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WSWS : News
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Party to challenge early filing deadline
Petition drive completed for SEP congressional candidate in
Ohio
By Shannon Jones
8 June 2004
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Supporters of the Socialist Equality Party completed a petition
drive last week to run SEP congressional candidate David Lawrence
as a candidate for US House of Representatives in Ohios
First Congressional District. In order for Lawrence to qualify
for the November ballot, however, the SEP must first conduct a
legal struggle against a discriminatory filing deadline in the
state and compel election officials to accept petitions to place
the SEP candidate on the ballot.
Citing the unfair restrictions, board of election officials
in Cincinnati on June 4 refused to accept nominating petitions
bearing more than 2,500 signatures, well over the minimum 1,695
required.
Lawrence, 37, is a teacher in the Dayton, Ohio public school
system and is a graduate of the University of Cincinnati. He is
the son of Jim Lawrence, the SEP candidate for US Vice President.
SEP supporters conducted the petitioning with the knowledge
that Ohios deadline for independent congressional candidates
is currently March 1. The SEP is planning to launch legal action
to overturn this deadline, which is patently unfair. The filing
date, more than eight months before the general election, would
require prospective candidates to conduct petitioning in the middle
of winter. Moreover, the SEP did not even announce its intentions
to enter the congressional race in Ohio until late March.
The courts have found against Ohio in previous challenges to
its early filing deadline. A 1983 Supreme Court ruling in the
Anderson vs. Celebrezze case forced Ohio to advance the
previous March 1 deadline for independent presidential candidates
to August 19, saying the previous deadline had placed an unconstitutional
burden on the candidates and their supporters.
In a 5-4 vote the majority ruled that A burden that falls
unequally on independent candidates or on new or small political
parties impinges, by its very nature, on associational choices
protected by the First Amendment, and discriminates against those
candidates and voters whose political preferences lie outside
the existing political parties.
Lawrence will be represented in his challenge to Ohios
early filing deadline by Robert Newman, a Cincinnati civil rights
attorney, who successfully overturned the deadline for an independent
congressional candidate during an election in the 1980s. State
officials, however, did not permanently extend the deadline at
that time.
Newman told the WSWS that the early filing deadline was patently
discriminatory against third parties, because, among other things,
it forced independents to petition and file before the major parties
had even selected their candidates. As it stands, there
is no opportunity to challenge these major parties, Newman
declared.
I look forward to the SEP candidate getting on the ballot
and participating in the debates with Congressman Steve Chabot.
A final petition drive by SEP supporters netted 1,100 signatures
over the Memorial Day weekend. Petitioners received a strong response
at the Taste of Cincinnati festival, in particular
to the demand for the immediate withdrawal of US troops from Iraq.
There was interest in several other aspects of the SEP program
as well, including issues such as access to health care, the high
cost of college education, the lack of decent paying jobs, and
police brutality. Signers included a broad cross section of the
population black, white and immigrant, urban and suburban.
Another team of petitioners campaigned at University Plaza,
near the University of Cincinnati. They encountered students and
working people from adjacent suburbs as well as the impoverished
Over-the-Rhine neighborhood, scene of rioting in April 2001 sparked
by the police murder of an unarmed black teenager.
Following the completion of petitioning David Lawrence told
the WSWS, The response to my campaign has been overwhelming.
The level of enthusiasm and excitement is great. In some areas
virtually everyone signed. Many saw the war as illegal because
it was based on lies and criminal because of the recent revelations
about the torture carried out by US troops. Many people sense
the war was taking money away from urgent social necessities in
this country; that the cost of this war will be borne by the working
class through the destruction of social programs.
The campaign has confirmed our position that given an
opportunity to express their interests, workers will respond.
There is an enormous disconnect between what the media portrays
and reality. They claim there is still strong support for the
war, but we didnt see it. In both working class and suburban
areas we saw a lot of concern about the consequences of the war.
One young lady who signed my petition said her father had just
been sent over to Iraq. A lot of workers raised Bushs business
interests, especially Halliburton, the company connected with
Vice President Dick Cheney.
The First Congressional District, which includes Cincinnati
and surrounding suburbs, is starkly divided between wealth and
poverty. Indian Hill, a suburb of Cincinnati, is one of the wealthiest
enclaves in the state, while the city of Cincinnati contains some
of the poorest inner city neighborhoods in the United States.
The incumbent First District congressman, Republican Steve
Chabot, is running for his sixth term. Chabot was a House Manager
during the impeachment trial of President Clinton. He is an enthusiastic
supporter of the big business tax cuts, the Patriot Act, and the
illegal invasion and occupation of Iraq. A supporter of the religious
right, he was the sponsor of the bill, recently struck down by
a federal court, banning the procedure known as partial birth
abortion.
See Also:
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2004 elections
[28 April 2004]
SEP campaign wins support
in Ohio
[15 April 2004]
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