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WSWS : News
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State of Ohio seeks to deny ballot status for SEP presidential
ticket
By the Editorial Board
13 September 2004
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In a flagrant attack on the democratic rights of the Socialist
Equality Party, its candidates and supporters, a spokesman for
the Ohio Board of Elections told the SEP September 9 that county
registrars had disqualified more than half the signatures on the
petition filed last month to place Bill Van Auken and Jim Lawrence
on the ballot for president and vice president.
The SEP filed nearly 8,000 signatures on August 18, well above
the 5,000 required by state law to win ballot status for an independent
presidential ticket in Ohio. Those signatures were distributed
to county officials to be checked by September 7. The county registrars
eliminated more than 4,000 signatures, reporting figures back
to the state which totaled only 3,811 valid signatures.
The Ohio Board of Elections made no effort to inform the SEP
or its candidates that it intended to deny ballot status to Bill
Van Auken and Jim Lawrence. The SEP initiated the phone call September
9, the day after the state panel made its initial determination
of ballot status.
The SEP now has six daysfrom the time of notification
until a deadline of 5 p.m. on September 15to double-check
the challenged signatures and seek to validate enough of them
to meet the requirement of 5,000. This procedure itself makes
a mockery of democracy, since the state and local authorities
in Ohio, with hundreds of paid employees, had 16 days to examine
and challenge signatures, while the SEP has only six days, with
only its own resources, to counter the challenge.
SEP supporters were required to request and pay for photocopies
of all the petitions from Columbus, as well as to request CDs
containing the lists of registered voters from the dozens of counties
where signatures were collected. They then had to begin the painstaking
task of comparing the disputed signatures with the thousands of
names contained in these databases.
The Ohio SEP campaign won a strong response in working class
neighborhoods of Cleveland, Columbus, Toledo, Dayton, Cincinnati
and Warren, as well as at college campuses. There was a particularly
strong response to the SEPs call for an immediate and unconditional
withdrawal of troops from Iraq.
The attempt of the Ohio authorities to keep the SEPs
presidential candidates off the ballot comes on the heels of their
effort to exclude David Lawrence, the SEPs candidate for
Congress in Ohios 1st Congressional District, from the ballot.
In April and May, Lawrence and supporters gathered the signatures
of 2,660 voters from the district on nominating petitions to place
his name on the ballot, far more than the required number.
However, the state refused to accept the signatures, citing
a March 1 deadline. A US district court and the Sixth Circuit
Court of Appeals have upheld the arbitrary filing deadline, nearly
six months earlier than the deadline for presidential candidates.
This court-sanctioned blow against democratic rights has encouraged
state officials to go further, attempting to deny ballot status
to the SEPs presidential candidates, although there was
no question of missing deadlines or other legal technicalities.
Initial reviews of the challenged signatures demonstrate the
gross abuse of power and political bias involved in this attempt
to deny the SEP ballot status. In Cuyahoga County, which includes
Cleveland, at least 40 percent of the challenges are bogusthe
rejected signatures are either clearly valid on their face, or
had minor errors in the street addresses (transposed digits, for
instance), or were block-printed by the signers in an effort to
be legible.
Statewide, hundreds of signatures were marked not genuine
because of such block-printing. Many more were marked illegible
even though the addresses are clearly marked and state law requires
that local registrars use the address to attempt to decipher the
name of the voter. Another large number of rejected signatures
are those of voters who have moved and not yet re-registered at
their new addresses. All these signatures represent voters who
agreed to sign the petition to place Bill Van Auken and Jim Lawrence
on the ballot, and whose wishes are being denied by the state
and local governments on the basis of arbitrary technicalities
or outright fraud.
A preliminary review of the rejected signatures gives a clear
indication of political bias. In Franklin County, which includes
Columbus, and in the dozens of counties which comprise the rural
and small-town portion of the state, more than 60 percent of the
SEP signatures have been found to be valid. In five other urban
countiesCuyahoga (Cleveland), Lucas (Toledo), Montgomery
(Dayton), Hamilton (Cincinnati) and Trumbull (Warren)the
rate of valid signatures supposedly drops to as low as 40 percent.
