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California campaign: socialist candidate John Christopher
Burton hits Iraq war in television, radio interviews
By Shannon Jones
8 September 2003
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The gubenatorial campaign of socialist candidate John Christopher
Burton is attracting mounting interest among workers, young people
and professionals in California. Over the past several days Burton
has participated in a live radio interview on KPCC, a National
Public Radio affiliate in Pasadena, and taped a radio interview
for Pacifica station KPFK in Los Angeles. He has also prepared
a video to appear on public television station KCET.
Burton has made opposition to the US invasion and occupation
of Iraq a focus of his campaign statements and appearances. He
is calling for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of all
US forces from Iraq and Afghanistan.
Burtons campaign has evoked considerable interest. His
office has received numerous emails from people wanting more information
or volunteering to support the campaign and make financial donations.
I would like to thank all those who have expressed support
for my campaign, Burton told the World Socialist Web
Site. Since I announced my intention to run for governor
of California in the special recall election, I have been struck
by the broad interest in socialist ideas my candidacy has evoked
among a wide range of people. My campaign, endorsed by the Socialist
Equality Party, is alone in advancing a comprehensive analysis
of the roots of the California budget crisis and outlining a program
to resolve this crisis in the interests of working people.
(See: Vote no
on the California recall. Vote John Christopher Burton for governor,
for a socialist solution to the crisis.)
Burton is calling for a no vote on the recall of
California Governor Gray Davis. The October 7 recall election
is the product of a drive led by right-wing elements and largely
funded by multi-millionaire Republican Congressman Darrell Issa.
These forces have sought to exploit public anger over rising unemployment
and cuts in social services to overturn the results of last Novembers
gubernatorial election and impose an agenda even more reactionary
than that of Davis and the Democrats. While opposing this anti-democratic
maneuver, Burton is giving no political support to Davis, Lt.
Governor Cruz Bustamante, who is running in the replacement election,
or any other candidates associated with the Democratic Party.
He is calling for a vote for his own candidacy as the socialist
alternative to the politicians of both big business parties, should
the recall election succeed in ousting Davis.
Speaking of the televised gubernatorial debate held September
3, from which he and all but six of the other candidates on the
October 7 ballot were excluded, Burton told the WSWS: None
of the so-called major replacement candidates in the
recall election could address in a serious way the economic and
social crisis facing working people in California. Governor Davis
and those who hope to replace him could only speak in sound bites.
None of them were able to make a serious analysis of the California
budget crisis or connect what is happening in California to the
broader issues of American society, the Bush administration or
the war in Iraq, which is consuming billions of dollars each month.
On September 4, Burton gave a live interview on KPCC at Pasadena
City College for the Talk of the City radio program. (Click
http://www.scpr.org/features/2003/09/recall/
for an audio file of the interview.)
Asked how he planned to implement his proposal to transform
the banks and corporations into public utilities under the democratic
control of the working class, Burton replied, The incredible
wealth and productivity in California must be used to meet human
needs. Until people realize that market economics and the capitalist
system are not meeting human needs and start to consider how society
can be reorganized, their lives will continue to stagnate and
social programs, such as education at this community college,
will become more and more inaccessible. My proposal to take the
major corporation and banks and convert them into public utilities
is a way to concretize how this could be done. I would protect
the rights of the small shareholders, the workers, and those with
401 k plans, but I would try to recover the hundreds of millions
of dollars that have been looted out of these corporations by
CEOs and other corporate criminals in America. I think the big
myth in this recall election is that there is no money to meet
human needs. There is plenty of money. The resources have to be
reallocated.
Not just a California problem
Burton was then asked what would he would do if corporations
attempted to flee California after he was elected. Burton replied,
I think there are two answers to that. First, the workers
of California, mobilized behind this program, wouldnt let
them leave, and the assets would remain, whether the CEOs left
or not. Second, this is not just a California problem. It is a
national and international problem. Part of my campaign is to
reach out to the people in the 37 other states that are facing
deficits, people throughout the United States who are facing record
deficits created by the irresponsibility of the Bush administration,
and, indeed, to people throughout the world.
