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SEP congressional candidate addresses workers, youth in Michigan
By Rick Kelly
27 October 2004
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Jerome White, the Socialist Equality Party candidate for Congress
from Michigans 15th Congressional District, has campaigned
against the Iraq war and for a socialist alternative to the two-party
system in Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti, Inkster, Monroe and several other
cities in Detroits western and southern suburbs.
White and his supporters won the right to be on the ballot
as an independent candidate in the November 2 election by collecting
the names of thousands of registered voters on
nominating petitions.
The SEP has held public meetings at Monroe Community College
and the University of Michigans main campus in Ann Arbor.
White has been interviewed by the Monroe Evening News,
the Henry Ford Community College student newspaper, the Mirror,
and the student-run radio station at the University of Michigan-Dearborn.
His supporters have widely distributed SEP election platforms
to workers and college students in the district.
SEP campaigners have won significant support in working class
neighborhoods, such as Inkster and Ypsilanti. These and other
cities and towns in Michigan have been devastated by the ongoing
destruction of decent-paying jobs, particularly in the industrial
sector. Some 200,000 industrial jobs in the state have vanished
since the election of Bush, and the assault on jobs has been accompanied
by an attack on pensions, health care benefits and education.
In all of his appearances, White has explained that the launching
of an illegal war in Iraq exposed the crisis of American democracy.
There was no serious opposition to the war within the Democratic
Party or the media, both of which promoted the Bush administrations
lies about weapons of mass destruction and Iraq-Al Qaeda ties,
legitimized the so-called war on terror, and spread
the myth that the invasion and occupation represented the liberation
of the country and a struggle for democracy in the
Middle East.
Behind this ruling class consensus were economic imperatives,
beginning with the drive by the US to establish unchallenged domination
over the oil reserves of the Middle East. The SEP alone, he said,
called for the immediate withdrawal of US troops, the prosecution
for war crimes of all those who plotted and launched the war,
and the payment of compensation to the people of Iraq, as well
as to the families of US soldiers killed or wounded.
Of particular concern at the University of Michigan-Dearborn
and Henry Ford Community College, which have substantial numbers
of students of Middle Eastern descent, were the repressive measures
carried out against immigrants following the September 11, 2001,
attacks. In his interviews with the student newspaper and radio
station, White denounced the US Patriot Act and the scapegoating
of Arab workers and students. These measures, he said, were ultimately
aimed at crushing political opposition to the war and establishing
the framework for authoritarian rule.
At a campaign meeting held October 24 at the Ann Arbor campus
of the University of Michigan, White told the audience that the
November election would mark a turning point in US politics, irrespective
of whether Bush or Kerry was elected. Although tens of millions
will go to the polls to defeat Bush and put an end to the war
in Iraq, the reality is that Kerry is committed not only to continue
the US occupation, but to intensify the bloody suppression of
the Iraqi people.
The SEP candidate noted that Kerry had said he would fight
the war against terrorism with the same energy...I
put into going after the Viet Cong and trying to win for our country.
With this statement, White said, Kerry repudiated the one
honorable chapter in his lifehis opposition to the Vietnam
War and his acknowledgement that it was the Vietnamese, not the
Americans, who were fighting for their country.
The Democratic candidate was preparing the justification for future
wars against Iran, North Korea and other countries.
In addition to the thousands of Iraqis who had been killed,
White said, more than 1,100 US soldiers had died in Iraq, including
30 from Michigan alone. He said it was worthwhile to look who
was dying. Those from the 15th Congressional District included:
* Marine Pfc. Juan Garza, 20, of Temperance, who was killed
by sniper fire April 8, 2003. Garza graduated from Summerfield
High School in 2002 and was married the day after Christmas of
that year.
* Army Pfc. Holly J. McGeogh, a 19-year-old from Taylor, who
was among three soldiers killed when a homemade bomb exploded
Jan 31, 2004, as her convoy drove along a road in Kirkuk.
* Army Spc. Donald R. McCune, 20, of Ypsilanti, who died August
5, 2004, at a military hospital in Germany of injuries he suffered
when an explosive device detonated near his patrol in Balad.
The dead from Michigan, White said, come
from working class towns like Flint, Port Huron, Detroit, Lansing
and Lincoln Park. They joined the military to get access to education
or a steady job, starting at the monthly pay of $1,179. A growing
number of US soldiers are single parents and the sole providers
for their children.
White concluded by saying opposition to the worsening situation
confronting the working class, including the human and financial
sacrifices being demanded for the war in Iraq and future wars,
would lead to a collision between the working class and
whatever administration takes office after the election.
The purpose of the SEP election campaign was to outline the political
program working people required to conduct the struggle against
war, poverty, unemployment and repression.
Also speaking at the meeting was David North, chairman of the
World Socialist Web Site international editorial board
and national chairman of the SEP; Jim Lawrence, the SEPs
vice presidential candidate; Tom Mackaman, SEP candidate for state
legislature from the 103rd District in Illinois; and WSWS journalist
Patrick Martin.
Mackaman spoke of the anti-democratic attempt by the Democratic
Party to exclude him from the ballotan attempt that aroused
powerful opposition not only in the US, but internationally, and
was eventually defeated.
Patrick Martin highlighted the moves by the Republican Party
to send thousands of their operatives into heavily Democratic
working class and minority areas on election day to challenge
the right of citizens to vote. This brazen attack on voting rights
was another expression of the breakdown of American democracy,
Martin explained. Underlying the political crisis was the increasingly
stark concentration of wealth in the hands of a financial oligarchy,
and the resulting growth of social inequality.
Jim Lawrence, a retired General Motors worker from Dayton,
Ohio, discussed the significance of GMs plans to slash thousands
of jobs in both Europe and the USincluding 900 jobs at a
GM plant in nearby Pontiac. This attack, the vice-presidential
candidate said, was aimed at driving down the living standards
of auto workers in Germany and the rest of Europe, just as the
auto companies had for decades attacked the jobs, wages and conditions
of American workers. The only way forward was for the working
class to launch an internationally unified struggle against the
profit system, he stressed.
David North critically assessed the claim often advanced by
those in the anybody but Bush camp, including the
Nation magazine, that it was necessary to elect Kerry in
order to prevent the destruction of democracy. This perspective,
he argued, was based on a false conception of the roots of the
current crisis and an underestimation of its deep and systemic
character.
In the 1930s, North explained, when fascism threatened liberal
democracies around the world, many left-wing liberals, together
with the Stalinist parties that were allied to the bureaucratic
regime in Moscow, argued that democracy could be defended only
on the basis of a popular frontthat is, a broad,
cross-class alliance of all those who opposed fascism. The theory
of popular frontism had disastrous consequences in many countries,
such as Spain and France, because the working class was blocked
from advancing its own independent perspective.
Similarly, in 2004, North said, the American working class
could not defend its democratic rights through any kind of bloc
with the Democratic Party. Workers had to fight both bourgeois
parties. Only through the development of its own independent perspective,
based on the struggle for socialism, could the working class secure
its democratic rights.
See Also:
The SEP 2004 Election Website
Bush-Kerry debate: two candidates committed
to war
[1 October 2004]
Socialist Equality Party files
petitions for Michigan congressional candidate
[16 July 2004]
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