Darfur Campaign Updates

Show Your Support

Across the country, presidential candidates have recognized Darfur activists by their signature bright orange "I Vote for Darfur" t-shirts, stickers and buttons. Now you can show the candidates, and the country, that Darfur is an important issue for you too!

Visit our Ask The Candidates online store and make Darfur a visible issue in this country today. Ten percent of all purchases will go to Ask The Candidates, and help us continue our work to make Darfur a priority in this election.


Tell Us Why You Vote for Darfur


Over the past months, the presidential candidates and the media have been making statements about issues they think Americans care about in the upcoming election.

Now it's YOUR TURN to make a statement.

Watch Nefertari explain why she is voting to end the genocide in Darfur, then submit your own video.

Let the candidates know that Darfur is an important issue for Americans. Explain that stopping the genocide in Darfur must be a priority for the next president.

SUBMIT A VIDEO and tell us why, come November, you will VOTE FOR DARFUR!

Ask the Candidates will feature one video per week on our website. Your video could be next!

Send your video to the candidates:

Make sure to also wubmit your video to Campus Progress's I'm Voting For Campaign. Each week, a new group of videos will be sent to the candidates and major media to let them know what issues Americans are voting for.

Having trouble uploading your video?

Let us help! Email your video file to info@askthecandidates.org and we will upload it to YouTube for you. 


KEEPING OUR WORD: Fulfilling the mandate to protect civilians in Darfur

Almost a year has passed since the United Nations Security Council approved a civilian protection force for Darfur. But the United Nations-African Union mission in Darfur, known as UNAMID, is stunted. Only one-third of the troops are deployed, critical gaps exist in equipment and logistical support and the force has been repeatedly attacked. The Sudanese government systematically obstructs full deployment with total impunity.

A report released today by Save Darfur Coalition President, Jerry Fowler and ENOUGH Co-Chair, John Prendergast, examines UNAMID's status and the challenges it faces. It offers recommendations to overcome logistical and political hurdles to achieve full, effective deployment. If fully deployed and fully capable, UNAMID can save lives and protect civilians. For UNAMID to effectively provide protection and stability for the people of Darfur, however, it must be coupled with an inclusive peace process that is mindful of the interconnected crises in Sudan.  

Read the report here.

"The inability to deploy UNAMID is but one of a number of interrelated challenges that threaten to set the entire nation of Sudan on fire," says Prendergast.  In addition, failure to fully deploy UNAMID right away will undermine any future U.N.-A.U. initiatives and threatens the credibility of both institutions. Civilians in other African conflict zones will feel the effects of this joint model's success or failure for years to come.

Read the report here.

Back to Iowa . . .

It was only a few months ago that the Ask The Candidates was out in Iowa, demanding to know what the presidential candidates would do to end genocide and caucusing for Darfur.  Though the Iowa caucus was back in January, the process in Iowa is actually not over yet.  This weekend, the final Iowa delegates will be chosen at the state conventions. In addition to choosing delegates, part of the caucus process also includes choosing a state platform for each party.  The platforms are a means for parties to state their positions and philosophies on various issues.  As a swing state, Senators McCain and Obama will spend a great deal of time campaigning in Iowa and will be very interested in the content of the parties' state platforms. 

This weekend, at the state convention, the five districts in Iowa will present their decided platforms and a coherent state platform will be determined.  Darfur has been made a priority by all five Democratic districts (we are hoping to hear from the Republican districts very soon).

Statements from the five district platforms include the following:

  • "Strong action in concert with the international community to end the genocide in Darfur and work for a fair and lasting peace."
  • "We support...robust world efforts to prevent and end genocide [and] rapid international peacekeeping intervention in armed conflicts."
  • "We support...ending genocide in Darfur and elsewhere, including the use of targeted sanctions and a full-time diplomatic team in the region and quick response to future genocide."
  • "We believe the US in cooperation with the international community should take decisive action to end genocide and human rights violations in Darfur and throughout the world."
  • "Support U.S. cooperation with the international community to impose targeted sanctions on any government official or faction leader who commits atrocities, impedes the peace process, or obstructs the deployment of a peacekeeping force in Darfur."

Thanks to everyone who has worked relentlessly to bring Darfur and genocide to the forefront of the campaign in Iowa and throughout the country!  Let's continue to make this an issue in the national campaign and ensure that the next president will end the atrocities being committed in Darfur!


'Young People' Earn Recognition from Presidential Hopefuls

Ending the genocide in Darfur is not the only issue U.S. presidential candidates agree upon; Senators McCain and Obama have both recognized the efforts of "young people" in keeping this issue on the political radar, as well as mobilizing public support and political will.

Senator Obama credited youth for engaging in "activism based not on self-interest, but on moral imperative," and "expressing their idealism through this movement." Senator McCain praised "young people all over America" and "the people and organizations who have dedicated so much of their time, their effort, their energy, and their funds" to the cause.

One such organization is STAND: A Student Anti-genocide Coalition, comprised of more than 800 chapters worldwide. Since September, 2007, 192 new chapters have formed in universities across the United States, demonstrating youth's passion and dedication towards this issue.

With a heated presidential campaign building, the number of opportunities to make your voice heard on this issue is increasing. Young people may be the loudest in the cause to save the millions displaced in Sudan, but people of all ages can raise their voices for the vicitims who quietly suffer from the ensuing violence and disease.


A Joint Statement is Not Enough

Last week, in a historic act of unity, Senators McCain, Obama and Clinton proclaimed to U.S. voters, the world, and President Bashir that bringing peace to Sudan transcends partisan politics in the U.S. All of them have publicly proclaimed that Darfur is of serious concern to them, and we have seen that this has rattled the Government of Sudan.

This is a great step forward in bringing peace to this war-torn area. However, much progress still needs to be made! The candidates still need to provide concrete plans that they would implement in order to bring peace to Darfur, if they were to be elected president this fall.

This unified claim that the candidates made is historic. But rhetoric is only the first step. We must ensure that this proclamation in the New York Times is transferred into action. We need to know now what each of the candidates will do for Darfur on day one in office.

Click here to write a message to the presidential candidates. Thank them for uniting in their fight against genocide. But also push them to publicly proclaim how they plan on ending the genocide in Darfur. Let them know that you will vote for the candidate who has the best policy to end genocide!


Government of Sudan Replies to Candidates' Joint Statement on Darfur

The Government of Sudan has issued a response to the candidates' joint statement on Darfur. The response focused on the notion of change, that has been a centerpiece of the candidates' campaigns.

“Yet the joint statement released yesterday by the “Save Darfur Coalition”, bearing the signatures of the candidates, deviated from this grandiose notion of ‘change’ that they have so championed. There can be no doubt that the Sudanese government is chiefly responsible for the violence and is able to end it” the statement read on the Coalition’s website. To make this claim is hardly “Straight talk”. And if in fact change is our genuine concern, then it seems we should begin by providing an objective account of reality. Nowhere in the joint statement was the voter given the chance to discern it for him/herself. The “Save Darfur Coalition”, after concocting an idyllic picture of events, went as far as drafting an editable “thank you” letter to the candidates for voters to submit. A ready made “thank you” letter, as if voters were short for words to use. Click here to read the complete response by the Goverment of Sudan.

It's apparent from this response that the Government of Sudan is worried about the next president. Click here to thank the candidates for their joint statement and encourage them to keep up the pressure on Sudan.


Candidates Release Joint Statement on Darfur


In a historic display of solidarity, Senators Clinton, McCain and Obama have issued a joint statement demanding an end to the violence in Darfur and pledging to pursue this goal with unstinting resolve once elected.

Not since World War II have all major presidential candidates come together on an international issue. A three-quarter page ad in the New York Times today will announce this important development. 

Click here to find 10 actions you can take to ensure that the cacndidates keep Darfur at the top of their priority list.