Marianne Williamson for President
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 19, 2019
Patricia Ewing
Communications Director

Marianne Williamson Announces U.S. Department of Peace Plan

Des Moines, IA - Presidential candidate Marianne Williamson today announced that as President she will work with the Congress to create a cabinet-level U.S. Department of Peace.

Ending the scourge of violence in the United States and across the planet requires more than suppressing violence. Lasting peace requires its active and systematized cultivation at every level of government and society. The U.S. Department of Peace will coordinate and spur the efforts we need to make our country and the world a safer place. Nothing short of broad-scale investment and government reorientation can truly turn things around.

Both domestically and internationally, we must dramatically ramp up the use of proven powers of peace-building, including dialogue, mediation, conflict resolution, economic and social development, restorative justice, public health approaches to violence prevention, trauma-informed systems of care, social and emotional learning in the schools, and many others.

“I believe our country’s way of dealing with security issues is increasingly obsolete. We have the finest military force in the world, however, we can no longer rely on force to rid ourselves of international enemies. The planet has become too small for that, and in so doing, we overburden our military by asking them to compensate for the other work that we choose not to do, and we are less effective, and less secure, because of our choices,” said Williamson.

As its mission, the U.S. Department of Peace will: hold peace as an organizing principle; promote justice and democratic principles to expand human rights; coordinate restorative justice programs; address white supremacy; strengthen nonmilitary means of peacemaking; work to prevent armed conflict; address the epidemic of gun violence; develop new structures of nonviolent dispute resolution; and proactively and systematically promote national and international conflict prevention, mediation, and resolution.

The Department will create and establish a Peace Academy, modeled after the military service academies, which will provide a 4-year concentration in peace education. Graduates will be required to serve 5 years in public service in programs dedicated to domestic or international nonviolent conflict resolution.

The Secretary of Peace will serve as a member of the National Security Council and will be empowered to coordinate with all Cabinet agencies – including the U.S. Departments of Agriculture, Defense, Education, Justice, and State, and the new U.S. Department of Children and Youth.

Initial funding for the Department will come from the consolidation of existing peace-building and violence-reducing efforts within the Federal government. As the Department becomes effective in its work, a true “peace dividend,” reflecting a declining domestic and international need for the instruments of violence, will more than fund the costs of the Department’s activities.

The full plan can be found HERE.
 
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https://www.marianne2020.com/issues/us-department-of-peace-plan

PLAN FOR A U.S. DEPARTMENT OF PEACE

Marianne Williamson, as President, will work with the Congress to create a cabinet-level U.S. Department of Peace.

Ending the scourge of violence in the United States and across the planet requires more than suppressing violence. Lasting peace requires its active and systematized cultivation at every level of government and society. The U.S. Department of Peace will coordinate and spur the efforts we need to make our country and the world a safer place. Nothing short of broad-scale investment and government reorientation can truly turn things around.

Both domestically and internationally, we must dramatically ramp up the use of proven powers of peace-building, including dialogue, mediation, conflict resolution, economic and social development, restorative justice, public health approaches to violence prevention, trauma-informed systems of care, social and emotional learning in schools, and many others.

“I believe our country’s way of dealing with security issues is increasingly obsolete. We have the finest military force in the world, however, we can no longer rely on force alone to rid ourselves of international enemies. The planet has become too small for that, and in so doing, we overburden our military by asking them to compensate for the other work that we choose not to do. We are less effective, and less secure, because of those choices,” said Williamson.

As its mission, the U.S. Department of Peace will; hold peace as an organizing principle; promote justice and democratic principles to expand human rights; coordinate restorative justice programs; address white supremacy; strengthen nonmilitary means of peacemaking; work to prevent armed conflict; address the epidemic of gun violence; develop new structures of nonviolent dispute resolution; and proactively and systematically promote national and international conflict prevention, mediation, and resolution. In short, we must wage peace.

The Department will create and establish a Peace Academy, modeled after the military service academies, which will provide a 4-year concentration in peace education. Graduates will be required to serve 5 years in public service in programs dedicated to domestic or international nonviolent conflict resolution.

The Secretary of Peace will serve as a member of the National Security Council and will be empowered to coordinate with all Cabinet agencies – including the Departments of Agriculture, Defense, Education, Justice, and State, and the new Department of Children and Youth.  
Initial funding for the U.S. Department of Peace will come from the consolidation of existing peace-building and violence-reducing efforts within the Federal government. As the Department becomes effective in its work, a true “peace dividend,” reflecting a declining domestic and international need for the instruments of violence, will more than fund the costs of the Department’s activities.

U.S. Department of Peace Overview 

What is the U.S. Department of Peace?‍

‍A new U.S. Department of Peace will coordinate our efforts to make our country a safer place. It will work actively and interactively with every branch of government on policy matters related to both international and domestic peace issues.

As its mission, the Department will: hold peace as an organizing principle; promote justice and democratic principles to expand human rights; coordinate restorative justice programs; strengthen nonmilitary means of peacemaking; work to prevent armed conflict; address the epidemic of gun violence; develop new structures of nonviolent dispute resolution; and proactively and systematically promote national and international conflict prevention, mediation, and resolution.

The Department will create and establish a Peace Academy, modeled after the military service academies, which will provide a 4-year concentration in peace education. Graduates will be required to serve 5 years in public service in programs dedicated to domestic or international nonviolent conflict resolution.

The Secretary of Peace will serve as a member of the National Security Council and will be empowered to coordinate with all Cabinet agencies – including the Departments of Agriculture, Defense, Education, Justice, and State, and the new Department of Children and Youth.  

Why do we need a U.S. Department of Peace?

Peace-building is both preferable to and less costly than war. We spend more on our military than the next nine largest militaries in the world. The United States and China spend half the $18 trillion global military spend, both growing at about 5 percent annually. As has become evident in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria, as well as against terrorist enemies like ISIS, at best our military can solve part of the issue, leaving the true, underlying problems unaddressed. Even with these expenditures, the economic impact of violence to the global economy was nearly $15 trillion in 2017, or 12.4 percent of global gross domestic product (GDP).

Domestically, the need for coordinated effort to end violence in our country is also greater than ever. Too many of our citizens, and in particular our children, fear violence on a daily basis. This is true in inner cities from gang and drug violence, in our schools from mass shootings and bullying, and in many areas from the violence that comes from people who have lost hope, and turned to opioids or other drugs. We need to coordinate our efforts across the Federal government, we need to work with states, we need to work with corporations and communities and parents and schools – as one, singular nation focused on the programmatic efforts that actually work to bring healing and more peace.

And we need to do this now. Americans are more likely to die every year from gun violence than they are to die in a war. We have more deaths of children and teachers from school shootings than any other country in the world. We have more gun violence in our cities than any other industrialized country. And we have more people imprisoned than any other country in the world.  

How will we pay for the U.S. Department of Peace?

If properly and completely implemented, the U.S. Department of Peace could actually save United States taxpayers an enormous amount of money. Avoiding costly wars abroad and reducing violence in the United States will decrease our federal budget.

Along with the long-term savings that come from implementing this kind of work on a broad scale, there should be few extra immediate costs involved.  This department will focus on reallocating existing budgets in more appropriate and coordinated ways to keep, maintain and create sustainable peace.

The key funding question for the U.S. Department of Peace is simply a matter of changing where the money goes, with a renewed focus on peace-building, humanitarian aid and development as a key to our national security. On the domestic front, there are incredible monetary costs to domestic violence in the United States that can be drastically reduced with coordinated violence prevention efforts.

U. S. Department of Peace Specifics

Domestically, the U.S. Department of Peace will work to:

  • Provide much-needed assistance to efforts by city, county, and state governments in coordinating existing programs; as well as develop new programs based on best practices nationally
  • Teach violence prevention and conflict resolution to America’s school children
  • Effectively treat and dismantle gang psychology
  • Reform our criminal justice system towards a focus on restorative and healing oriented approaches rather than punitive alone
  • Reshape our prison system by addressing racial inequalities and recidivism
  • Rehabilitate the prison population
  • Foster strategies to eliminate the school-to-prison pipeline
  • Build peace-making efforts among conflicting cultures both here and abroad
  • Work with local and state governments to help change police culture and the way that police work with our communities, with the goal of fostering improved relations.
  • Work with local and state governments to lessen gun violence on a national level.
  • Examine how elements of our food supply affect our behaviors.
  • Address factors such as drug and alcohol abuse, mistreatment of the elderly, and much more.

Internationally, the U.S. Department of Peace will focus on the following areas among others:

  • Provide peace-building support to assist governments and communities in attempts to end conflicts, instead of providing military aid which often prolongs conflicts
  • Provide and help coordinate humanitarian assistance around the world to help people and governments get out of their current crises, and have a chance to build peaceful lives in the future.
  • Humanitarian assistance may include aid for things like food security, health care, education, women, children and a variety of other types of aid
  • Provide community building and rebuilding assistance to aid people and countries in creating a more sustainable, peaceful culture that will help to prevent future conflicts.
  • Support our military with complementary approaches to peacebuilding.
  • Create and administer a U.S. Peace Academy, acting as a sister organization to the U.S. Military Academy.
  • The Secretary of the Department of Peace, and the department, will advise the Secretaries of Defense and State on matters related to national security, and will coordinate peacemaking efforts across these departments.

Marianne Williamson for President
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 21, 2019
Patricia Ewing
Communications Director

Marianne Williamson: “We Need a United States Department of Peace”

Concord, N.H. - Marianne Williamson, Democratic Candidate for President, is calling for the creation of a United States Department of Peace as the first step in dismantling our systemically entrenched perpetuation of violence. From millions of chronically traumatized children to mass incarceration to family separation at the border, the current administration is choosing to pay to perpetuate acts of violence. Williamson wants to invest in our future by investing in peace. 
 
