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California recall results
Socialist Equality candidate John Burton wins 5,915 votes
By Andrea Peters
10 October 2003
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Socialist Equality Party candidate John Christopher Burton
received 5,915 votes in the California recall election held Tuesday,
October 7, according to the Secretary of States office.
Burton ranked 13th out of a field of 135 candidates.
Turnout for the election was estimated to be in the range of
60 percent of registered voters, an increase over last years
gubernatorial race, which set a record low of a 51 percent participation
rate. However, voter turnout was still well short of the 70 percent
typically seen in presidential races in California.
The SEP candidate campaigned on the basis of a principled opposition
to the recall itself, while rejecting any political support for
the Democratic Party. The campaign made opposition to the war
in Iraq and the reactionary policies of the Bush administration
central issues, while elaborating a genuine socialist program.
On this basis, the SEP was able to gain the support of a small
but significant layer of the population seeking an alternative
to the two parties of big business.
Setting aside those so-called minor candidates
who largely garnered votes on the basis of their celebrity statusformer
childhood TV star Gary Coleman, adult film actress Mary Cook and
pornography magazine publisher Larry FlyntJohn Christopher
Burton was among the top three non-major contenders
in the race.
In addition to these figures and the five so-called major
candidates in the race, those ahead of Burton included two leading
personalities from the Republican political establishmentPeter
Ueberroth and Bill Simonwho had dropped out of the race
but could not remove their names from the ballot, a well-known
lawyer who campaigned for the legalization of marijuana, and another
lesser-known figure, whose last name is quite similar to that
of Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Support for Burton came from throughout the state, with the
SEP candidate receiving votes in 55 out of Californias 58
counties. The largest concentrations of votes came from the metropolitan
areas in the North and South of the state.
Los Angeles County, where Burton is a well-known civil rights
attorney specializing in police brutality cases, accounted for
37 percent of his vote total. The Socialist Equality Party campaigned
heavily at universities, high schools as well as in working, middle-class
and immigrant neighborhoods in the area.
Burton made six radio, five television and four campus appearances
in this region, while members and supporters of the Socialist
Equality Party distributed approximately 14,000 election brochures
at public locations throughout the metropolitan area. Burton came
in 11th in the polls in Los Angeles County, with 2,193 votes.
In the surrounding countiesRiverside, Orange, San Bernardino
and San DiegoBurton garnered 244, 178, 190 and 389 votes
respectively. Three of the schools where Burton was invited to
speakChapman University, Claremont McKenna College, and
Irvine Valley Collegeare located in these areas.
The counties of the San Francisco Bay Area and Sacramento collectively
yielded another 1,333 votes for Burton. Approximately 4,000 election
brochures were distributed in these regions, where Burton and
representatives from the Socialist Equality Party spoke with students
and residents of the area at local colleges, high schools and
universities. Significantly, Burton received 493 votesand
finished 10th among all candidatesin Santa Clara County,
the heart of Silicon Valley.
Burton received four times as many votes as Peace and Freedom
Party (PFP) candidate C.T. Weber and nine times as many as Socialist
Workers Party (SWP) candidate Joel Britton. Weber and Britton
garnered 1,440 and 653 votes respectively.
These results point to the political collapse of these organizations.
Britton and the SWP supported the recall and aligned themselves
with the far-right forces attempting to overturn the recent gubernatorial
election. The SWP put forward no coherent program and made no
attempt to explain the pressing political and economic questions
facing Californians.
Webers low vote total likewise underscores the failed
policy and perspective of the PFP. The PFP is a amalgamation of
different middle class left groups, which formed a political bloc
without any agreement on political principles.
Over the course of the past several years, the PFP has dedicated
all its efforts towards regaining ballot status in California.
The Peace and Freedom campaign for formal recognition as a political
party in the state, which it did eventually achieve, served as
a substitute for elaborating a political program. The PFP told
the public that a socialist opposition would exist when this mix
of petty-bourgeois organizations was officially on the ballot.
The support for the SEP came in the face of a total blackout
by the major media in California. Those who learned about Burtons
candidacy and went to the polls to vote for him did so on the
basis of the partys independent fight to make its program
known to Californians.
In addition to the 61-point election statement published by
the SEP analyzing the significance and nature of the California
recall election and elaborating a socialist alternative, over
the course of the eight-week campaign the SEP and Burton issued
eight statements on ongoing political developments and the pressing
questions facing California voters.
These included: a call for a full investigation into the East
Coast electricity blackout, a statement denouncing Jay Lenos
attempt to portray the political crisis in California as a circus,
a statement opposing the war and the reactionary policies of the
Bush administration, an exposé of the bipartisan attack
on workers rights contained in recently signed workers
compensation legislation, an analysis of the implications of the
court decisions on a proposed delay in the California recall election,
a statement exposing the travesty of the debates organized between
the five major candidates, and a call for a no
vote on Proposition 54 as an attack on the social gains of the
working class.
On the basis of the election statement, the principles and
perspective advanced in these statements, and the public campaign
the SEP demarcated itself from all other major and minor candidates
in the race, including those who identified themselves as socialists
or lefts. The results of John Christopher Burtons campaign
point to a palpable shift among the most politically conscious
layers in California, who are revolted by the backwardness and
political reaction that dominated the recall election and are
searching for a genuine alternative.
See Also:
Lessons of the Democratic debacle in
California
[9 October 2003]
Socialist Equality candidates statement
on recall of California governor: Democratic debacle vindicates
fight to build SEP as the socialist alternative
[8 October 2003]
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]
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