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Socialist Equality candidates statement on recall of
California governor: Democratic debacle vindicates fight
to build SEP as the socialist alternative
By John Christopher Burton
8 October 2003
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The following statement was issued Tuesday evening, October
7, by John Christopher Burton, the Socialist Equality Party candidate
for governor in Californias special recall election. Burton,
a civil rights lawyer in Los Angeles, ran as a replacement candidate
in Tuesdays election. While calling for a no
vote on the recall of Governor Gray Davis, Burton gave no political
support to Davis or any of the candidates associated with the
Democratic and Republican parties who ran in the replacement contest.
He advanced a socialist program in opposition to the policies
of both parties of the American corporate establishment.
The substantial majority vote to recall Democratic Governor
Gray Davis is more than anything else a vote of no confidence
in the Democratic Party. Arnold Schwarzenegger and his right-wing
Republican and corporate backers triumphed not because the people
of California support their reactionary social agendawhich
was kept hidden from the electorate throughout the campaignbut
because the broad mass of working people has become thoroughly
alienated from the Democrats.
And rightly so! The Davis administration was entirely a creature
of big business. During the boom years of the dot.com stock market
bubble it presided over an orgy of self-enrichment on the part
of the CEOs and big investors, while the conditions of workers
stagnated and next to nothing was done to address chronic problems
of poverty, decaying schools, homelessness, and lack of health
care. The concentration of wealth in the hands of a financial
oligarchy became more pronounced, and the chasm between the rich
and the vast majority of people widened.
More and more resources were channeled into prisons and the
police, as Davis continued the policy of his Republican predecessors
of building up the repressive apparatus of the state.
When the dot.com bubble collapsed and the state budget fell
into a deficit, Davis and the Democrats launched a series of massive
cuts in education and health care, combined with sharp increases
in user fees, such as for auto registration, which fall most heavily
on working people. Similarly, when energy giants like Enron manipulated
the electricity market to create shortages and jack up prices,
the Davis administration placed the burden for their crimes on
the general population, raising rates and spending billions to
purchase power at exorbitant prices.
The resulting popular anger and discontent were seized on by
right-wing Republicans, backed by the corporate elite, who financed
the recall as a means of circumventing normal democratic procedures
and installing an even more reactionary administration. They ultimately
chose the multi-millionaire action film star and real estate speculator
Arnold Schwarzenegger as their front man.
As todays election results demonstrated, the Democrats
were unable to offer any serious alternative to the working people
of California. The campaigns of both Davis and the main Democratic
replacement candidate, Lieutenant Governor Cruz Bustamante, were
as hollow as they were cynical. No less beholden to big business
than Schwarzenegger and the Republicans, they could propose nothing
to deal with an acute and deepening social crisiswith over
six million Californians lacking health insurance, housing costs
soaring beyond the means of millions of working class families,
and decent-paying jobs disappearing every day.
Nor would they expose the deeply reactionary and anti-democratic
conspiracy underlying the recall drive, no more than the Democrats
seriously opposed the impeachment coup against Clinton and the
theft of the 2000 presidential election.
Throughout the recall campaign, the Democrats maintained a
cowardly silence on the right-wing cabal under George W. Bush
and refused to link the fight against the recall to the fight
against the administration in Washington. Above all, they said
nothing about the catastrophic imperialist war in Iraq, which
is daily costing the lives of American troops and Iraqi civilians
and wasting tens of billions of dollars every montha financial
drain that will mean further attacks on medical care, pensions
and jobs and a further decline in the basic infrastructure of
the country.
Instead, as a pathetic diversion from these critical issues,
the Democrats tried to capitalize in the final days of the campaign
on the exposure of Schwarzeneggers sexual predations. In
the end, they only succeeded in highlighting their own political
bankruptcy.
Initial exit polls and voting data indicate the depth of alienation
from the Democratic Party. While voter turnout overall was higher
than in the 2002 gubernatorial electionalthough far short
of the record rates that had been predictedit was less intense
in working class areas that traditionally vote Democratic than
in Republican precincts. And despite the campaign by the trade
union bureaucracy for Davis and the Democrats, involving an expenditure
of some $5 million, about half of union members voted in favor
of the recall and some 40 percent of voters in union households
voted for Schwarzenegger to replace the sitting governor.
The Democrats fared no less disastrously among Hispanic voters,
with half supporting Davis ouster.
This latest debacle for the Democratic Partyfollowing
its collapse in the 2002 congressional election, when it lost
control of the US Senate and failed to gain seats in the House
of Representativesmust serve as the impetus for workers
and young people in California and across the country to recognize
the futility of looking toward this political instrument of the
ruling elite as a means of defending their social interests and
democratic rights.
As I have sought to explain throughout my campaign, the Democratic
Party is a party of the ruling elite in America. Whatever its
differences with the Republicans, in the end it defends the same
oligarchy, which is why it votes for imperialist war abroad and
austerity and political repression at home.
The Democratic debacle in California vindicates the call of
my campaign and the Socialist Equality Party for a break with
the two parties of American capitalism and the building of the
SEP as a mass socialist party of the working class. This is the
road forward for the struggles that will erupt in the coming weeks
and months, as millions of workers learn through bitter experience
that the attacks on jobs and living standards will only intensify
under Schwarzenegger.
I call on all working people to study the election statement
issued by the SEP and make the decision to join and build this
party.
See Also:
SEP meeting addresses political issues
facing workers in California recall election
[7 October 2003]
Speech to SEP meeting in Los Angeles
"The answer to the crisis is a socialist political movement
to fight for power"
[7 October 2003]
California recall election: SEP candidate
John Christopher Burton calls for "no" vote on Proposition
54
[4 October 2003]
Socialist Equality Party
statement on the California recall election
Vote no on the California recall. Vote John Christopher
Burton for governor, for a socialist solution to the crisis
Jobs for the unemployed! Billions for education, health care
and housing! US troops out of Iraq!
[30 August 2003]
For more information on the John Christopher Burton campaign
visit www.socialequality.com
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