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SEP obtains Minnesota ballot status for presidential candidates
By Eric Anderson
16 September 2004
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Minnesotas Office of Secretary of State has determined
that the Socialist Equality Party has more than met the minimum
petition requirement of 2,000 signatures to place our candidates,
Bill Van Auken and Jim Lawrence, on the ballot for the November
2 presidential elections. On Monday, September 13, one day before
the deadline for submission of petitions, the Elections Division
office determined that the 2,404 signatures obtained by SEP petitioners
qualified Van Auken and Lawrence to appear on the Minnesota ballot.
The SEPs campaign received an important response from
workers, students and professionals in Minnesota who have been
subjected to a strong dose of the anybody but Bush
tactic employed by the Democratic Party (known in Minnesota as
the DFL or Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party), which seeks to browbeat
workers into voting for John Kerry as the lesser of two evils.
Throughout much of the 20th century the DFL dominated the states
politics through a limited liberal reform policy that made concessions
to workers, farmers and sections of the urban middle class. But
the DFL has followed in the footsteps of the rest of the Democratic
Party establishment and subordinated the living standards of Minnesota
workers to the profit requirements of the global economy and transnational
corporations. So much so, that the DFLs decline has put
the states 10 electoral votes up for grabs in the presidential
race. Minnesota, the only state carried by Walter Mondale in his
landslide loss to Ronald Reagan in 1984, is now considered a battleground
state, closely contested between Kerry and Bush.
A number of working people eagerly signed the SEP petition
on the basis of their solidarity with the ideals of socialism.
Minnesota has a long tradition of socialist political activity
and working class radicalism, going back to the 1934 general strike
in Minneapolis led by the Trotskyists of the Communist League
of America, one of the forerunners of todays SEP.
Others signed the petition out of a deep disgust with both
candidates nominated by the Republican and Democratic parties.
Among the signers were also Kucinich volunteers who were appalled
at the caving in of Kucinich delegates from Minnesota to the Democratic
Party convention when they failed to mount a floor fight on any
issues, particularly the war in Iraq.
A considerable number of those who signed initially resisted
out of fear that to allow other candidates on the ballot would
take votes away from Kerry. But the anybody but Bush
mentality often crumbled when SEP petitioners pointed out the
bankruptcy of a nationalist perspective of liberal reform, given
the evolution of the global economy, and counterposed the necessity
of establishing the political independence of the working class
based on a socialist and internationalist perspective.
A significant number of those who signed were young workers
and students who were motivated by opposition to the war in Iraq
and hostility to the prowar stance of both Kerry and Bush.
Some hard-core DFLers who refused to sign the petition expressed
open support for US imperialism and an utter indifference to the
plight of the Iraqi people suffering under US occupation. When
a petitioner commented to one of them that if Kerry were elected
it would result in the continuing death of Iraqis, not to mention
US troops, the Democrat Party loyalist responded, I would
rather have Iraqis die under Kerry than have Iraqis die under
Bush.
Another Kerry supporter who refused to sign the petition declared
she had a feminist perspective as opposed to the SEPs socialist
perspective. When the SEP petitioner asked, What about extending
your feminist perspective to the women of Iraq, she responded,
I dont care about Iraqi women.
Shortly after the SEP submitted its signatures to the Elections
Division, supporters of Ralph Nader submitted 4,781 signatures,
with the expectation that he will be challenged by the Democratic
Party. DFL party chairman Mike Erlandson indicated that he might
review Naders signatures. Jenna Norwood of StopNader.com,
a branch of the political action committee Democratic Action Team,
told Minnesota Public Radio, As soon as he turns his petitions
in, well start reviewing them to make sure theyre
legitimate. And well do in Minnesota what weve done
in other states.
See Also:
The filthy underside of American "democracy":
How Ohio officials have conspired against the SEP and its supporters
[15 September 2004]
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