What we have now are corporations that are transnational
in their structure, using their ability to shift production throughout
the world to pit one set of workers against the other. First,
it was manufacturing jobs that moved to South Asia. Now, technical
jobs are moving to places like India. The solution is not to lower
the standard of living in California to the level of those countries,
but to raise the standard of living in those countries to what
we should have here in California.
In closing, the interviewer expressed appreciation for Burtons
remarks, exclaiming, Well, its certainly conversation
we didnt hear last night at the debate.
The next day, September 5, Burton went to KPFK in Los Angeles,
operated by Pacifica Radio Foundation, to do a taping for the
Uprising program moderated by Sonali Kolhatkar. The program
airs weekdays between 8 and 9 a.m. Burtons interview is
scheduled to be broadcast September 9 or September 10. (The station
can be accessed at 90.7 FM Los Angeles and 98.7 FM Santa Barbara,
or online at http://www.kpfk.org)
Kolhatkar asked detailed questions about Burtons views
and those of the Socialist Equality Party. The socialist candidate
began by explaining that he was running to present a socialist
alternative and open a debate over the crisis in California and
how it could be resolved in the interests of the working class.
He continued, I am not opposed in general to recall elections.
In the past, recalls have been seen as an important tool of democracy.
I am against this recall because it is part of a right-wing Republican
attempt, like the Clinton impeachment and the halting of the 2000
Florida recount, to overturn the results of an election.
The program host then asked Burton how his platform differed
from that of other progressive candidates, such as
independent Arriana Huffington and Peter Camejo of the Green Party.
Burton replied, Unlike all the other candidates, I do not
accept the inviolability of the present social order. He
explained that there were more than enough resources to satisfy
all basic human needs. He then outlined his Bill of Social
Rights for the working class, including guaranteed employment,
a $15-an-hour minimum wage, high quality education for all, and
universal health care.
Also on September 5, Burton made a three-minute videotaped
statement that will be aired later this month on public television
stations in California. In it, Burton outlined the basic planks
of his program.
On the Iraq war, he said, No one can solve Californias
crisis while the federal government spends $500 billion a year
on the military budget, plus $75 billion more on the occupation
of Iraq. Our young people should not be sent to Iraq and Afghanistan
to defend the interests of Big Oil. I call for the immediate withdrawal
of US troops from Afghanistan and Iraq.
Wars overseas lead to repression at home. I have spent
the last 25 years fighting to defend and expand democratic rights.
I oppose the death penalty and the three-strikes law. I advocate
the repeal of the Patriot Act and the dismantling of the Homeland
Security Department. I demand that the Bush Administration cease
its abhorrent practice of incarcerating citizens and non-citizens
alike without charges, lawyers, or access to courts.
Burton continued: California is a concentrated expression
of the failure of the capitalist profit system, which subordinates
all social questions to the accumulation of personal wealth. This
is the root problemnot a lack of wealth. As a socialist,
I would resolve Californias crisis in the interest of working
families, small business owners, students and professionals. The
satisfaction of human needs, not amassing corporate profit, would
be the basis of Californias economy.
Growing interest in campaign
People from across California and the United States have contacted
Burtons campaign to express support or to ask for more information.
Among those emailing the Burton campaign (johncburton@socialequality.com)
was a professor who wrote, I appreciated your reply to Jay
Leno and your demand for an investigation into the blackout. Good
luck in the election. I wish we had more candidates who were not
hell bent on gutting social services.
Another email read, After reading your candidates
statement for the California Recall Election of 2003, I found
we have similar political interests. I want to take this moment
to wish you well and best of luck with your campaign. Finally,
I wanted to let you know that you can count on my vote.
The campaign has also evoked interest from an international
audience. A man from Kiel, Germany extended best wishes to Burton
and raised concern over the illegal election of George
Bush and offenses against civil rights and illegal
acts against foreign guests.
A Sri Lankan said, Wish you every success at your humane
endeavor to humanize US society, upon which the destiny of humans
on our planet rests.
Full coverage of Burtons campaign and details of upcoming
events can be accessed on his web page: http://www.socialequality.com/.
See Also:
California recall election John Christopher
Burton, socialist gubernatorial candidate, discusses California
crisis
[2 September 2003]
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]
A letter from John Christopher
Burton, socialist candidate in California, to Tonight Show
host Jay Leno
[23 August 2003]
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