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Socialist Equality Party campaign makes gains in Iowa, Ohio,
Michigan
By a reporting team
16 August 2004
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The Socialist Equality Party has completed petition drives
to win ballot status in three key midwestern states over the past
week. The efforts in Iowa, Ohio and Michigan represent a major
advance for the socialist campaign, coming in the face of intensive
campaigning and heavy commercial advertising by the Democratic
and Republican presidential candidates and a concerted media blackout
of third-party candidates.
The Midwest region, once home to a powerful labor movement
rooted in heavy industry, is characterized now by industrial decline
and spreading economic blight, both urban and rural. It has been
a major focus of both the big business parties, which regard Ohio,
Michigan and Iowaalong with Wisconsin and Minnesotaas
among the most critical battleground states in the
November 2 vote.
In Iowa, the SEP campaign filed petitions August 12 to place
the SEPs presidential and vice-presidential candidates,
Bill Van Auken and Jim Lawrence, on the ballot as independents.
State election officials confirmed that the total number of signatures
was nearly 1,750, well above the 1,500 required.
Iowa does not require that those who sign a nominating petition
be registered to vote. Any resident of the state who is eligible
to votei.e., at least 18 years old, a citizen, and not barred
by a felony convictionmay sign, whether registered or not.
The state has one of the most liberal ballot-access laws in the
US, and no third-party petition has been challenged in Iowa in
at least a dozen years.
The signatures for Van Auken and Lawrence were collected in
a petition drive beginning in June that was concentrated in Des
Moines, the states capital and largest city, but also included
efforts in Davenport, Ames, Mason City and Council Bluffs, among
other towns. In all, signatures were collected from residents
of 41 of Iowas 99 counties.
Seven Iowa voters, distributed across the states five
congressional districts, agreed to serve as electors for the SEP
campaign. They included two from Des Moines and one each from
Ames, Cedar Rapids, Council Bluffs, Danville, and Davenport. An
unemployed worker in Des Moines who was approached to sign the
petition decided to join the campaign and participated in petitioning
for the final two weekends.
SEP campaigners found overwhelming opposition to the war in
Iraq, both in working class areas and among farmers and rural
families, as well as among students at Iowa State University (Ames)
and Drake University (Des Moines). The antiwar sentiment was particularly
strong in working class areas, whether in Des Moines or in smaller
towns like Mason City and Davenport, where a very high percentage
of those approached by petitioners agreed to sign.
A large number of Iowa families have sons or daughters mobilized
for the Iraq war, and some soldiers relatives initially
expressed reservations about backing a petition for a candidate
opposed to the war. But in most cases, when the SEPs analysis
of the war was explained, including our call for immediate withdrawal
of all US and other foreign troops, they agreed to sign.
In one incident, the mother of a soldier refused to sign while
her adult daughter, who was shopping with her, insisted on adding
her signature to the petition. The mother warned her daughter,
Dont you know that the FBI is going to go through
every name on that petition! Theyll see your name on it
and they will connect you to my son! The SEP petitioners
explained that this concern, while understandable, was itself
an indictment of the US political system, where any alternative
to the two established bourgeois parties is treated as subversive.
Another feature of Iowaone that is relatively new in
the states historyis the large and growing number
of immigrant workers who have lived in the US long enough to become
citizens. Among those signing the SEP petition were Spanish-speaking
workers and immigrants from Bosnia who speak Serbo-Croatian.
In the state of Ohiothe most populous state where the
SEP is seeking to place its presidential candidates on the ballotparty
campaigners collected over 1,200 signatures August 14-15 in a
weekend drive that included teams in Toledo, Dayton, Cincinnati,
Cleveland and Warren. The SEP has collected over 8,000 signatures
to place Bill Van Auken and Jim Lawrence on the ballot, far more
than the requirement of 5,000. The deadline for filing the petitions
is Thursday, August 19.
The last two weeks have seen an outpouring of support for the
Ohio SEP campaign in the wake of the display of militarism and
chauvinism at the Democratic National Convention. Nearly 5,000
of the 8,000 signatures in Ohio have been collected since the
end of the convention, which shattered illusions among many opponents
of the war in Iraq that Kerry represents an alternative to Bush.
The SEPs emphasis on the struggle for social and economic
equality has evoked a strong response in a state that has lost
159,700 manufacturing jobs since the start of the last recession
in March 2001. Unemployment remains high in former manufacturing
centers. For example in Cleveland it stands at 12.7 percent, according
to recent figures, well above the national average of 5.6 percent.
A large portion of the signatures gathered in the final weeks
of the campaign were in working class neighborhoods devastated
by years of plant closings and mass layoffs, including former
centers of automobile production like Toledo, Cleveland and Dayton,
and steel centers like Cleveland, Warren and Youngstown. Most
working people in these areas expressed hostility to the war in
Iraq and President Bush, but showed little if any enthusiasm for
Democratic nominee John Kerry.
Only in liberal middle class areasparticularly around
Ohio State University in Columbusdid SEP petitioners encounter
significant numbers of people who expressed opposition to the
war in Iraq but refused to sign the petition to place the SEP
candidates on the ballot. These professed opponents of the war
claimed that it was necessary keep the antiwar SEP candidates
off the ballot to insure the victory of the prowar candidate Kerry
as the lesser evil to Bush.
But even among this layer, there has been a noticeable weakening
of support for the anybody but Bush position, in light
of Kerrys most recent statements, declaring that he would
have voted for the resolution authorizing Bush to invade Iraq,
even knowing that the claims that Iraq possessed weapons of mass
destruction were false.
Finally, in Michigan, the states Election Division has
made a preliminary determination that the SEP has met the requirement
for ballot status for its candidate for Congress in the 15th Congressional
District, Jerry White. SEP campaigners filed over 4,500 signatures
last month to put White on the ballot as an independent candidate,
well over the 3,000 signatures required under state law.
In response to inquiries from the campaign, an official of
the Election Division called the SEP office August 10 to confirm
that his office had completed its review of the petitions and
found there to be sufficient signatures. This recommendation will
be placed before an upcoming meeting of the State Board of Elections
for formal ratification.
The state governments election web site has begun listing
Jerry White as a candidate and White has already received his
first invitations to election campaign forums scheduled for the
fall. White is challenging incumbent Democrat John Dingell, the
longest-serving member of Congress, in a district that includes
Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti, Monroe County, and the southern and southwestern
portions of Wayne County.
White is the third SEP congressional or state legislative candidate
to win ballot status, following Carl Cooley, who is the partys
candidate for Congress in Maines Second Congressional District,
and Tom Mackaman, the SEP candidate for state legislature in the
102nd district of Illinois.
A fourth SEP candidate, David Lawrence, is awaiting the ruling
of a federal district judge on a civil rights lawsuit filed to
compel the state of Ohio to place him on the ballot in the 1st
Congressional District (Cincinnati). Lawrences supporters
filed more than 2,500 signatures, well over the total required,
but collected after the states March 1 deadline. Lawrence
is seeking a court order to overturn the deadline as unfair and
arbitrary.
See Also:
A letter from Tom Mackaman
SEP candidate in Illinois thanks supporters of ballot access fight
[12 August 2004]
SEP challenges Ohio petition deadline
in US District Court
[7 August 2004]
Democrats withdraw objections
to SEP petitions: Tom Mackaman to be on the ballot in Illinois
[30 July 2004]
2004
SEP Election Campaign
[Full Coverage]
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