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California recall: socialist candidate campaigns on college
campuses
By our reporting team
1 October 2003
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John Christopher Burton, the Socialist Equality Party candidate
for governor in the California recall election, addressed students
at several community college campuses during the past week as
part of a continuing campaign by the candidate and his supporters
in both Northern and Southern California.
On September 23, Burton spoke to two well-attended history
classes at Irvine Valley College in an Orange County suburb of
Los Angeles. The socialist candidate introduced himself and spoke
briefly to each class, followed by extensive discussion and questions
lasting until the end of the hour-long classes.
Burton explained that he was a civil rights attorney specializing
in cases seeking redress for incidents of police brutality. He
had joined the socialist movement 20 years ago in order to fight
against the system which was fundamentally responsible for the
examples of injustice with which he dealt on a daily basis.
The candidate stressed his opposition to the recall as a reactionary
attempt to overturn the results of an election held less than
a year ago. This anti-democratic initiative has been organized
with the support of big business to implement a right-wing social
agenda even more onerous than that of Democratic governor Gray
Davis, an agenda for which there is little popular support.
At the same time, Burton explained that he was giving no support
to Davis or any other section of the Democratic Party, which was
complicit in the attacks on jobs and living standards, and which
was incapable of seriously opposing the Republican right. Davis
should be removed, but how? asked Burton. By far right-wing
Republican millionaires who paid to get signatures and are seeking
even deeper attacks on the working class, or by a popular, politically
educated movement of working people?
He explained that he was running to provide a socialist alternative
in the event the recall was successful, and to take forward the
fight for the political independence of the working class. I
and the Socialist Equality Party are stressing that the crisis
in California is not simply a local question, but rather an expression
of a national and international crisis. The root issue is,
he continued, the failure of the capitalist system, which
subordinates all human needs to the accumulation of personal wealth
and corporate profit.
Burton explained that he was placing opposition to the war
against Iraq at the center of his campaign. He pointed to the
cost of the war not only in the lives of American soldiers and
the many thousands of Iraqi victims, but also in terms of its
impact on federal, state and local spending for basic needs like
education and health care. I am calling for the immediate
and unconditional withdrawal of US troops from Afghanistan, Iraq,
and the entire Middle East, he told the students.
Briefly outlining his program, he called for a $15 an hour
minimum wage, a 30-hour workweek at 40 hours pay, free tuition
for higher education and free quality medical care for all.
Following the presentations, there were numerous questions
and comments from students. One student suggested that the more
than one million signatures on the recall petitions indicated
the popular nature of the recall campaign. Burton explained the
role of paid petition gatherers in exploiting the justified anger
of voters over the crisis and the Democratic governors record
in order to pave the way for even more reactionary attacks.
A student who came originally from the Czech Republic claimed
that the experience in that country had shown that socialism did
not work. Burton explained that the Stalinist regimes that previously
existed in Eastern Europe and the former USSR did not represent
the working class, but rather the rule of privileged bureaucracies
that had smeared the cause of genuine socialism.
After the classes, a number of students came up to the candidate
to express their interest and agreement with his analysis, and
to ask for further information on the SEPs public meeting
scheduled for Sunday, October 5.
Later that week, on September 26, Burton returned to Santa
Monica College, where he had spoken previously. This time he addressed
a political science class, and his remarks were followed by a
spirited exchange with students on the issues of socialism, taxation,
the influence of giant corporations and the nature of democracy.
In Northern California, Burton spoke at a candidates
forum in Oakland sponsored by the Peace and Freedom Party. Present
at the forum, in addition to Burton were C.T. Weber, the Peace
and Freedom gubernatorial candidate, and a representative of Green
Party candidate Peter Camejo. Later in the week, a representative
of Burtons campaign spoke at a candidates debate at
Saratoga High School outside of San Jose.
On September 29, Burton spoke to a class of political science
students at Claremont McKenna College in a Los Angeles suburb.
A lively question and answer session followed the candidates
opening remarks.
The next day, the candidate spoke at a candidates forum
sponsored by the California Humanist Society at California State
University at Los Angeles. At the same time, representatives of
the campaign held an hour-long discussion with advanced civics
students at Morningside High School in nearby Inglewood.
See Also:
John Christopher Burton
Transform the recall into a referendum on Bushs policies
of war and social reaction
[20 September 2003]
Socialist candidate John Christopher
Burton replies to Bush speech on Iraq:
Stop the slaughter in Iraq and the looting of America! US
troops out now!
[10 September 2003]
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