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America
World Socialist Web Site and Socialist Equality Party
hold conference on The 2004 US Election: the Case for a
Socialist Alternative
By Shannon Jones
15 March 2004
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Today we are publishing a summary account of the conference
held by the World Socialist Web Site and the Socialist
Equality Party over the weekend in Ann Arbor, Michigan. In coming
days, the WSWS will provide extensive coverage of the conference,
including the opening report given by David North, chairman of
the WSWS International Editorial Board and national secretary
of the SEP in the US, and the remarks of SEP presidential and
vice presidential candidates Bill Van Auken and Jim Lawrence.
On March 13-14, the World Socialist Web Site and the
Socialist Equality Party held a highly successful conference entitled
The 2004 US Election: the Case for a Socialist Alternative.
The event, held on the campus of the University of Michigan in
Ann Arbor, was attended by 135 delegates, including students,
workers, professional people and retirees from across the United
States. Delegates traveled from California, the Pacific Northwest,
the South, the East Coast and a number of midwestern states to
participate in the conference. Also in attendance were delegations
from Australia, Germany, Britain and Canada.
A substantial number
of those at the conference had attended the WSWS-SEP conference
on Socialism and the Struggle Against Imperialism and War
held in Ann Arbor in March of 2003, and had since begun contributing
to the work of the web site.
Underscoring the international character of the election campaign,
Peter Schwarz from the German Partei für Soziale Gleichheit
[Socialist Equality Party], Julie Hyland from the SEP of Britain,
and Richard Phillips from the SEP of Australia gave greetings
to the conference.
The political basis for the discussion at the conference was
the SEP election statement published by the WSWS on January 27
(See Socialist Equality
Party announces US presidential campaign). In the call
for the conference, the WSWS said its purpose would be to initiate
a thoroughgoing discussion on the political issues that the 2004
election poses before working people in the US and internationally,
focusing on the economic and socio-political roots of the eruption
of American imperialism, the failure of liberal reformism in the
US, and the need to build an independent socialist alternative
to the bourgeois two-party system.
The conference succeeded in conducting such a discussion, with
many of the delegates speaking on such critical questions as the
US-engineered coup in Haiti, the social crisis facing working
people, the assault on democratic rights, and the need to fight
for an internationalist program, in opposition to all forms of
nationalism and economic protectionism.
The conference unanimously endorsed the SEP election statement
as the political basis of the partys campaign. It rejected
the position of various liberal and left organizations
that are lining up behind the Democratic nominee, John Kerry,
and opposing any independent campaign on the grounds that the
overriding issue is defeating President Bush.
In his opening report to the conference, David North dealt
directly with this issue, saying, Based on all the lessons
of the history of the American working class, the Socialist Equality
Party completely rejects the claim that the most burning task
in 2004, to which all other concerns and considerations must be
subordinated, is the defeat of President Bush.
No, the most pressing and urgent task is to fight for
the political independence of the working class on the basis of
a socialist and internationalist program.
Regarding the attempts of the US media and political establishment
to portray the systematic lying that accompanied the Iraq war
as an intelligence failure, North said: No,
the war was not the product of a failure of intelligence,not
even that of the intellectually handicapped president. Rather,
the war was the product, in a political sense, of a historic failure,
to the point of breakdown, of the institutions of American democracy.
He went on to review the process by which the ruling elite
intervened in the Democratic primaries to derail the campaign
of former Vermont governor Howard Dean, who had criticized the
Iraq war, and ensure the nomination of Senator John Kerry, who
had voted in favor of the congressional resolution that authorized
Bush to intervene militarily in Iraq. Dean, himself a thoroughly
conventional big business politician, was unacceptable to the
ruling elite because his nomination might have interjected a discussion
of the war into the presidential campaign, something which both
the Democratic and Republican establishments were determined to
prevent.
North insisted that the interests of the working class could
not find expression through the Kerry campaign or the Democrats:
In the elaboration of a principled position in this election
campaignthat is one that upholds the interests of the working
classit is necessary to proceed from an historical evaluation
of the bourgeois two-party system, and in particular, the class
character of the Democratic Party.
The Democratic Party, North continued, has been the principle
instrument employed by the American bourgeoisie for more than
a century to block the development of an independent working class
party, preserve the hegemony of the bourgeois two-party system,
and maintain the capitalist class monopoly of political
power.
Following the opening report, delegates participated in a detailed
discussion of the SEP election statement, covering a wide range
of topics, including public ownership of industry, the socialist
attitude to affirmative action and other forms of racial preferences,
the defense of democratic rights, and the fight for the international
unity of the working class.
SEP presidential candidate Bill Van Auken opened the second
day of the conference. He stressed the need for the American working
class to base itself on a program that united its struggles with
those of workers and oppressed people around the world. We
are striving, he said, through this intervention to
forge, together with our comrades in Socialist Equality parties
in Europe, South Asia, Australia and Canada, a genuinely worldwide
movement against imperialism, based upon the independent political
mobilization of the working class.
The recent US-backed overthrow of President Jean Bertrand Aristide
in Haiti marked, he said, another manifestation of the global
eruption of US imperialism.
Washington arrogates to itself the right to depose whomever
it sees fit, occupy territory and install puppet regimes. Nothing
could more clearly expose the farcical character of the Bush administrations
claims that its interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan are part
of some global crusade for democracy, he continued.
Van Auken explained that the Democratic Party did not represent
an alternative for those seeking to fight imperialism. He reviewed
the history of US intervention in the Persian Gulf from the administration
of Democrat Jimmy Carter, which asserted US imperialisms
right to unrestricted access to Persian Gulf oil and began the
buildup of a rapid deployment force, to that of Democrat Bill
Clinton, which maintained crushing sanctions against Iraq that
led to the death of one million people through lack of food, medicine
and essential supplies.
He cited a document of the Democratic Leadership Council that
serves as a principal basis of Kerrys foreign policy platform.
The document uncritically endorses Bushs so-called war
on terror and embraces his doctrine of preemptive war. Its
criticisms of Bushs foreign policy, Van Auken explained,
are of a purely tactical, and not principled, character, and,
in many cases, suggest an even more ferociously militaristic policy
than that of the current administration.
He concluded, The issues posed by the US elections are
world issues and require a world solution. The election campaign
waged by the SEP must become the means for the most conscious
sections of the working class internationally to intervene in
the political situation here, at the very heart of world imperialism,
as part of a worldwide offensive against war and for the socialist
reorganization of society.
Jim Lawrence, the SEP candidate for vice president, stressed
the need for a political struggle against the profit system to
defend jobs and living conditions. Lawrence worked for three decades
in Dayton, Ohio auto plants, and is a member of the United Auto
Workers union (UAW).
He said, The working class must develop a political strategy
to defend its jobs and living standards. Such a strategy, however,
must be based on an understanding of the objective economic changes
of the last quarter of a century, and include a critical appraisal
of the record and policies of all those who have claimed to speak
in the interests of working people.
Lawrence reviewed the dismal record of the AFL-CIO bureaucracy,
which, basing itself on policies of anti-communism and economic
nationalism, has failed to stop a single plant shutdown or defend
a single job.
The UAW and other unions promoted the most poisonous
national chauvinism and racism, aimed at convincing American workers
that their enemy was not big business, but Japanese and European
workers, who were supposedly stealing American jobs.
What has the promotion of economic nationalism produced?
When I first joined the UAW, the union had 2.25 million workers
in basic industry. Today it has 638,000 members.
He continued, The source of job destruction is not trade
per se, or even globalization. It is an economic system that subordinates
human needs to the accumulation of personal wealth. A system that
allows 587 people to control $1.9 trillion, while one half the
worlds population subsists on less than two dollars a day,
is historically doomed.
WSWS editorial board member Patrick Martin gave a report on
the practical work of the election campaign. He emphasized the
undemocratic character of US election laws.
When it comes to ballot access for third parties,
he said, the United States, contrary to the professions
of its ruling elite, is far from a paragon of democracy. Nowhere
in the developed world, with the possible exception of Australia,
are so many obstacles placed in the path of those who wish to
challenge the monopoly of the established political parties.
He noted that for SEP candidates Bill Van Auken and Jim Lawrence
to get on the ballot in all 50 states, more than 750,000 signatures
would have to be collected. He pointed out that besides collecting
signatures, SEP supporters would have to register electors in
each state and meet numerous other technical requirements.
He stressed that despite these difficulties, the SEP would
fight for ballot status in as many states as possible, and would
make a particular effort to run candidates in congressional races.
Following the discussion, delegates responded generously to
an appeal for financial contributions to support the work of the
WSWS. Many of those in attendance also applied to join the SEP
and a number volunteered to stand as party candidates in congressional
races.
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