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WSWS : News
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SEP submits petitions to qualify for Illinois State House
campaign
By Joe Parks
23 June 2004
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On Monday, June 21, Socialist Equality Party candidate Thomas
Mackaman turned in signatures to obtain ballot status for state
house in Illinois 103rd representative district, which includes
the cities of Champaign and Urbana and is home to the University
of Illinois. In order to ensure the candidacy against potential
Democratic or Republican challenges, SEP supporters collected
over 2,000 signaturesfar more than the 1,344 required. According
to the Illinois State Board of Elections, any challenge to the
petition must be submitted within five days of the petition filing.
The success of the petition
drive demonstrates that growing numbers of workers and youth are
prepared to support a socialist alternative to imperialist war
abroad and the further destruction of living standards in the
US. Against difficult oddsIllinois maintains among the most
restrictive ballot access legislation in the countrythe
petitioning work of SEP supporters was warmly received.
Numerous conversations during the course of petitioning revealed
a thoroughgoing hostility to the Iraq war and the Bush administration,
as well as a growing awareness that John Kerry and the Democratic
Party have acted as accomplices in the drive to war and occupation
of Iraq.
Many signers lent their names either as a means to ensure as
broad a choice as possible on November 2, or in order to register
their disgust with the Democrats and Republicans. Typical was
the comment of one signer, Any new party is better than
the two weve got. Indeed, very few residents of this
East Central Illinois district of more than 100,000 people identified
themselves with either established party. By distributing hundreds
of leaflets and encouraging residents to read the World Socialist
Web Site, petitioners worked to channel this disenchantment
and anger behind the only political party that unequivocally opposes
the occupation of Iraq, the SEP.
The campaign has attracted substantial attention locally. Mackaman
has been interviewed by the local newspaper, the Champaign
News-Gazette, and has been offered a radio interview as well.
In the News-Gazette article, he pointed out the basis of
the SEP campaign: Were trying to offer an alternative
to both the Democrats and Republicans. Practically, what that
means is a political alternative to war and the destruction of
living standards in this country. Mackaman is challenging the
Democratic Party incumbent, Naomi Jakobsson, and her Republican
opponent, Deborah Feinen.
The Democratic Party has responded to the independent socialist
challenge with particular hostility. In the News-Gazette
article, Jakobsson reacted to the SEP campaign by suggesting that
its aim is to undermine University of Illinois funding, a patently
absurd accusation. In another instance, a local Democratic Party
official harassed one SEP petitioner at an Urbana farmers
market, accusing the campaign of stealing votes from
the Democratsas if Democrats have an unquestionable proprietary
claim to votes!
Both the Democrats and Republicans have presided over a deepening
social crisis nationwide, brought on by a relentless attack on
workers living standards in the US and militarism abroad.
The ramifications of this crisis are to be found in many facets
of life in Champaign and Urbana. Thousands of residents do not
have access to adequate health care. There has been a marked rise
in poverty over the past 10 years, and a corresponding increase
in crime statistics and juvenile imprisonment. Numerous soldiers
from East Central Illinois, for the most part economic conscripts,
are now deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan, where they put in the
position of attacking the civilian population and face the prospects
of death, injury and psychological trauma.
At the University of Illinois, students have seen their tuition
rise again and again, a phenomenon which is straining the budgets
of the states middle class families, and which is limiting
access to the towns poor and working class students, who
often attend the local community college. Graduate teaching assistants
and adjunct faculty now find themselves trapped in low-paid positions
with few benefits and limited prospects for improving their tenuous
situations. International students face new hurdles to their ability
to study in the US put in place since the 9/11 attacks.
The Democratic and Republican parties not only fail to offer
solutions to these problems, they bear political responsibility
for their existence. The success of the SEP campaign in Champaign
and Urbana, Illinois, shows that more and more workers and students
are beginning to draw the same conclusion, and are seeking out
an alternative.
See Also:
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 campaign wins support
in Ohio
[15 April 2004]
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