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SEP presidential candidate Bill Van Auken speaks in New York
By our reporter
2 November 2004
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Socialist Equality Party presidential candidate Bill Van Auken
spoke at a campaign meeting in New York City on October 30, just
a few days after returning from an international tour that took
him to London and Sri Lanka.
The meeting was attended by people from New Jersey and Connecticut,
as well as New York. Those in attendance included supporters of
the SEP, readers of the World Socialist Web Site, and students
and young people met in the course of the election campaign.
Van Auken and vice presidential candidate Jim Lawrence are
on the ballot in New Jersey, and are urging supporters in New
York to cast write-in votes.
The first speaker at the meeting was Peter Daniels of the WSWS
editorial board. Daniels spoke about the crisis of American capitalism
reflected in the bitter political contest and the uncertainty
over the outcome of the voting on November 2.
It is becoming increasingly likely, he said, that
Election Day may come and go without anything being settled. No
clear outcome may be known, with the determination being made
once again by the courts. The only thing that can be stated with
certainty is that the next occupant of the White House, whether
Bush or Kerry, will be forced to confront the growing quagmire
in Iraq and a deepening economic and political crisis at home
and abroad.
Daniels explained that the political polarization that characterizes
the presidential race is only a pale and distorted reflection
of the social polarization within American society. The
Republicans are spearheading the program of domestic and international
reaction, the attempt to turn the clock back a century and more
on living standards and democratic rights, to rip up what remains
of the New Deal reforms, while turning toward the recolonization
of large sections of the globe. The Democrats, however, have demonstrated
over and over their essential agreement with these policies of
class war against the international working class...
Kerrys criticisms of the Bush Administrations
domestic policies mirror the criticisms over Iraq. He speaks for
that section of the ruling elite concerned that the Republicans
policies and methods risk provoking social and political upheaval.
But there are no differences on fundamental aims.
The main speaker at the meeting, Bill Van Auken, pointed out
that the entire 2004 election campaign has been dominated by an
appeal to fear by both the Democrats and Republicans, with both
parties attempting to terrorize the American people with
the invocation of a supposedly omnipresent threat of terrorism.
He continued: What is behind the reliance of both sides
on fear campaigns and the endless invocation of the never-ending
war on terror? In the wake of the Soviet Unions dissolution,
the war against terrorism has come to play the role previously
reserved for anti-communism as the foundation of American bourgeois
politics.
It is a necessarythough fraudulentideological
glue that is used in an attempt to justify all actions both foreign
and domestic taken by Americas ruling elite, and to suppress
opposition from within. In a country so riven with class contradictions
and so polarized between wealth and poverty, the specter of an
external enemy bent upon the countrys destruction has become
indispensable. It serves to prevent any genuine discussion on
the role played by American imperialism abroad and capitalisms
impact on the lives of hundreds of millions of working people
within the United States itself.
This reliance upon fear as the central ingredient of
capitalist politics in America is the hallmark of a society that
is in deep crisis and of a ruling establishment that can offer
no way out.
Van Auken pointed out that the election is overshadowed by
the war in Iraq and dominated by international events. He condemned
the continuing bombardment of cities like Fallujah, warning that
Washington is preparing a bloody ground offensive once the election
is over, delaying this carnage for fear that substantial US casualties
could hurt Bush at the polls.
The candidate cited two recent reports spelling out the scale
of the catastrophe that the US intervention has inflicted upon
the Iraqi people. The first, issued by Johns Hopkins University,
indicated that the invasion and occupation have resulted in an
additional 100,000 violent deaths in Iraq, and that US liberation
has meant that Iraqis are 58 times more likely to be killed than
they were before the invasion.
The other report, released by the United Nations, showed that
in the period following the US invasion, Iraq has registered the
largest increase in child mortality of any nation in the world,
with over one in ten children dying before they reach the age
of five. The child death rate now, he said, has climbed
back to the highest levels reached under the punishing economic
sanctions imposed by the Western powers, when UN officials lodged
protests describing the policy towards Iraq as genocidal.
Van Auken cited the overwhelming support the SEP has received
in campaigning on its demand for the immediate and unconditional
withdrawal of all US troops from Iraq. He noted the deep sense
of frustration that pervades the American electorate over the
two-party systems failure to reflect either this vast opposition
to the war or the needs and demands of ordinary working people.
This frustration, Van Auken explained, the
sense that the old political forms offer no means whatsoever to
address the problems confronting working people, is not merely
an American phenomenon.
He reported on the speaking tour he had conducted in Britain
and Sri Lanka the previous week. For those who view politics
from the standpoint of electoral calculations, the decision to
send a presidential candidate overseas in the weeks directly preceding
the election no doubt seems peculiar.
But, as Trotsky noted at time of the founding of the
Fourth International, We are not a party like other parties.
Elections for us are a means, not an end in themselves. We are
not focused on the ballot boxes on November 2, but on preparing
a revolutionary movement capable of providing leadership to the
working class in the face of the crises that will follow this
election.
