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SEP meeting launches California ballot drive
By our correspondent
28 April 2006
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John Burton, the Socialist Equality Party candidate for Congress
in the 29th District of California, addressed a public meeting
in Pasadena on Wednesday. Burton spoke and answered questions
about the basic issues of his campaign.
In his remarks, Burton stressed three basic issues that will
be central to his campaign and the campaign of the SEP nationally
during the 2006 congressional elections: US militarism and the
occupation of Iraq, the attack on democratic rights, and the growth
of social inequality in the US and internationally. I see
these issues as essentially interconnected, as part of the same
basic process, Burton said, and argued that only the program
of the SEP offered a solution to these problems.
Discussing the war in Iraq, Burton pointed to a recent interview
given by US Ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalizad, to the Los
Angeles Times, in which Khalizad declared, We must perhaps
reluctantly accept that we have to help this region become a normal
region, the way we helped Europe and Asia in another era.
Burton responded, Putting aside the absurd comparison of
the bloody occupation of Iraq with the presence of US troops in
Europe following World War II, Khalizads statements are
clear: The US military, which has already begun setting up permanent
bases in Iraq, has no plans on leaving and will occupy the country
for decades.
A passage in the Times article on the interview with
Khalizad noted that the ambassador predicted that the long-term
US effort to shape the future of this region would
continue regardless of which party controlled the White House,
how many troops remained in Iraq and what tactics and strategies
are employed. Khalizad, Burton said, is here expressing
the justifiable confidence that, in the event that the Democrats
win in 2006, this my have an impact on tactics in the Iraq occupation...but
it will not effect the basic thrust of American military policy.
A basic theme of Butons remarks was that the Democratic
Party is complicit in the growth of American militarism, the attack
on democratic rights, and the growth of inequality. He emphasized
in particular the role of Adam Schiff, the Democratic incumbent
in the 29th District. He noted that Schiff voted to approve the
authorization to use military force against Iraq and that he was
adamant in promoting the lies used by the administration to justify
the war.
After explaining that the invasion of Iraq constituted a fundamental
violation of international law, Burton cited a recent comment
by Schiff that it is now conventional wisdom that Americans
do not care why we went to war in Iraq, that it is enough that
the world is better off without Saddam Hussein.
Schiff, Burton said, has good reason to want
to cut off all discussion of the motives behind the invasion of
Iraqthat it was carried out on the basis of liesbecause
he would like to avoid discussion of his own responsibility. But
we are also entitled to disagree. Yes, Mr. Schiff, it does matter
why we went to war, and I will make this issue a central component
of my campaign.
Burton also outlined the different aspects of the attack on
democratic rights in the United States, including the attempt
by the Bush administration to use the commander in chief clause
of the Constitution to justify everything from indefinite detention,
to warrantless spying on American citizen, to torture. He cited
a bill currently under discussion in Congress that would give
the CIA and the National Security Agency broad powers to arrest
people within the United States.
Schiffs record on democratic rights is not better than
his record on militarism, Burton said. Schiff voted for the Patriot
Act and later its extension, and he has introduced legislation
in Congress that would sanction the use of the term enemy
combatant to deprive people of their constitutional rights.
He recently introduced legislation that would retroactively give
sanction to the NSAs domestic spying program.
The question of democratic rights is central to my own
practice as a civil rights lawyer, Burton explained. Indeed,
it was this issue that first attracted me to the socialist movement.
Constitutional rights must be defended and extended, he said,
but this cannot be done outside of a social movement that addresses
the underlying causes of the decay of democracy in the US and
around the world.
Turning to the question of social inequality, Burton cited
several studies pointing to the enormous concentration of wealth
in the United States, giving as an example the case of Lee Raymond,
the former CEO of ExxonMobil, who, during the course of his thirteen-year
tenure as CEO, took home $686 million. He also pointed to recent
figures showing that all of the growth in income in the US is
being swallowed up by the top one percent of the population, while
the income of the vast bulk of the population is stagnating or
declining.
These concentrations of wealth, Burton explained,
are not for us a moral issue, and certainly not a question
of individual resentment. It is the social cost that these fortunes
impose on people all around the world, and the price that we as
a world society pay for this inequality that is most critical.
He argued that, on the one hand, the accumulation of wealth comes
at the expense of jobs, wages, and social programs, as well as
spending on social infrastructure and the environment.
On the other hand, the growth of an oligarchy in the US is
the driving force behind the growth of militarism and the attack
on democratic rights. It is to a small layer of very wealthy individuals
that both the Democrats and Republicans are beholden. Burton noted
that in a recent trip to Los Angeles, Hilary Clinton, a frontrunner
for the Democratic Presidential nomination in 2008, did not bother
to speak to ordinary people in the city, but instead spent her
time at a fundraiser for her Senate campaign hosted by billionaire
supermarket mogul Ron Burkle. The same basic orientation is expressed
in Schiff, Burton said, which is why he has been so unresponsive
to his own constituents on the question of militarism and the
attack on democratic rights.
After addressing these three components of his campaign, Burton
argued that the only possible solution to the crisis confronting
humankind was the development of a socialist movement of the working
class internationally. So long as a small percentage of
the population, the oligarchy, increases its control over the
giant forces of production, the corporations and the banks, it
is impossible to deal with any of the problems I have discussed,
he said. To defend democratic rights and end war, it is
necessary to confront the problem of the burgeoning American oligarchy,
but one cannot address this problem without addressing
the cause of the oligarchy-the organization of social and economic
life, the subordination of everything to the accumulation of profit
and individual wealth.
Burton concluded his remarks by stressing that the problems
he outlined were not confined to the United States. Capitalism
is a global system of exploitation, he noted, and can only
be addressed through a global movement of working people. He explained
that the SEP campaign in California and in other parts of the
United States would be directed toward the political education
of working people in order to lay the foundation for such a international
socialist movement.
Several issues were discussed during the question and answer
period that followed. One person asked Burton what was his attitude
to the question of immigration. Burton explained that the SEP
supported the democratic right of any worker to live wherever
they wanted. He argued that immigrant workers and workers born
in the United States are both exploited by the same corporations
and have identical interests. None of the problems faced by these
workers or workers of any country can be solved except through
a unified movement of working people of all countries.
Another person asked about how the SEP would address the problem
of homelessness. Burton noted that the enormous homeless population
in Los Angeles, a city that is also home to a layer of people
with extraordinary sums of wealth, is an indictment of the capitalist
system. Many of the homeless people in the city and in other parts
of the country suffer from mental illness. Burton said that the
SEP advocates a vast increase in the use of social resources to
provide health services, decent jobs and quality living conditions
for everyone.
The meeting in Pasadena was intended to launch the petition
drive to get John Burton on the ballot in California. Members
and supporters of the Socialist Equality Party and the Students
for Social Equality at UCLA will begin petitioning on April 29
and are aiming to collect 15,000 signatures by August. The SEP
appeals for the help and support of all WSWS readers in the area.
To participate in the SEP campaign in California,
click here
See Also:
SEP candidate in California: Extend full
rights to all immigrants
[5 April 2006]
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