excerpt from the piece:

“The growing importance of Africa demands a much more focused, long-term, and carefully directed program of economic assistance and trade reform. The Bush administration has begun to move in that direction with the Millennium Challenge Account, and Congress has contributed with the African Growth and Opportunity Act, which opens the U.S. market to African exports. But much more needs to be done. Only when Africa is recognized for the growing importance it has for America will these shortcomings be overcome.”

You can read the full article here.