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WSWS : News
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US: SEP files for Colorado ballot status
By Tim Tower
30 June 2004
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On Monday, June 21, supporters of the Socialist Equality Party
filed the required affidavits and signatures to place its candidates
for president and vice president of the United States on the ballot
in Colorado. Well in advance of the July 2 deadline, the filing
included nine electors and four alternates to ensure that Bill
Van Auken and Jim Lawrence will appear on the states ballot.
A drawing will be held during the first two weeks of July to determine
the order in which the names of candidates will appear, and the
completed ballot will be certified September 8.
The stand taken by these electors, many of whom are new to
the SEP, demonstrates a growing alienation from the two-party
system and the emergence of an opposition to its program of imperialist
war and social reaction.
The first few to sign up as electors were drawn from a number
of respondents who have written to the World Socialist Web
Site in recent months to offer support and contribute funds
to the campaign. An unemployed high school teacher from Boulder
stated, As a world party, the SEP clearly is in a position
to represent the interests of all workers throughout the world,
and as such, the fact that the US seems to be more and more trying
to dominate and run the world, connotes the idea that there should
be no government without representation.
He said that the lack of decent jobs posed a sharp crisis in
the state. In April, 6,000 Coloradoans lost their jobs, raising
the total number of unemployed in the state to 127,200. Measured
against a total employed of 2,377,300, the increase raised the
unemployment rate two tenths of 1 percent to 5.1 percent.
After securing several electors in Denver, SEP supporters went
to the town of Boulder, which is dominated by the University of
Colorado. Distributing election materials on the Pearl Street
Mall in the town center, they assembled a core of supporters including
graduate students, a pre-school teacher, a poet, a musician, and
a construction worker who gathered around the campaign table to
discuss the socialist strategy to oppose the war in Iraq. The
discussion focused on Democrat John Kerrys support for the
war and the domestic program of the Bush administration and the
need for a socialist alternative to the two-party system.
One elector explained that he had supported the Green Party
four years ago when they held their nominating convention in Denver.
He had believed at the time that they would build a broad, grass-roots
movement against capitalism. Since then, he had become disgusted
with the opportunism of the Greens and their maneuvering within
the two-party system.
Colorado politics is dominated by the regressive and reactionary
policies of its Republican governor, who has aped the Bush administration
in advocating massive tax cuts for the wealthy while gutting social
services and education. Governor Bill Owens recently pushed through
the largest tax cut in state history with the lions share
of the $1 billion raised from cuts in sales, personal income and
capital gains taxes being shifted from state programs to the pockets
of the very wealthy.
The US Census Bureau analyzes state education funding in relation
to personal income. For 2000-2001, Colorado ranked 49th in K-12
revenue and 48th in K-12 spending. When the comparison to personal
income is taken out of the equation, Colorado ranked 36th and
33rd, with per-pupil revenues of $7,366 and per-pupil expenditures
of $6,515.
Underscoring the crisis in the states schools, a recent
report entitled Quality Counts 2003 gave Colorado
a C- for the adequacy of its education resources,
ranking the state 41st out of the 50 states. Furthermore, based
on US Department of Education data on instruction expenditures,
Colorado ranked 46th in this category for 1999-2000, spending
57.9 percent of its annual education expenditures on instruction-related
functions. The national average was 61.7 percent.
In lockstep with the two parties in Washington, the state administration
places the blame for the crisis in the schools on the teachers
and staff members who struggle every day against deteriorating
conditions. Governor Owens sponsored an education accountability
systemincluding detailed, online school report cardsthat
has won the praises of the reactionary Heritage Foundation and
of Education Secretary Rod Paige who called it the envy
of the nation.
This month, Families USA released a report entitled, One
in Three: Non-Elderly Americans without Health Insurance,
in which Colorado did not fare better than other states. Nearly
one out of three people (32.1 percent) under the age of 65 went
without health insurance for all or part of the two-year period
from 2002 through 2003. Of the 1.3 million uninsured Coloradoans,
nearly two thirds (66.0 percent) went without health insurance
coverage for six months or longer during this period. Of the total
population below the age of 65 of 4,078,000, those who went without
medical insurance numbered 1,309,000.
The vast majority of the uninsured (84.1 percent) are either
working or members of working families. Though Hispanics, African
Americans and other ethnic minorities are more likely to be without
health insurance than white, non-Hispanic people, the largest
category of the uninsured (683,000) were white and non-Hispanic.
In Colorado, 56.1 percent of Hispanics, 36.5 percent of African
Americans, and 38.8 percent of other ethnic minorities
were uninsured, compared to 24.1 percent of white, non-Hispanic
people.
Other supporters and volunteers have contacted the WSWS from
around Colorado Springs and Ouray in the mountains to the southwest
with the hope of assisting the SEP campaign in the Denver area
and throughout the state in the coming months.
See Also:
SEP submits petitions to qualify for
Illinois State House campaign
[23 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 US elections: Statement of the Socialist Equality
Party
[28 April 2004]
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