Our campaign begins from the understanding that the problems
confronting working people in Britain, Sri Lanka, the United States
and every other corner of the globe can be resolved only through
the building of a genuinely worldwide movement against imperialism
based on the perspective of international socialism.
The common economic and social problems facing workers in every
country in a globally integrated economy, Van Auken said, are
accompanied by similar political problems. In Britain, where
opposition to the Iraq war is even more intense than in the US,
the working class is saddled with a Labour government that is
committed to this war, and whose policies are indistinguishable
from those of the Tory Party.
The Labour government has taken up where the Tories left
off after the savage attacks on the miners and other sections
of the working class inaugurated under the government of Margaret
Thatcher in the 1980s. What alternative is there for the working
class under these conditions? The radical protesters demand that
Blair resign, but they have no proposal on who or what should
take his place. There is no answer outside of the building of
a new revolutionary party.
In Sri Lanka, similar questions are posed, Van Auken said.
He traced the political developments on the island from the great
betrayal of the former Trotskyist party, the Lanka Sama
Samaja Party, which in 1964 joined a bourgeois government, through
to the growth of chauvinist and national separatist movements
and the onset of civil war.
He pointed out that over the past three decades, some 140,000
people have been killed, noting that an equivalent death toll
in the US would be over 2 million.
Today, these processes have reached a point of complete
impasse, he said. The Sri Lankan government is confronting
mounting pressure from the native and international bourgeoisie
to bring the civil war to an end. Decades of fighting have served
as an impediment to the penetration of foreign capital and the
integration of the island into the global capitalist economy.
Having for decades utilized communal politics as the
basis of its rule, the Sri Lankan bourgeoisie has been thrown
into immense crisis by this demand.
Van Auken reported on the two meetings organized by the Socialist
Equality Party of Sri Lanka the previous week, at which he spoke
on the US elections and the war in Iraq. These meetings
were inspiring, he said. Under conditions in which
every other political organization on the island bases itself
on ethnic chauvinism, the Sri Lankan SEP brought together Tamil
and Sinhalese workers and youth to discuss the American election,
the war, and the intervention of the SEP in the US.
A delegation traveled 14 hours from Jaffna in the north,
past government roadblocks and through LTTE-controlled (Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam, the Tamil separatist organization) territory.
Tamil workers came from the plantations, joining Sinhalese students,
garment workers and others.
If anyone here thinks this speech is long, you should
try sitting through it as it is translated consecutively into
two other languages. This was not only a practical, but a political
necessity, given the discrimination against the Tamil language
that has been the hallmark of Sinhalese chauvinism for the last
half-century. But it did mean turning a 45 minute speech into
a three hour presentation.
Nevertheless, the audience remained extremely attentive.
The sections of my report dealing with social polarization and
the assault on living standards in the US, as well as the sweeping
attacks on democratic rights that have taken place, were followed
with intense interest. Many said afterwards that they had never
realized that there existed in the US a working class that confronted
problems similar to their own.
In a country where common people have suffered so intensely
from ethnic and national divisions, the partys essential
perspective of internationalism struck a very powerful chord.
One Tamil woman approached me after the second meeting and said,
simply, This is what we need here, internationalism.
The question posed to peoples around the globe is: what
is to be done about US imperialism, with its policy of aggressive
war, its disdain for any restraints of international law or global
public opinion, and its vastly destructive economic policies?
Under conditions in which imperialism and colonialism
are resurgent, all of the old so-called anti-imperialist forces
of yesteryear are either defunct or prostrate. The so-called socialist
bloc touted by supporters of Stalinism has been liquidated by
the Stalinists themselves, as they sought to preserve their privileges
and protect themselves from the working class by restoring capitalism.
Bourgeois nationalism has failed to offer a way forward
not only in Sri Lanka, but all over the former colonial world.
Forces such as Castroism and guerrillaism, promoted by the Pabloite
revisionists in the 1960s as the new road to socialism, have likewise
proven a dead end.
There is no alternative, the candidate explained, outside of
the building of a new party capable of uniting the working class
internationally in the struggle for socialism.
Van Aukens speech was followed by a lengthy and lively
discussion. Among the issues raised was the historical role of
third-party movements in American politics, the prospect of civil
war in Iraq should the US withdraw its forces, the danger of authoritarian
forms of rule in the US, the relationship between the World
Socialist Web Site and the broader opposition to the Iraq
war, and the role of the middle class left in seeking
to channel this opposition into support for the Democratic Party.
See Also:
The SEP 2004 Election Website
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2004 US elections
[20 September 2004]
On eve of 2004 election: US faces unprecedented
social conflict
[1 November 2004]
US SEP presidential candidate
addresses Sri Lanka meetings
"Our campaign fights to unify workers internationally"
[29 October 2004]
SEP presidential candidate
Bill Van Auken speaks to South Asian press in Sri Lanka
[21 October 2004]
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