This disparity cannot be explained by any difference in registration
figures. The statewide registration rate is well over 60 percent,
and in urban areas, even the poorest, more than half the adult
population is registered to vote. The reason for the difference
is apparent: Columbus and rural Ohio are administered by local
officials loyal to the Republican Party; the other five large
urban counties are heavily industrialized areas, long dominated
by the Democratic Party through its alliance with the trade union
bureaucracy.
Both the Republicans and the Democrats are implacably hostile
to socialism and to the democratic rights of socialist and working
class parties. But the Democrats are undoubtedly more concerned
about the immediate impact on their political fortunes from the
presence of socialist candidates on the ballotand more generally,
over the growth of socialist political influence in the working
class and among young people.
The claim that the SEP did not file enough signatures to qualify
for ballot status is absurd on its face. A random sample of state
residents would find 70 percent registered to vote. Yet state
and local officials claim that the SEP, in a petition drive in
which each signer was asked beforehand whether they were registered
to vote, produced a registration rate of barely 45 percent.
The attempt to deny the SEP candidates ballot status flies
in the face of past state history. The predecessor of the SEP,
the Workers League, placed its presidential candidate on the ballot
in 1984 and 1988, each time submitting about the same number of
signatures as the SEP did in 2004. The percentage of state residents
registered to vote has actually increased since the 1980s, but
nonetheless, the SEP petition supposedly fell short.
The attack on the SEP in Ohio is part of a national pattern
in which the Democratic Party has sought to exclude any third-party
campaign that might attract working-class voters and those opposed
to the war policies espoused by both Bush and the Democrats. The
Democrats have successfully denied ballot status to independent
presidential candidate Ralph Nader in nearly a dozen statesmost
recently in Virginia and Florida.
Ohio is one of the most critical and hotly-contested states
if the 2004 presidential contest remains close. A poll released
Sunday by the Columbus Dispatch found 46 percent for Bush,
46 percent for Kerry and 2 percent for Nader. The outcome of the
election could thus be determined by a few thousand or even a
few hundred votes in Ohio.
With this in mind, the Democratic Party machine launched an
all-out effort to deny Nader ballot status in Ohio. Naders
supporters filed 14,573 signatures, nearly triple the 5,000 required.
County registrars eliminated more than 8,000 of these signatures
as invalid, but this still left 6,464 marked valid, and the Ohio
election board accordingly declared that Naders name would
appear on the ballot.
In that context, the grotesque distortions revealed in the
disqualification of SEP petition signatures have a logical political
motive: if the Democrats intended to claim that Nader, with nearly
15,000 signatures, failed to meet the 5,000 requirement, they
could hardly permit the SEP, with 8,000 signatures, to obtain
ballot status for its candidates.
The SEP presidential campaign is already certified in four
states: New Jersey, Colorado, Iowa and Washington. SEP supporters
plan to submit petitions for the presidential ballot in Minnesota
by the September 14 deadline. They have already collected well
over the 2,000 signatures required in that state. Three SEP congressional
and legislative candidates are on the ballot in Maine, Michigan
and Illinois.
At the center of the SEP campaign is the struggle to build
an independent mass political movement of the working class. We
tell working people the truth: American democracy is a fraud.
The purpose of the myriad rules and procedures that govern the
US electoral process is to exclude and disenfranchise millions
of people. The right to voteitself frequently denied to
minority workers and the poormeans nothing when the ruling
elite controls the process of candidate selection and allows only
its pre-approved nominees to appear on the ballot where voters
make their free choice.
The SEP calls on all readers of the WSWS and all supporters
to demand that the Ohio Board of Elections halt its attack on
our democratic rights and place Bill Van Auken and Jim Lawrence
on the statewide ballot. Send e-mail messages of protest to:
Kenneth Blackwell
Ohio Secretary of State
www.sos.state.oh.us
Please send copies to editor@wsws.org
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