According to Williamson, there is a strong need for peace building both domestically and internationally. Williamson supports the creation of a U.S. Department of Peace to address issues of peace-building here at home – trauma-informed education, community wraparound services, restorative justice, conflict resolution, mindfulness in the schools, violence prevention programs and more programs to strengthen communities and heal individuals.
 
Peace creation is happening all over the country and the U.S. needs to invest in it by lessening the incidence of conflict. Specifically, Williamson believes in expanded economic opportunities for women, expanded educational opportunities for children, reduction of violence against women, and the amelioration of unnecessary human suffering wherever possible. 
 
“When I am President, the world will know that America’s greatest ally is humanity itself. Let us restore our position as a moral leader both here and abroad. Far more Americans love than hate, but we must display our love with a renewed commitment and serious conviction. In 2004, I co-founded The Peace Alliance to advocate for peace building and as President I would continue those efforts through the Department of Peace. I would also augment the diplomatic work of the Department of State and the Department of Defense abroad and add significant support to the U.S. Institute of Peace.”
 
Williamson added, “I will make the relationship between the State Department and the Department of Defense a robust partnership. I will build up the peacebuilding agencies within the State Department in a major way.” 
 
While the Defense Department handles military involvements, the State Department handles foreign affairs and peace creation, according to Williamson. The Defense Department currently has a military budget that is  $718B – almost larger than that of all other nations combined – while the State Department Budget, including all peace-creation agencies – is $40B. The independent US Institute of Peace has a budget of $36.8M. 
 
Williamson concluded, “In order to have peace in the world, we have to cultivate peace. Such things as peace-creation through development, diplomacy, mediation, and humanitarian assistance are as important to building peace as is being prepared for war, should war be necessary.”
 
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About Marianne
Marianne Williamson is a bestselling author, lecturer and non-profit activist. She has worked with thousands of individuals, as well as large and small groups, in transforming crisis into opportunity. For 35 years she has been helping people heal from problems that in many ways have been created by an irresponsible political establishment. She has an up close and personal understanding of the impact of bad policy on average American’s lives.
 
For three decades Marianne has been a leader in spiritual and religiously progressive circles. Her book about the intersection of spirituality and politics, Healing the Soul of America, was released in 1997 and re-released in a revised edition earlier this year. Her book A POLITICS OF LOVE: Handbook for a New American Revolution, was released in April 2019. In total, she has written 13 books, four reaching # 1 on the New York Times Best Sellers List.

Marianne has founded nonprofit organizations such as Project Angel Food, that in 1989 started delivering meals to homebound AIDS patients. The organization has now served over 11 million meals. She has also worked throughout her career on poverty, anti-hunger and racial reconciliation issues. She has advocated for reparations for slavery since the 1990’s and was the first candidate in this presidential primary season to make it a pillar of her campaign. In 2004, she co-founded The Peace Alliance and supports the creation of a US Department of Peace. In addition, she advocates a cabinet-level Department of Children and Youth to more adequately address the chronic trauma of millions of American children.

Marianne’s candidacy has received national attention as she continues to campaign in early primary states. She has appeared on MSNBC’s Weekends with Alex WittMSNBC Live with Stephanie Ruhle, CNN New Day and Fox News @ Night with Shannon Bream, among others. She was also featured in a live CNN Town Hall in early April. Recent campaign swings include Iowa, Michigan, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Carolina, and California.
 
Marianne was declared a 'major candidate' by Nate Silver's FiveThirtyEight on April 26th and on May 9th reached the 65,000 unique voter contributions threshold. She has reached the 1% polling threshold in bothCNN and Fox News polls. All are important markers to be invited to the first round of the DNC Presidential Debates in Miami on June 26-27.

Sample of recent coverage:
NPR’s 1A: Conversation with Marianne Williamson
New York Magazine: Marianne Williamson Is a Lefty With Soul
The Hill: Don't tell Marianne Williamson she can't win
MSNBC/Kasie DC: Outsider candidate Marianne Williamson makes debate stage, challenges political establishment
Fox News@Nightw/Shannon Bream: Williamson: The mean spiritedness in politics has been damaging
Sacramento Bee: 5 things to know about the newest Democrat to qualify for 2020 debate, Marianne Williamson
CNN: Town Hall with Democratic Presidential Candidate Marianne Williamson
Des Moines Register: Editorial Board meeting
MSNBC Live w/Stephanie Ruhle: Marianne Williamson: We Can Turn Love Into A Political Force
New Hampshire Public Radio: How Marianne Williamson Plans to Heal America's 'Spiritual Malfunction'
Pantsuit Politics Show: Marianne Williamson on the Opioid Crisis, Racism, and Healing America
UPI: Williamson running as political visionary
Vice: Marianne Williamson Wants to Make Democrats the Party of Faith`
WMUR New Hampshire Town Hall: “Conversations with the Candidate”

Website: www.marianne2020.com
Twitter: @marwilliamson
Campaign video: Marianne Williamson for President 2020