|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
SEP files petitions for presidential ballot status in Ohio
By a WSWS reporting team
19 August 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
On August 17, the Socialist Equality Party filed petitions
bearing more than 7,900 signatures with the Ohio secretary of
states office to place its candidates Bill Van Auken for
president and Jim Lawrence for vice president on the statewide
ballot. The total is far above the minimum requirement of 5,000
signatures.
Ohio is the fourth state where the SEP has filed to place its
presidential ticket on the ballot. Van Auken and Lawrence are
already certified in New Jersey and Colorado. The SEP filed in
Iowa last week, and petitioning is still under way in Washington
state and Minnesota.
The Ohio petition drive succeeded in the face of a determined
campaign by the Democratic Party to vilify left-wing opponents
of its nominee John Kerry as allies of President George Bush.
However, in neighborhoods hard-pressed by layoffs and jobs cuts,
the SEP received a strong response to its call for the construction
of an independent political party of the working class. The SEP
found that the Democrats arguments have made little headway,
except among a layer of more affluent liberals.

Over the previous two weeks, petition circulators campaigning
in Cleveland, Warren, Columbus, Toledo, Dayton and Cincinnati
collected more than 5,000 signatures. Workers in these cities
have suffered from drastic losses in manufacturing jobs over the
last five years. According to a report published by the nonprofit
research institute Policy Matters Ohio, total nonagricultural
employment declined by 244,000 jobs between November 1999 and
November 2003. Ohio, with 3 percent of the US population, accounted
for 20 percent of the total US job decline during the Bush administration.
Working people and young people responded enthusiastically
to the SEP candidates call for the immediate withdrawal
of US troops from Iraq and the conversion of war production to
provide civilian employment and meet social needs.
In Cleveland, the SEP collected more than 500 signatures in
a single day. Cleveland has one of the highest unemployment rates
in the state of Ohio, 12.7 percent according to recent figures,
well above the national average of 5.6 percent. The city lost
43,700 manufacturing jobs between November 1999 and November 2003.
Workers voiced skepticism about both the Democrats and Republicans.
Some expressed palpable relief that someone was openly calling
for an end to the war in Iraq. As one worker told an SEP supporter,
It seems like their main reason for the war in Iraq was
to destroy the country so that American companies could build
it up again and make money.
Dayton is the hometown of SEP vice-presidential candidate Jim
Lawrence, who is well known among working people as a principled
fighter. During the course of the campaign, SEP petitioners collected
more than 1,000 signatures in Dayton, which has lost more manufacturing
jobs over the past four years than any other city in the state
except Cleveland.
One worker told petitioners, I raised my kids and they
left home; now Im 44 and I cant find any work to support
myself. They took my health care away, so now Im afraid
to go to the doctor or the hospital because they may not treat
me. Why should I vote for Kerry if hes not even promising
to provide everyone with at least that?
Toledo, a former center of auto and glass manufacturing, has
been devastated by plant closures. A large portion of the population
is now employed in low-wage service jobs, paying few if any benefits.
SEP supporters collected hundreds of signatures at a food market
in a working class neighborhood of the city where the manager
had given them permission to set up a table. He told the petitioners,
This country is becoming more and more divided, and I can
see it from the people who shop at the store. Working families
are being squeezed and forced to cut back. I do not think your
candidate will win the election, but you have every right to place
his name on the ballot, and there need to be more choices than
just the Democrats and Republicans.
A Libby Glass worker said, I feel somewhat fortunate
because I am still employed and my pay and pension plan is fairly
decent, but how long is that going to last? During the past number
of years I have seen workers lose everything. Now you have the
announcements by companies like United Airlines that they will
not pay into the pension fund. I fear that by the time I retire,
Social Security benefits will not exist. Kerry is not speaking
for the little guys in this election, and I do not feel things
will improve if he wins.
Many signed without hesitation. Typical was a young mother
who said, I hate Bush but I dont like Kerry. I work
at a BP gas station and I can barely make it, I have eight kids.
In Cincinnati, SEP supporters campaigned at the historic Findlay
Market, a popular outdoor market, where they met workers and middle
class people from the Cincinnati region. Several shoppers were
incensed about the growth of low-wage jobs, with almost all signers
agreeing that the real issue in the election was the war in Iraq.
After signing the petition to place the SEP on the ballot,
one woman said she did not believe the latest terror alert announced
by the Bush administration. In my opinion they are all terrorists!
she exclaimed.
A number of people, primarily middle class, refused to sign
on the grounds that the election was too important,
arguing that a socialist on the ballot might draw votes away from
Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry. A few became quite
agitated.
By contrast, the sentiment among workers, and especially the
more oppressed sections of the working class, was that the election
offered little alternative. As one woman related, We know
both of them are no goodI dont like Kerry, but I hate
Bush. I feel something needs to be done about better jobs, health
care and the schools.
One ominous indication of the impact of the governments
recent terror alert was the refusal of several people to sign
the petition citing fears that their signature would be reviewed
by the Department of Homeland Security.
In Warren, a former center of the steel and auto industry,
workers decried the drastic decline in the living standards. One
man whose father and grandfather were steelworkers remarked, It
is hard to believe how much things have changed. There is a guy
who grew up here I know who is coming back after 16 years. I told
him to be prepared not to recognize a lot of things.
There used to be good jobs here, but now almost everything
is near-minimum-wage retail clerking. I have had to go to Columbus
to find work. What kind of a place is it where the former Republic
and LTV steel companies are threatening the pension of my 90-year-old
steelworker grandfather?
A Lordstown autoworker commented that while there were still
3,800 to 3,900 working at the assembly plant, the van plant had
been shut down a few years ago, and thousands of jobs and tax
revenue were lost. I went to a city council meeting recently,
he said. One of the big problems in the town are rodents
living in abandoned houses. People lose their job or just cant
pay the mortgage, and they end up having to pack up and leave
their houses.
See Also:
SEP challenges Ohio petition deadline
in US District Court
[7 August 2004]
Press statement of Ohio SEP
candidate David Lawrence
[16 June 2004]
SEP congressional candidate
launches lawsuit against early filing date in Ohio
[16 June 2004]
Party to challenge early
filing deadline
Petition drive completed for SEP congressional candidate in Ohio
[8 June 2004]
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2004 elections
[28 April 2004]
SEP 2004 web site
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |