|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
US: SEP holds election meetings in Seattle and Portland
By our reporters
24 May 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
On May 18 and 20, the Socialist Equality Party continued its
series of meetings on the West Coast in the US focusing on the
war in Iraq and the partys campaign in the 2004 presidential
election, as well as other races.
The SEP is running Bill Van Auken, a full-time writer for the
WSWS, for president; Jim Lawrence, a retired auto worker from
Dayton, Ohio, is the partys vice presidential candidate.
In Seattle, Washington, on May 18 the SEP held a public meeting
in the Central District at Garfield Community Center. The meeting,
which attracted readers and supporters of the WSWS, was addressed
by WSWS Arts Editor David Walsh. Walsh addressed the nature of
the Iraq war and what it had revealed about American society.
He noted that a vast apparatus of repression has been
built up in the US. There are some two million individuals incarcerated
in this country. Ten percent of those in state prisons are serving
life sentences, these are horrific statistics.
The last decades have witnessed the proliferation of
a population of hundreds of thousands of police, prison guards,
security guards, body guards, thugs for hire of various kinds.
Whats behind this? The vast social inequality. In the final
analysis, the repression stems from the determination of those
who have accumulated vast wealth to keep their ill-gotten gains.
They want guarantees, not merely in the form of the destruction
of the welfare state, the massive tax cuts and gutting of the
progressive tax system, the elimination of virtually every mechanism
by which those who work for a wage might defend themselves. The
wealthy elite wants guarantees, written in blood if necessary,
that their riches will never be threatened, never tampered with.
What was gained, perhaps stolen, will never be given back.
Following Walshs report, there was a wide-ranging discussion.
One participant asked about the SEPs analysis of the Howard
Dean campaign: Hadnt voters, after all, cast ballots for
John Kerry? Another member of the audience asked How can
we get the message of the SEP out there more aggressively?
He noted that many Americans want to get rich themselves
and that it was necessary to dispel the myth of the American Dream.
Walsh replied that there were indeed problems in the consciousness
of millions, all the more reason for a patient explanation of
the role of the Democratic Party as one of the principal defenders
of American capitalism and a persistent effort to extend the influence
of the WSWS and SEP. He emphasized that there was no quick fix
to the problems currently plaguing the working class either in
this country or internationally. As Walsh stated, If you
want change, you are going to have to fight for it.
He asserted that the Anything But Bush appeal was
entirely bankrupt. Both Bush and John Kerry are cut from the same
essential cloth, supporters of the imperialist war in Iraq and
promoters of the corporate ruling elite. Clearly, there is a need
for an alternative for the working class, he argued.
This led to an interesting debate with several members and
supporters of the Freedom Socialist Party (FSP), which describes
itself as the voice of revolutionary feminism. One
FSP supporter accused the SEP and WSWS of sectarianism
for criticizing the positions of the Ligue Communiste Révolutionnaire
(LCR) and Lutte Ouvrière (LO) group in France during the
2002 presidential elections. Another FSP member called for support
for the organizations project of uniting the left.
Walsh replied that a central tenet of the Marxist movement
was the need of the working class to establish its political independence.
He suggested that the FSP represented one of the diverse varieties
of middle class protest politics that showed no way forward for
working people.
As for the French events, Walsh pointed out that the LCR and
LO had carried out a serious betrayal of the working class: in
the case of the LCR, more or less open support for a vote for
the leading representative of French capitalism, Jacques Chirac,
in the second round of the 2002 elections; the LO had taken a
confused and abstentionist position, capitulating to the pressure
of the Stalinists and the trade union bureaucracy.
We stood on May Day 2002 and distributed a leaflet calling
for a working class boycott of both Chirac and [extreme right-winger
Jean-Marie] Le Pen. The LO said this couldnt be done, that
there was too much hostility. A few members of the Socialist Party
threw the leaflet away, everyone else read it seriously. The LO
ran away and hid.
Many of the organizations on the left in America,
Walsh noted, had neither a following nor significance. The SEP
saw its task as uniting the working class, not the left.
A number of participants at the meeting expressed interest
in helping with the SEP campaign efforts that will take place
in Seattle next month. In compliance with the Washington State
ballot requirements, SEP members and supporters will work to collect
signatures for both the presidential and senatorial candidates
over a one-week period from June 26 through July 3.
In Portland, Oregon, on May 20 students and workers attended
a meeting sponsored by the SEP on the campus of Portland State
University (PSU). They included a pipe fitter, a nursery worker,
a writer, a nurse and a computer programmer, among others. Participants
in recent antiwar rallies, supporters of the Green Party and long-time
readers of the WSWS also attended.
Earlier in the day, David Walsh was interviewed in a 30-minute
live program broadcast by the nonprofit Portland-based radio station
KBOO.
At the PSU meeting Walsh discussed the most recent outrage:
the photographs of American soldiers torturing and humiliating
Iraqi prisoners. The acts depicted in those photos, he noted,
even if carried out by a relatively small number of soldiers,
do not represent an aberration: The photos of repression
correspond directly to the nature of the entire enterprise,
he said. It is a brutal, colonial exercise.
All of this, he added, reveals the true visage
of American imperialism.
Walsh impressed upon the audience the importance of understanding
that neither the Democratic Party nor the Green Party represent
in any way an alternative for the working class. The entire political
establishment has been discredited by the developments in Iraq,
along with the growing social divide in the United States, he
said, but he added that opponents of the existing social order
should be wary about assigning too much significance to Bush himself.
To demonize Bush is to make too much of him, he
said, noting that the crisis stems directly from the social ordercapitalism.
Following Walshs presentation, several members of the
audience asked questions, about the Greens, problems in consciousness
and other matters. Unlike the bombast and sheer banality one is
subjected to by either right-wing radio or the allegedly left
forum of the recently launched Air America radio network,
the ensuing discussion was intense and thoughtful.
For those who attended, the meeting accomplished precisely
what the SEPs 2004 election campaign is about: to raise
the level of political discussion, and to highlight the vital
role that class consciousness must play in a principled struggle
against capitalism.
One participant in the discussion expressed an intention to
join, while others indicated they planned to learn more about
the SEP. Several bought books and pamphlets from a literature
table.
See Also:
SEP election meetings in California
[18 May 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |