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The SEPs 2004 campaign: a preparation for coming battles
By Bill Van Auken, SEP presidential candidate
5 November 2004
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The 2004 elections are over. The Bush administration has won
a second term during which it aims to escalate its global military
aggression and intensify its attacks on the social conditions
and democratic rights of working people in America.
The Democratic Party has suffered a humiliating debacle, not
only going down to defeat in the presidential race, but losing
ground as well in both the Senate and House of Representatives.
This party stands discredited before tens of millions of people
who harbored illusions that it could serve as the political instrument
for overturning the administrations reactionary policies.
The elections proved that the ostensible opposition party was
incapable of mounting serious opposition to any of these policies.
For its part, the Socialist Equality Party has registered an
important victory. The perspective that we advanced in launching
our election campaign has been thoroughly vindicated. We stated
from the outset that the struggle against war and reaction could
be advanced only through a break from the two-party system and
the building of an independent party of the working class opposed
to the profit system.
While the number of votes received by our candidates was relatively
small, the political content our campaign stands in stark contrast
to the lies and demagogy of the two parties of big business. It
has served to raise the level of political debate and educate
a significant layer of working people, students and youth on both
the nature of the social and political crisis and the socialist
and internationalist program required to confront it.
Bush, Vice President Cheney and others in the administration
have claimed the election results as a popular mandate to continue
their policies of militarism and war and embark on a domestic
program that amounts to the dismantling of every social reform
and restriction on corporate power enacted in the course of the
twentieth century.
First, they propose the reform of the tax code,
meaning drastic reductions, if not the outright elimination, of
taxes on accumulated wealth, combined with a greater tax burden
on workers incomes. Under the slogan of an ownership
society, they are pressing for the privatization of the
Social Security program, subordinating retirees limited
benefits to the profits of Wall Street. Social Security reform
is to set the precedent for gutting whatever else remains of entitlement
programs, such as Medicare.
In his victory speech Wednesday, Cheney claimed that the Bush
had campaigned forthrightly on a clear agenda for this nations
future, and the nation responded by giving him a mandate.
This is a lie. The Republican campaign sought to terrorize
the American people by invoking a supposedly omnipresent terrorist
threat. It relied on cynical appeals to religion and social backwardness,
over issues such as gay marriage, abortion and stem cell research.
The confused vote given to Bush on this basis is no political
mandate. The relatively narrow victory registered by the Republicans
at the polls does not suffice to dispel the political stench left
by their theft of the 2000 election. This administration was and
remains a government based on criminality and lies.
In conceding the election to Bush Wednesday, Democratic presidential
candidate John Kerry urged a common effort, invoked
the need for unity, and pledged to bridge the
partisan divide. He disingenuously suggested that Bush might
show compassion in his second term.
Kerry does not speak for the broad layers of the population
that are deeply opposed to the war in Iraq, the assault on civil
liberties, and the vast transfer of wealth from working people
to the financial elitethe centerpieces of Bushs first
term. On the contrary, he is calling for the political establishment
to close ranks so that it can better prosecute these very policies.
The Democrats refusal to demand a full count of the Ohio
vote, or pursue reports of uncounted votes and electoral fraud
in other states, is the final act in what was a bankrupt and cowardly
campaign. One can only imagine the Republicans response
had the results been the reverse, with Bush trailing Kerry by
2 percent of the vote in Ohio. As in Florida in 2000, they would
have mobilized battalions of lawyers, Supreme Court justices and
right-wing mobs to capture the states electoral votesby
fair means or foul.
More fundamentally, the Democrats surrender is a manifestation
of the partys real social basewhich is rooted not
in the working population, but rather in sections of the ruling
elite and the most privileged social layers. No matter how bitter
their tactical differences with the Republicans, the Democrats
defend the most basic interests of the same financial oligarchy.
Kerry underscored his call for unity by declaring: Now,
more than ever, with our soldiers in harms way, we must
stand together and succeed in Iraq and win the war on terror.
He thereby signaled the Democrats support for an impending
bloodbath.
The administration is falsely claiming the election as a referendum
in support of its criminal war in Iraq. With the ballots barely
counted, the Pentagon is already launching a military offensive
that will claim many more Iraqi lives and add to the death toll
among US soldiers. On Thursday, AC-130 gunships poured cannon
and machinegun fire into Fallujah, while tanks joined in the bombardment,
in preparation for a ground assault against the city. The operation
was held in abeyance until after the election for fear of hurting
Bush at the polls.
The Socialist Equality Party campaigned in the 2004 election
for the immediate and unconditional withdrawal of all US troops
from Iraq. This is a demand supported by many millions of Americans,
but it could find no expression within the two-party system. We
are confident that the opposition to this war will intensify in
direct proportion to the escalating military aggression against
the Iraqi people.
While the media portrays the Bush administration as greatly
strengthened by the election, the coming year will confront both
the government and the American people with immense crises.
The popular resistance to the US occupation of Iraq will not
be crushed by tanks storming Fallujah. On the contrary, the wholesale
killing of civilians will only provoke greater opposition, while
inflaming the masses throughout the Middle East. The clumsy attempts
by Washington to impose a colonial regime in Iraq will inevitably
end in ignominy.
This military campaign is a massive atrocity. It is now estimated
that up to 100,000 Iraqisthe vast majority of them civilianshave
been killed as a result of the US invasion and occupation. It
is an obscenity that under these conditions the Republican Party
can run an election campaign on moral values, while
the Democrats seek ways to emulate it. What is the morality of
slaughtering women and children so as to seize a country and its
oil?
The military operation in Iraq unfolds simultaneously with
growing indications that US capitalism is headed for a financial
shipwreck. Just one day after the election the Bush administration
announced that the US government was on the brink of bankruptcy,
demanding that Congress raise the debt ceiling to $8.074 trillion
so that Washington could continue borrowing to cover its ballooning
deficits. These budget deficits, together with the record current
account deficit and rising oil prices, threaten to bring about
a crash of the dollar, unleashing a global economic crisis.
We are confident that the political work of our election campaign
has prepared the SEP for the outbreak of mass social and political
struggles that lie ahead. The campaign served to root our party
even more firmly in the perspective of socialist internationalism.
In fighting for our program, we championed the interests not only
of working people in the US, but of the masses of workers and
oppressed all over the world who suffer the consequences of US
imperialisms military and economic policies. Our party made
the fight for the international unity of the working class the
axis of its campaign.
In the final weeks before the election, I had the great privilege
of addressing audiences of workers, students and professionals
both in Britain and in Sri Lanka on the SEPs attitude both
to the Iraq war and the 2004 election. The perspective of building
a mass independent socialist party in the United States as part
of a worldwide movement against imperialism was a powerful pole
of attraction in both countries. The understanding that in the
center of imperialism there exists an immense social forcethe
American working classwhose interests are objectively opposed
to those defended by Bush, Kerry and the US ruling elite has revolutionary
significance for people all over the world.
The high level of interest in and support for our partys
fight for an internationalist perspective within the United States
is an indication that any development of the class struggle in
the US will be answered by an eruption of mass struggles internationally.
Through the campaign, our party has won a significant new layer
of supporters. Many participated in or politically supported the
SEPs difficult battle to place our candidates on the ballotconfronting
undemocratic ballot laws and the dirty tricks of both Democratic
and Republican officials. This struggle served to educate many
as to the nature of the existing political system and the profound
erosion of democratic rights that is rooted in the growth of social
polarization in the US.
The Socialist Equality Party is not awed by the Bush administrations
electoral gains. We are confident that the deep economic, social
and political contradictions underlying this government will give
rise to a new wave of mass struggles. We have utilized the 2004
elections to lay the political foundations for the emergence of
a new mass political movement of working people in the struggle
for socialism. We will continue and strengthen these efforts in
the aftermath of November 2 vote, utilizing the World Socialist
Web Site to make our program widely known and to unite the
struggles of American workers with those of working people all
over the world.
Our party is not simply a party for elections. While elections
can play an important role, our intervention has been aimed at
organizing, mobilizing and, above all, educating. This work will
go on. We will continue to draw the lessons of this election and
go forward to build the Socialist Equality Party in the months
ahead. We intend to advance the work begun in the 2004 campaign,
and we appeal to all of our readers to participate in this effort.
We urge you to come forward, join the SEP and take up the fight
for socialism.
See Also:
Socialist Equality Party gains significant
support in US elections
[4 November 2004]
After the 2004 elections: the political
and social crisis will intensify
[3 November 2004]
On eve of 2004 election: US faces unprecedented
social conflict
[1 November 2004]
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2004 US elections
[20 September 2004]
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