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California recall election
John Christopher Burton, socialist gubernatorial candidate,
discusses California crisis
By Andrea Cappannari
2 September 2003
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In the opening phase of his campaign for governor in the California
recall election, John Christopher Burton, the socialist candidate
supported by the Socialist Equality Party (SEP), was able to discuss
his policies in a series of interviews to be aired on cable television
stations throughout the state over the next several weeks.
Burton was invited by several cable TV outlets to discuss his
campaign following brief appearances on the ABC and FOX network
news affiliates broadcasting in the Los Angeles area. These appearances
reflect growing interest among California voters in the socialist
alternative to the Democrats and Republicans represented by Burtons
candidacy.
Burton and the SEP are calling for a no vote on
the recall of Gray Davis, the Democratic governor who was reelected
last November. As explained in the election statement issued by
the SEP on August 30 (See: Vote
no on the California recall. Vote John Christopher
Burton for governor, for a socialist solution to the crisis),
the recall drive is the latest effort by the Republican Party,
acting in behalf of corporate interests, to subvert democratic
processes. At the same time, Burton and the SEP are giving no
political support to Davis, Lt. Governor Bustamante or any other
representatives of the Democratic Party.
On August 22, Jim Goyjer of Snaptours Productions, a non-profit
company dedicated to securing television airtime for other non-profit
organizations, interviewed Burton. In the 12-minute session, which
can be accessed on-line at http://www.snaptours.com/candidatesforgovernor.htm,
Burton spoke of the political character of the recall and outlined
the socialist program that he is advancing to resolve Californias
economic crisis.
Burton began his remarks by stating his opposition to the recall
and discussing its political origins.
The motive behind the recall is not a challenge to Davis
mismanagement of the state, he said. Rather, [it is]
an attempt by right-wing Republicans, [who] financed the signature
gathering, to undo the results of the last election and to put
in an administration that will remove even more quickly all fetters
to the private accumulation of wealth.
The political events unfolding in California, Burton said,
were symptomatic of wider phenomena. This is an international
situation and a national crisis that is really caused by the breakdown
of market economics. I think the period we are in now is very
similar to the period that the country and the world found itself
in [during] the 1930s, [when] the major organs of capitalism could
no longer meet human needs.
What is needed, Burton maintained, is a radical reorganization
of society. If he were governor, he said, he would completely
revamp the tax structure of the state of California. He
continued: I would drastically increase taxes on large businesses
and the wealthy and I would lower taxes for the masses of working
people.
Expanding on his socialist program, Burton told Goyjer: My
platform calls for transforming the major corporations and banks
into public utilities, to obtain the resources necessary, not
only for education and health, [but also for] real programs for
the growing number of unemployed, to eradicate poverty and homelessness,
to expand recreational opportunities for youth and for families
and to develop culture and the artsall of which are necessary
to live a full and satisfying life.
In discussing the social decline that has plagued California
for several decades, Burton, a civil rights lawyer in the Los
Angeles area, drew a comparison between the state of the education
system today and that of the 1970s. When I went to law school
25 years ago at Hastings College of the Law, he said, virtually
my entire tuition was paid by the state. Now, students are having
to pay upwards of $14,000 to $15,000 a year, which excludes a
large percentage of people from becoming lawyers.
The entire educational system needs to be revamped, from
kindergarten up, with massive infusions of money, so that peopleno
matter where they grow up, where they are born, whether they are
immigrants or the children of...single mothers or [immigrant]
parents, or have grown up in povertyhave excellent educational
opportunities right through professional school.
Burton spoke about the political processes unleashed by the
recall election, saying, Even though I am opposed to the
recall, I think it has, probably to the chagrin of the people
who originally supported it, opened up the field so that people
like myself and the 134 other candidates can obtain ballot status
and thereby present the voters with options that theyve
never seen before.
[The media] present to the public a very narrow debate,
where progressive ideas, much less socialist ideas like my own,
are censored. This race has given an opportunity for these views
to get out.
The Snaptours interview with Burton will air as part of a 30-minute
program featuring lesser-known candidates in the recall election.
Los Angeles-area viewers can watch the segment on Time Warner
Communications Channel 34 at 10:30 a.m. every Saturday from August
30 to September 20. Additionally, the interview will air on Adelphia
Channel 25 in the LA area at 10:30 a.m. every Saturday, beginning
on September 13 and ending on October 4.
The California Channel, a statewide cable TV network that broadcasts
interviews and unedited footage of political events, conducted
a 30-minute interview with Burton on August 25. Burtons
conversation with John Hancock, president of the channel, will
air during the week of September 22. The exact date and time have
not been set.
To find out which station carries The California Channel in
your local area, check the listings at http://www.calchannel.com/carriage.htm.
In addition, the interview will be available for viewing as of
September 22 on the California Secretary of States web site
at http://www.ss.ca.gov/.
A 60-second radio statement by Burton will be aired throughout
California on 36 Infinity Broadcasting stations and is available
on the WSWS. In his remarks, Burton responds to the question,
As governor, what would you do to improve the state of California?
Full coverage of Burtons campaign and details of upcoming
events can be accessed on-line at his web page: http://www.socialequality.com/.
See Also:
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
[30 August 2003]
Republicans and Democrats unveil
right-wing economic programs in California recall
[27 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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