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SEP presidential candidate addresses London meeting
By our correspondent
19 October 2004
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On October 16, Bill Van Auken, the presidential candidate of
the Socialist Equality Party in the US, addressed a meeting in
London held by the SEP of Britain and the World Socialist Web
Site.
Van Auken explained that the central aim of the SEPs
campaign was to build a new socialist leadership for the American
and international working class. He told the audience, For
us, the most important task of our campaign is to forge the unity
of the American working class with workers in Britain and all
over the world, and to bring the force of the international working
class to bear on the political situation in the US itself.

He continued, Our intervention in the 2004 election is
not a matter of how many votes we can get, but how we can fight
for a program that advances the class consciousness and political
independence of the working class. This cannot be done outside
of a genuinely internationalist perspective and practice.
Van Auken said the election took place against the backdrop
of the ongoing war in Iraq. The mass killings and immense
human suffering inflicted upon the Iraqi people, however, merit
not a mention in the debates between the two big business candidates.
He stressed that in opposing the war, the SEP was fighting
for the working class to break from the two-party system in the
US, and was opposing the camp of Anybody but Bushthe
slogan under which various left groups subordinate
themselves to the Democrats and Kerry.
Van Auken said that the US presidential elections, no matter
who won, would only exacerbate the crisis facing the ruling classnot
just in America, but all over the worldbecause neither candidate
offered an alternative to war and social impoverishment.
Introducing Van Auken, SEP National Secretary Chris Marsden
emphasised that the presidential campaign had been characterised
by lies on the part of the candidates of both major parties, aided
by a pliant media that virtually ignored the atrocities being
committed each day in Iraq by US and British forces, and the deteriorating
social conditions facing the majority of US workers.
If all that Van Auken did was to tell the truth about what
was going on in the US, that would be enough to make his appearance
a vital contribution. But the SEP and the World Socialist Web
Site were aiming to do something far more fundamentalto
politically mobilise the American working class and forge its
unity with workers in Britain, Europe and all over the world.
In a lively and extensive discussion, audience members asked
questions on the elections impact on the British government
of Prime Minister Tony Blair; on how the SEP could broaden the
audience for Marxist politics, including among those without access
to the internet; on the role of workers from Latin America in
the political life of the US; and on the situation in Iraq. A
collection raised more than £500.
See Also:
SEP to hold public meetings in final weeks
of 2004 US election campaign
[16 October 2004]
WSWS Chairman David North denounces Iraq
war at Dublin debate
[15 October 2004]
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