Euro Elections 2009

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The Free Software Pact Initiative: This Action Started Friday May 22, 2009 by Manchester Free Software

Take Action in the UK and across Europe

  • The election in the UK occurs on Thursday June 4, 2009. We want to have every candidate contacted by email, phone or fax before May 31, 2009. Take these steps:
  • Get yourself a copy of the Free Software Pact
  • Prepare some email text to accompany the Free Software Pact PDF. Below are some suggestions you can try or create your own. Please feel free to add your texts for others to use.
  • Use this list of candidates to find contact info for UK candidates.
  • Remember to inform the candidates that they should sign the pact and email a copy to <contact@freesoftwarepact.eu>, or fax it to +33 1 45 65 32 90.
  • If there is no contact info listed for a particular candidate, please help track that information down and add it to this page of candidates contacted Candidate_Info
  • When you have contacted an MEP candidate also list their name here Candidate_Info
  • It is fine to have candidates contacted by multiple free software supporters, but lets make sure every candidate gets contacted at least once.
  • Raise awareness by Digging this story: Free Software Pact Announcement.
  • Contact other free software users and ask them to help out. Post this notice to free software forums and sites you visit.
  • Then contact another candidate :)

Resources

Press and Blog Coverage for this Action

Letter

Dear <candidate name>,

I am writing to you on behalf of free software users in the <region> Euro region. Free software is a growing movement with over twenty years of history, and refers not to price, but to freedom - it is software which allows its users to see how it works, make changes and share those changes with others. Examples of popular free software include the Firefox web browser, the OpenOffice suite, and the GNU/Linux operating system.

Free software has clear social benefits - it is developed by communities of businesses and individuals choosing to share their talents in ways that enable communities to enhance software which would be unprofitable for software developed in a proprietary fashion. For example, blind users might adapt free software to work better with screen readers, or speakers of less common languages like Welsh might translate software into their native tongue.

Free software also has economic benefits. Because users can examine and modify it, it becomes impossible for a single vendor to control the market. This encourages co-operation and a truly free market between businesses. As a result, free software has lower costs associated with it - both up front and in maintenance. Government, educational and business organisations are increasingly turning to free software for its economic as well as social benefits.

However, free software is always under threat from new legislation in the European parliament. I therefore ask you as a candidate in these elections to please read the Free Software Pact and help protect the future of free software in Europe by signing and sending a copy by email to <contact@freesoftwarepact.eu>, or by faxing it to +33 1 45 65 32 90.

Thank you for supporting the public good that is free software!

Yours,

NAME