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SEP campaign in California turns in remaining signatures for
ballot status
By Joe Kay
12 August 2006
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On Friday, John Burton, the Socialist Equality Party (SEP)
candidate for US Congress in Californias 29th District,
turned in the last of the signatures gathered to place him on
the ballot as an independent candidate. August 11 was the deadline
for submitting the 8,442 signatures required to gain ballot status.
Burton handed in 466 petition sheets with approximately 4,500
signatures. Including the signatures already submitted in July816
sheets with 7,587 signaturessupporters of the SEP gathered
a total of more than 12,000 signatures during the 15-week period
that began on April 28.

The number of signatures our campaign has been able to
gather under difficult circumstances is truly extraordinary,
Burton said. I would like to thank the individuals who dedicated
so much time to petitioning and aiding the campaign in other ways.
The thousands of signatures demonstrate the enormous discontent
for government policy within broad sections of the population.
Signers responded particularly strongly to the SEPs call
for an immediate end to the US occupation of Iraq and, during
the final weeks of the campaign, to the SEPs opposition
to the US-Israeli assault on Lebanon.
Burton said that it is particularly noteworthy that each signer
received a leaflet with the slogan Put a socialist candidate
on the ballot. Burton added, We did not run simply
on the basis of opposition to the occupation of Iraq, but explained
that opposition to war can succeed only as part of a broader movement
against the social system that created it. Throughout the campaign,
we fought to explain that the only way forward is through a break
with the Democratic Party and the building of a independent party
of the working class, based on a socialist perspective.
The campaign highlighted the complicity of the Democratic Party
in supporting the occupation of Iraq, the attack on democratic
rights and the growth of social inequality. The position of the
Democrats is clearly expressed in the actions of the incumbent
in the 29th District, Adam Schiff, who was a co-author of the
Patriot Act and played a critical role in passing the October
2002 authorization to use military force against Iraq.
In gathering signatures, SEP supporters spoke to tens of thousands
of people and distributed close to 100,000 leaflets in English
and Spanish. By the end of the campaign, many residents had met
and spoken to petitioners multiple times, and expressed strong
support for the SEP campaign. Some helped to gather signatures
themselves.
The effort to place Burtons name on the ballot as an
independent candidate is not over. On Tuesday, the campaign received
notification by Los Angeles County Registrars Office that
of the nearly 7,600 signatures turned in by July 25, only 4,001
were determined valid. According to the registrars office,
some who signed were registered to vote in a different congressional
district, while others were determined to be not registered,
including names that were illegible. Several hundred were invalidated
because the signers were registered to vote in the district, but
put down an address that differed from the address on file.
The SEP expects that the final figure of valid signatures given
by the LA County Registrars Office may be fewer than the
8,442 signatures required. In this event, the campaign will seek
to recover as many signatures as possible through independent
checks of those ruled invalid.
In addition to giving expression to the enormous opposition
that exists within the United States to the policies of the political
establishment, the SEP campaign also directly confronted the various
mechanisms set up in an attempt to ensure that this opposition
does not find expression through the election process. The hurdles
put in place to prevent independent or third-party candidates
from achieving ballot status are particularly onerous in California.
The two parties of big business have erected a fortressthe
ballot access lawsto protect their political monopoly,
candidate Burton stated. Even calling them ballot access
laws is misleading, since they are designed not to provide access,
but to block it. Prima facie evidence for this, Burton noted,
is the fact that in the past 30 years only two independent candidates
have qualified for ballot status in Los Angeles County. One of
these was a representative of the Workers League, the predecessor
of the SEP.
The number of signatures required for independent candidates
in California is among the highest in the country. In almost every
state in the country, the number of signatures gathered by the
SEP in California would easily exceed the number required to get
ballot status. This is true even for many states with very restrictive
ballot laws.
The districts of Los Angeles County are highly gerrymandered,
having been carved up to ensure safe seats for one
or the other of the two big-business parties. As a result, communities
are split up and boundaries are highly irregular, making petitioning
for signatures within a particular congressional district much
more difficult. For this reason, many individuals who signed the
SEP petition are registered to vote outside of the district.
The requirement that signers put down the address at which
they are registered to vote is another burden. The requirement
has the effect of discriminating against students, poorer workers
and others who move frequently.
In Los Angeles, one of the most significant barriers is the
fact that a very high proportion of potential residents could
not sign the petition because they are not US citizens and therefore
cannot vote. The SEP campaign has made the demand for full rights
for all immigrants one of its central issues.
Whatever the results of the ballot fight, the SEP plans on
waging an aggressive campaign during the coming months to present
its perspective to residents in the district and throughout Southern
California. Through this petition drive, Burton said,
we have made enormous strides. We have laid the foundations
for the development of a genuinely independent and socialist political
movement in this area, which will form an important component
of the SEPs campaign on a national and international level.
To help in the SEP campaign, click
here.
To donate to the SEP, click
here.
See Also:
SEP California campaign: Elections board
declares nearly one half of signatures invalid
[9 August 2006]
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