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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Socialist Equality Party candidates attain ballot status in
Washington, Iowa and Michigan
By Andrea Peters
26 August 2004
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The Socialist Equality Partys presidential candidatesBill
Van Auken for president and Jim Lawrence for vice presidenthave
gained ballot status in Washington and Iowa. Success in these
two states means that the SEP candidates will be in a position
to address some 10 million voters and offer an alternative to
the pro-war, big-business agenda of both the Democratic and Republican
parties. In another achievement, the SEPs Jerry White has
also been officially approved as a congressional candidate in
Michigans 15th District.
On August 24, one day after petitions bearing the signatures
of approximately 1,500 registered Washington voters had been submitted
to the Secretary of States office in Olympia, the SEP was
notified that at least 1,000 of the signatures were valid and
that Van Auken and Lawrence would be placed on the ballot. This
is the first time that the SEP or its forerunner, the Workers
League, has stood candidates in any election in the state of Washington.
In Iowa, as of August 16, Van Auken and Lawrence were included
on the list, posted on the Secretary of States web site,
of candidates running in the 2004 general election. Petitioners
in Iowa, working in Des Moines, Mason City, Ames and Council Bluffs,
had gathered almost 1,750 signatures, well above the 1,500 needed
in order to win ballot status for Van Auken and Lawrence.
On August 25, Brad Wittman from the Michigan Bureau of Elections
informed the SEP that Jerry White, our candidate in the states
15th congressional district, is on the ballot.
In Washington, Iowa and Michigan the SEPs campaign to
attain ballot status won support from working and middle class
layers opposed to the war in Iraq, the anti-democratic methods
of the Bush administration, and the countrys deteriorating
social conditions. All of the most critical concerns facing the
vast majority of people in the USthe destruction of jobs
and their replacement by low-wage employment, the skyrocketing
costs of education, the lack of healthcare and health insurance,
and the continuous dismantling of all manner of social programsform
a daily part of the pressures weighing on voters in these three
states.
For example, the jobs situation in Michigan, where White has
attained ballot status, is typical of the entire swath of Midwest
states that have been devastated by the process of deindustrialization.
Michigan lost 10,000 industrial jobs during the month of June
and another 16,000 in July. Since 2000, the state has shed more
than 324,000 jobs, 65 percent of them in manufacturing. In the
15th Congressional District, Whites main opponent is Democrat
John Dingell, a supporter of the war whose views are in opposition
to those held by the majority of registered Democrats.
In Washington, where Van Auken and Lawrence are on the ballot,
the unemployment rate is 6 percent, half of a percentage point
above the national average. Over the course of the last several
years, there has been a stream of articles in the local press
discussing deteriorating social conditions in the statefor
example, almost one-fifth of the states population required
some form of food assistance from July 2001 to July 2002. Similarly,
in 2003 a report on hunger in Iowa found that 90,000 households
in the state, or 250,000 people, experience food insecurity.
Having achieved ballot status in Washington, Iowa and Michigan,
the SEP will soon begin actively campaigning in these areas. Van
Auken, Lawrence and White will use the elections as a forum through
which to raise a public discussion on the central political and
economic questions facing masses of peoplethe war in Iraq,
the attack on democratic rights, and the onslaught on living standards.
The SEP will organize the distribution of campaign materials in
these states, as well as arranging speaking engagements and media
coverage for the candidates.
Van Auken and Lawrence are now running as candidates in four
US states, having already achieved ballot status in Colorado and
New Jersey. As a congressional candidate for the SEP, Jerry White
is joined by Carl Cooley, who was already placed on the ballot
in Maines 2nd Congressional District. In Illinois, Tom Mackaman
beat back the Democratic Partys bad faith effort to keep
him off the ballot as the SEPs candidate for state representative
in the 103rd District.
The SEP is awaiting news on the ballot status of Van Auken
and Lawrence in Ohio and is currently in the midst of petitioning
to get them on the ballot in Minnesota. In addition, the SEP has
recently filed an appeal against the decision by a federal judge
to turn down the lawsuit by our candidate in Ohios 1st Congressional
District, David Lawrence, against the discriminatory filing deadline
for third-party candidates.
See Also:
SEP presidential campaign files petitions
in Washington state
[25 August 2004]
WSWS readers condemn denial of ballot
status to SEP candidate in Ohio
[25 August 2004]
Ohio SEP candidate David Lawrence appeals
for support in fight for ballot status
[20 August 2004]
Judge rejects ballot lawsuit of SEP
congressional candidate in Ohio
[19 August 2004]
SEP files petitions for presidential
ballot status in Ohio
[19 August 2004]
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2004 elections
[28 April 2004]
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