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Socialist candidate Tom Mackaman addresses SEP meeting at
the University of Illinois
By Kate Randall
3 November 2004
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The Socialist Equality Party held a public meeting on the campus
of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign on October 28
to support the campaign of Tom Mackaman, SEP candidate for state
representative in Illinois 103rd District.
The meeting was well attended by U of I students and working
people from the area. Speaking alongside Mackaman were Jerry White,
the SEP candidate for Congress from Michigans 15th Congressional
District, and David North, chairman of the editorial board of
the World Socialist Web Site and national secretary of
the Socialist Equality Party of the US.
In the course of our campaign here in Champaign-Urbana,
Mackaman told the meeting, we have spoken with thousands
upon thousands of working people and students. What we have found
is that the social and political distance between the needs of
working people and the two political parties is unbridgeable.
He explained that his opponents
in the race, Democratic incumbent Naomi Jakobsson and Republican
Deb Feinen, were running as fiscal conservatives, and that the
Democrat, Jakobsson, was positioning herself to the right of the
Republican, running on a program of no new taxes and cleaning
up government waste. The latter phrase, Mackaman said,
was a euphemism for slashing social programs. He added:
Such policies might have been plagiarized from a press conference
held by Ronald Reagan!
Mackaman continued: Anger over the war in Iraqparticularly
in the working class neighborhoods where family members are fighting
and dyingis white hot. Despite this, in the course
of 12 debates, neither Jakobsson nor Feinen had let the
word Iraq fall from her lips.
The SEP candidate told the meeting: A large majority
of Americans now believe the war was wrong, and something approaching
half wish to see all US troops withdrawn. But this enormous and
bitter opposition to the war in the US and internationally has
found no serious expression within the political establishment.
Both Bush and Kerry promise to continue the war. And there is
a growing drumbeat for further wars of aggression.
The Iraq wars millions upon millions of opponents
are, for all intents and purposes, politically disenfranchised.
Bush and Kerry, Republicans and Democrats, promise only more war
and militarism because these are the policies of the US corporate
and financial oligarchy that controls both parties.
Mackaman said that the price paid for a war based on lies has
been enormous. Tens of thousands of Iraqis have been killed,
and millions remain in abject poverty, with little food, without
electricity, water, sewerage service. Nearly 1,100 working class
Americans, men and women, have now diedincluding youth from
these communitiesand thousands upon thousands more have
been maimed.
Given all this, Mackaman asked, What has become of the
political leaders of the peace movement and the radical protest
groups? The answer, Im afraid, is that they have politically
dissolved themselves into the pro-war Democratic Party. They have
done so through the hollow perspective of anyone but Bush,
even though their man, Kerry, promises only more war and militarism.
The Patriot Act, the attack on habeas corpus seen in
the detention of US citizens and internationals, the concentration
camp at Guantanamo Baywhich, taken together, constitute
what is euphemistically known as the war on terrorthese
are the shared policies of the Democrats and Republicans.
To oppose these policies, he stressed, required breaking the stranglehold
of the two-party duopoly through the creation of a mass party
of the international working class.
Mackaman noted that the very right to vote was now under assault.
Right now, he said, gangs of Republican operatives
are being openly, indeed brazenly, organized to harass working
class and minority voters at polling stations in states such as
Ohio. This recalls the methods used to intimidate blacks and prevent
them from voting in the old, Jim Crow South.
The SEP campaign in Champaign itself was the target of a disenfranchisement
campaignthis time by the Democratic Partyto keep Tom
Mackamans name off the ballot. We collected over 2,000
signatures in order to gain ballot statusfar more than the
1,325 required, Mackaman related. Students and workers signing
the SEPs petitions either supported the partys socialist
program or agreed that the democratic system is badly broken,
and that new alternatives must be put before voters on the ballot.
The Democrats attempted to disqualify more than half of these
signatures. But through a determined effort by Mackaman and his
supporters, and at a considerable cost of time and financial resources,
the SEP defeated this attempt to bar him from the ballot.
However, our victory over the Democratic Party was not
the end, he added. I was later attacked for using
my e-mail for political purposes, first by a smear
artist for the Champaign News-Gazette, Phil Bloomer, and
later by the university itself. The university, realizing it had
no legal basis to monitor students e-mail and discipline
them for constitutionally guaranteed free speech, has since altered
its administrative manual to forbid what it refers to as political
campaigning. Students and university staff must fight to reverse
this anti-democratic measure!
Mackaman said these attacks were not of a personal nature.
They are an effort to silence debate on the issues most
pressing to students and working people in Champaignabove
all else, the war in Iraq.
He said the assault on democratic rights has become a necessary
policy for the ruling elite and its two parties under conditions
in which their policieswar and the destruction of living
standardsenjoy no significant popular support. With
millions of workers and students now moving into political life,
the financial oligarchy can no longer rule by the old methods.
Democracy must go.
Mackaman concluded: Working people and students require
their own tool to fight for political powerthat is, their
own political party. What is required is the building of a political
party of the international working class. We have stood in this
election to help lay the groundwork for this necessary task, as
well as to warn working and young people of the dangers that await
them after November 2.
Jerry White also addressed the attack on the right to vote.
He said that the same methods used by the Democratic Party in
an attempt to keep the SEP off the ballot in Champaign-Urbana
were being used nationwide in an effort to block hundreds of thousands
of newly registered voters from casting their votes on Election
Day.
He explained how the Republican Party has responded to the
groundswell of newly registered voters by threatening to send
gangs of poll watchers to voting locations to challenge
their right to vote. They seek to disrupt and delay the
voting process, or create sufficient havoc and even violence to
throw the whole election into question.
White concluded, Democracy is not compatible with a society
so polarized by social inequality. Working people want health
care, they want jobs at decent wages, they want peace. But the
ruling elite needs war and tax cuts.
The defense of democracy is bound up with the political
struggle of the working class. This is not simply a defensive
struggle, but an offensive struggle to democratize all aspects
of society.
David North, the final speaker, focused on the acute social
polarization of American society that underlies the political
tension reflected in the elections. He noted that the conflicting
social interests and contradictions in the US were concealed by
the media and both major parties, and found, by and large, no
clear expression in the political consciousness of broad sections
of working people. Indeed, the decades-long suppression of class
questions had led to considerable political confusion.
What accounts for the huge tension in this election?
he asked. If you look at the programs of the two parties,
there is virtually no difference, on either domestic or international
policy.
Bush and the Republicans are making cynical appeals to fear,
he said. In the guise of the war on terrorism
they are waging a war on democratic rights. The electorate is
polarized, but it is not too sure what its polarized about.
North said there have never been such levels of wealth accumulated
in the hands of a very small stratum of the population. But
the ruling class cant go to the working class and say what
they really want: more wealth, destruction of social programs,
imperialist military conquest.
Utilizing religion, the war on terror and talk
of the wars of the twenty-first century, the ruling
elite seeks to create a false national unity, when, in fact, US
society has never been so polarized.
Democracy cannot be reconciled with such massive accumulations
of wealth, North concluded. The working class is politically
handicapped. What is needed is the political organization of the
common struggles of working people throughout the world.
In the discussion following the reports, one student said that
he came from Galesburg, Illinois, where Maytag was shutting down
its refrigerator factory and moving operations to Mexico. He asked
what could be done to fight such moves.
Jerry White said the conception that a national solution could
be found to the transfer of jobs to low-wage countries was belied
by the global mobility of capitalist production. He said the trade
unions nationalist strategy had led to a disaster, and that
the only solution was to unify workers on an international basis.
David North added, Who owns these corporations? How are
these resources used? How is it that vast sums of money are squandered
on the military industrial complex? Workers needed to unite
to fight the common capitalist enemy in their respective countries.
A student asked what the attitude of the SEP would be, were
it to become a large party, toward the right to vote and ballot
access. The panel responded that the SEP was not in favor of any
type of voter suppression, and would defend anyones right
to run for office.
As the meeting wound up, discussion continued informally and
a number of students took copies of the SEP 2004 Election Platform
to distribute on campus and at polling locations on Election Day.
See Also:
On eve of 2004 election: US faces unprecedented
social conflict: Statement of the Socialist Equality Party
[1 November 2004]
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