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SEP submits petitions for US Senate candidate in New York
By a reporter
24 August 2006
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The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) submitted petitions August
22 to place its candidate for US Senate, Bill Van Auken, on the
ballot in New York. Van Auken is challenging New Yorks incumbent
Senator, the pro-war Democrat Hillary Clinton, in the November
election.
The filing of the petitions, bearing the signatures of nearly
25,000 New Yorkers, marked the culmination of an intense six-week
campaign that elicited powerful support across the state. The
final total of 24,319 signatures exceeded the states 15,000
legal minimum for placing an independent party on the ballot by
nearly 10,000.
In addition, the state law required that the SEP identify at
least 100 registered voters who had signed the petitions in each
of at least half the states 29 congressional districts.
The party also exceeded this requirement, providing such names
in 17 of these districts, stretching from New York City to Buffalo.
Van Auken turned over a two-foot-high stack of 12 volumes to
officials at the states Board of Elections in Albany. The
board will make a face check of the petitions within
two days to determine that they meet the specifications set by
law. Should the Clinton campaign machine decide to challenge the
petitionsas the Democratic Party has done in other statesit
must state its intentions within three days of the filing deadline.
Reaching these difficult goals in the narrow time frame imposed
by the states election law represents an enormous political
achievement for the SEP.
Our highly successful campaign here in New York signals
a shift in the political situation, Van Auken said. This
is clear from the immense class response to our fight to get on
the ballot on the basis of a socialist program to end the Iraq
war and battle against the attacks on democratic rights and the
deepening social inequality at home.
But equally important is the campaign itself, he
added. A number of students, workers and professionalsmany
of them relatively new to our partycarried out tireless
political work and made major personal sacrifices to mount the
sustained intervention, without which it would have been impossible
to meet the onerous ballot requirements set by the Democratic
and Republican lawmakers in Albany. This determination represents
a conscious articulation of the growing social and class tensions
emerging throughout America.
In the course of the campaign, petitioners spoke to hundreds
of thousands of New Yorkers, advancing the SEPs demand for
an immediate and unconditional withdrawal of all US troops from
Iraq, as well as the necessity for the independent political mobilization
of working people against both the Democratic and Republican parties.
The response, particularly in the working class neighborhoods
of cities like New York and Buffalo, in western New York state,
was one of intense hatred of the war and of both the Democratic
and Republican politicians who dragged the American people into
it based on lies.
At least 125 soldiers from New York have been killed in Iraq
since the start of the war in 2003.
In the course of the campaign, a mother who lost her son in
Iraq signed the petition in Queens, a borough of New York City,
declaring that something has to be done to end this war.
On the Lower East Side of Manhattan, friends of a soldier killed
early this month in Ramadi stopped to sign the petition, saying
that he had gone into the military to support his family and earn
money for college, and had not wanted to go back to Iraq.
Both active duty military personnel and returned veterans of
the conflict signed to place the SEP on the ballot, along with
parents, relatives and friends of soldiers serving in Iraq, all
of whom said that they wanted an immediate end to the war. Among
them was a woman in Buffalo, whose son was a member of the 172nd
Stryker Brigade. As they were boarding planes to return to the
US after a year in Iraq, the units members were told that
they were being redeployed to Baghdad for at least another four
months.
In a number of areas, young people signed the petition, declaring
that they had no intention of going into the Army and were opposed
to the war. Some complained bitterly of military recruiters who
hound them in their schools and neighborhoods.
The reaction to the war was invariably bound up with anger
over deteriorating living standards and social conditions for
the majority of the population. During the course of the petitioning
drive, New York City saw a blackout that left more than 100,000
people in Queens without power for over a week. The outage took
place during a heat wave that claimed the lives of at least 36
city residents, most of them elderly residents in Brooklyn, Queens
and the Bronx.
Working people in Queens expressed agreement with a statement
issued by the SEPs candidate, which identified electric
utility Con Edisons drive for profit and failure to maintain
infrastructure in working class areas as the source of the electricity
crisis and demanded the entire energy sector be placed under public
control and utilized for the benefit of all.
In many areas of New York City, people spoke bitterly about
the way in which the accumulation of wealth by a narrow layer
of the population has driven up the cost of living, and housing
costs in particular, making it impossible for many to continue
living in neighborhoods where they were born and grew up.
In the Buffalo area, there was anger over the drastic cuts
in pay and the elimination of benefits for workers at Delphi.
The auto parts manufacturer is a major employer in the region.
In many cases, particularly in New York City, immigrant workers
were unable to sign the petition, but expressed their agreement
with the SEPs program and appreciation for the partys
internationalist outlook and opposition to the political scapegoating
of immigrants.
While the SEP was carrying out its campaign across the state,
Hillary Clinton was solidifying her support among the corporations
and on the right. She repeated her insistence that it is impossible
to withdraw from Iraq, or even set a date for a future withdrawal.
She announced her unconditional support for Israels criminal
war against Lebanon.
Clinton also has built up a record campaign war chest amounting
to approximately $25 million, much of it coming from the major
corporate interests she defends. Among the endorsements that she
accepted over the summer was one from right-wing media mogul Rupert
Murdoch, owner of the odious Fox News Channel and New York
Post.
When Hillary Clinton moved to New York in 1999 to run
for the US Senate, she staged a so-called listening tour,
which her handlers believed would make her seem sympathetic to
voters concerns, without having to commit herself to any
policies whatsoever, said Van Auken. Five years later,
it is clear that Hillary Clinton is stone deaf to the seething
anger of working people in New York over the war in Iraqa
war that she voted for and continues to supportand about
the gaping social divide between the top 1 percentof which
she is a member in good standingand the masses of ordinary
people, who cannot make ends meet.
He added: Over the course of the last six weeks, the
SEP has carried out a concentrated dialogue with working people
across this state. We will use our partys position on the
ballot, which 25,000 New Yorkers have demanded, to deepen this
dialogue, expose the role of Clinton and the Democrats, while
laying the foundations for a powerful independent socialist movement
of working people in New York, across the country and internationally.
See Also:
SEP candidate for US Senate from New
York: "The war in Lebanon is a world historic crime"
[1 August 2006]
Hillary Clinton celebrates
Israeli war crimes
[19 July 2006]
Hillary Clinton and New York's
gay marriage ruling: a calculated bow to the right
[15 July 2006]
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