ONE CAMPAIGN

(Redirected from One Campaign)

The 'ONE Campaign' is a U.S.-based, non-partisan non-profit organization which aims to create the political will to end extreme poverty and fight global disease. ONE is closely linked to both the international effort to achieve the United Nations' Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and the Global Call to Action Against Poverty, which represents the international Make Poverty History movement.
ONE was originally founded by a coalition of 11 non-profit humanitarian and advocacy organizations (such as DATA, World Vision, Oxfam America, and Bread for the World) with funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
The organization has launched a campaign around the presidential election called ONE Vote '08 and co-chaired by former senators Tom Daschle and Bill Frist.

Contents
Overview
History
Methods
References
External links

Overview


ONE is a grassroots organization which attempts to mobilize supporters around its issues and organize them into a lobbying force, with the goal of encouraging America’s elected national leaders to fund more of the U.S’s international development and relief programs. As a campaign to fight extreme poverty and global diseases, it supports the Millennium Development Goals.
Although its central talking points center on ending extreme poverty and fighting the AIDS pandemic, ONE supports a broad variety of international development and relief issues, including debt relief, clean water, increasing the quantity and efficiency of aid, lessening corruption in the governments of the aid-recipient countries, providing basic education for all, making trade more fair, reforming the farm bill to make it more fair for farmers in developing countries, slowing deadly diseases such as HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis, and increasing the international affairs budget in general. ONE also holds the position that increasing foreign development assistance will create a more secure world, believing that global poverty and the ideological extremism that fuels terrorism are linked.
ONE claims that increasing international assistance by an amount equal to one percent of the U.S. budget will[1]:

★ Reduce by half the number of people in the world who suffer from hunger.

★ Provide free access to primary education for 77 million out-of-school children.

★ Provide access to clean water to 450 million people and basic sanitation to 700 million people.

★ Prevent 5.4 million young children from dying of poverty-related illnesses each year.

★ Save 16,000 lives a day by fighting HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.

History


ONE was founded by 11 organizations: Bread for the World, Cooperative for Assistance and Relief Everywhere (CARE), DATA, International Medical Corps, International Rescue Committee, Mercy Corps, Oxfam America, Plan USA, Save the Children US, World Concern, World Vision.
There was an official launch on May 16 2004 at Liberty Mall in Philadelphia. About 2,000 people attended the rally, including Bono, Dikembe Mutombo, Michael W. Smith, Richard Stearns (President of World Vision), and David Beckmann (President of Bread for the World).[2]
In December, ONE announced a $3 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation[3]. Corresponding with this announcement, ONE tried to show the bi-partisan nature of its campaign by having Mark McKinnon, an advisor to President Bush, and Mike McCurry, an advisor to the Kerry Campaign, go on CNN’s Inside Politics with Judy Woodruff in support of ONE.[4]
On May 22 2007 the Global Fund to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria announced that it had saved 1.8 million lives since 2002, including a roughly doubling of services in the past year. ONE took partial credit for this increase since ONE members advocated for the increases to the Global Fund in both 2006 and 2007.[5]
In June 2007, ONE launched ONE Vote '08.[6] to mobilize American voters to engage the presidential candidates about the issues of global diseases and poverty. ONE Vote '08 seeks to have all the candidates make the fight against global poverty a key part of their national security and foreign policy platform. ONE Vote '08 is co-chaired by former Senate Majority Leaders, Sen. Tom Daschle and Sen. Bill Frist. Since the launch, state-wide initiatives have been established in each of the four early primary states - Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina, and Nevada.[7][8][9][10]
[11][12]
In addition, the ONE Vote initiative has produced official and unofficial endorsements from presidential candidates John Edwards and Bill Richardson. [13][14]

Methods


ONE uses a number of highly visible methods to reach out to the general public, promote its message, encourage action and raise funds.
Celebrity spokespeople are used to speak to the media and undertake trips abroad
televised visits to areas suffering from poverty in order to illustrate the issues ONE is attempting to solve. ONE also uses its celebrity supporters for video ads which are released on YouTube.
ONE is a largely Internet-based campaign and therefore has multiple online communities throughout cyberspace. As well as using YouTube, ONE has a significant presence on MySpace, Yahoo Groups] and Flickr[15] and uses Facebook for its campus organizing[16].
Supporters are encouraged to sign ONE's declaration, encourage their family, friends and community to join and lobby their political representatives.[17].

References


1. Issues The ONE Campaign website. Retrieved August 9 2007
2. saworship.com
3. ONE Campaign Announces National Effort To Mobilize Americans in Support of Helping Fight Global AIDS and Poverty." The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation website. Retrieved August 9 2007.
4. transcripts.com
5. christiantoday.com
6. [1]
7. [2]
8. [3]
9. [4]
10. [5]
11. [6]
12. [7]
13. [8]
14. [9]
15. Will the 2008 USA election be won on Facebook? CNN.com, May 29 2007. Retrieved August 9 2007.
16. Facebook and MySpace The ONE website. Retrieved August 9 2007.
17. Ten ways to contribute to ONE, the ONE Campaign website. Retrieved August 9 2007.

External links



The ONE Campaign - Official site

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves