
(AGENPARL) – mar 03 dicembre 2024 Dear Friend,
Last week I wrote you that the reelection of President Donald Trump shows the stakes for our values—freedom, justice, and accountability—have never been higher. But also with the 2024 election showing the collapse of traditional Washington orthodoxies and voters’ relationships with policy, Center for International Policy’s mission of rethinking U.S. foreign policy has never been more urgent – and more possible.
This Giving Tuesday, as you reflect on the year and consider the challenges and opportunities of the year ahead, we hope you will join us in standing up for justice and accountability at home and abroad, push back against policies that threaten civil society, and ensure that the voices of the vulnerable are heard.Donate Now
Our mission may be ambitious, but we have a clear strategy to enact this change. Today’s Foreign Affairs piece lays the intellectual foundation for shifting the center of gravity in U.S. foreign policy, and we have already seen signs that it is resonating with Congressional offices, civil servants, members of the media and other thought leaders. In the coming weeks and months, we will continue our consultations with progressive leaders in the U.S. and globally to further develop policies and expound on action plans.
Your gift today will help us continue this fight to redirect U.S. leadership and resources to serve people’s needs, not those of violent and corrupt elites, oligarchs, kleptocrats and autocrats.
The way through the 21st century is not with the primacy of any one nation, but with solidarity between nations. It is the work of solidarity that is needed to tackle climate change and pandemics, and it is through building the common good that the U.S. has the best path away from constant conflict and faulty strategic thinking like Great Power Competition.
Thank you for your ongoing commitment to the work that lies ahead. Together, we can create a future rooted in peace, fairness, and respect for human dignity.
With gratitude,
Nancy Okail
President and CEO
Center for International Policy
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