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SEP campaign wins support in Cincinnati, Ohio
By Jerry Isaacs
15 April 2004
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Supporters of the Socialist Equality Party gathered hundreds
of signatures in Cincinnati, Ohio, last weekend to place David
Lawrence, the partys candidate for the US House of Representatives,
on the ballot in the First Congressional District of Ohio.

David Lawrence, 37, teaches at a public high school in Dayton
and is a graduate of the University of Cincinnati. He is also
the son of Jim Lawrence, the vice-presidential running mate of
SEP presidential candidate Bill Van Auken.
On the first weekend of the campaign supporters gathered nearly
600 signatures out of the 1,695 required to gain ballot access.
Campaigners intend to gather at least 2,500 signatures in order
to sustain any challenge by the authorities. At the same time
the SEP is preparing legal action to overturn Ohios undemocratic
ballot restrictions, including the March 1 filing deadline for
independent congressional candidates.
Workers and college students responded enthusiastically to
the SEP campaign and particularly to the partys demand for
the immediate withdrawal of US troops from Iraq. At the University
of Cincinnati and in working class neighborhoods many people who
signed petitions said they had friends and relatives who were
US soldiers in Iraq and were angered by the statements by John
Kerrythe presumptive presidential nominee for the Democratsthat
he would continue the occupation if elected.
One student, who signed the petition and offered to help the
SEP candidate get on the ballot, commented on Kerrys visit
to the University of Cincinnati the week before. Kerry was
here. I was not interested in seeing him. Hes tongue-tied
about the war. It will be a big fight, but I agree that working
people need their own party.
This is a senseless war. Its for oil, a worker
said as she was signing the petition. We are going to pay
for it for the next 50 years. New York and California are broke,
people are losing jobs, and Mr. Corporate America is shifting
more jobs overseas. I go to the Internet and read lots of international
papers because the media in the US only tell you what they want
you to hear.
The First Congressional District encompasses most of Cincinnatia
city of 331,000 peopleand much of the surrounding suburbs
in Hamilton and Butler counties. Like America as a whole the metropolitan
Cincinnati area is characterized by severe social and economic
polarization.
The city is home to the some of the richest Fortune 500 companies,
such as Procter & Gamble, Krogers, Chiquita Brands International
and Federated Department Stores. According to the Center for Responsive
Politics, residents of Ohios 45243 ZIP Code, an enclave
of million dollar homes in Indian Hills and other suburbs on Cincinnatis
eastern edge, have given more money to Bush than any other area
in the state and second only, on the national level, to the 10021
ZIP Code on Manhattans upper east side.
The incumbent in the First District is five-term Congressman
Steve Chabot, a right-wing Republican who was a House Manager
during the impeachment of Bill Clinton and currently serves as
the vice chairman of the House Subcommittee on the Middle East.
Bush chose Cincinnati as the venue for his October 2002 speech,
where he outlined the lies used to launch the war against Iraq.
Cincinnati also includes a large working class population and
many layers of professionals and middle class people outraged
over the war in Iraq, the attack on democratic rights and corporate
downsizing. Cincinnati also includes some of the most impoverished
inner-city neighborhoods in America. One study said the economic
disparity between the richest 5 percent of the population in the
Cincinnati area and the poorest 5 percent is second only to the
Tampa Bay, Florida area, the worst in the country.
In April 2001 rioting erupted in several minority neighborhoods
following the police killing of Timothy Thomas, an unarmed teenager
and the fifteenth black male killed by police over a span of six
years. Officials placed the city under a state of emergency, imposed
a dawn-to-dusk curfew and dispatched hundreds of police officers
and state troopers to suppress the riot. By the time the violence
was over scores of people were hospitalized, widespread damage
had been done to storefronts and businesses and more than 800
people were jailed for rioting, looting and curfew violations.
Despite promises from corporate executives and city officials
that the chronic problems of police brutality and poverty would
be addressed, matters have only gotten worse over the last three
years. Since March 2001 Ohio has lost 223,700 jobs, some 4 percent
of the total jobs in the state. The police killing of 41-year-old
Nathaniel Jones last Decembera beating by six cops captured
on a police videotapeunderscores the fact that police brutality
continues unabated.
Throughout the day of campaigning David Lawrence explained
that the SEP was fighting to mobilize the working class against
the two big business parties and their policies of war and attacks
on democratic rights and living standards.
One young electrician who signed the petition said, Inequality
and poverty caused the riots in 2001. Nothing has changed since
then. You see the way blacks are treated by police with the case
of Nathaniel Jones. The same police chief is in there who keeps
saying the cops are good.
Bush is spending $86 billion for Iraq when schools are
falling apart and people are scraping by on $6 an hour. Its
time for working peopleblack and whiteto fight for
our own interests.
Click
here to volunteer to join the campaign
See Also:
The Cincinnati riots
and the class divide in America
[24 May 2001]
Volunteers needed for petition drive
SEP launches campaign to put Van Auken and Lawrence on the
ballot in the US
[8 April 2004]
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