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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
SEP in Michigan files petitions to place US congressional
candidate on ballot
By our reporter
20 July 2006
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this version to print
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the author
The Socialist Equality Party on Wednesday submitted qualifying
petitions bearing the names of 5,045 voters to the Secretary of
States office in Lansing, Michigan to place its candidate
for US Representative in Congress, Jerome White, on the ballot
in the states 12th District. The filing of the petitions
was the culmination of a three-month campaign, in which the SEP
overcame many obstacles thrown in the path of third party candidates
by the Democrats and Republicans and collected well above the
3,000 signatures required by the state to place an independent
candidate on the ballot.

In the course of the campaign, SEP petitioners won the support
of workers, college students and young people looking for a political
alternative to the pro-war and pro-big business policies advanced
by the two major parties. An important contribution was made by
several new supporters, whose efforts to place a socialist candidate
on the ballot was their first practical political experience.
According to a Secretary of State employee, the Bureau of Elections
will complete a face check of the SEP petitions over
the next few days, which he described as a routine examination
to make sure those who signed the petitions reside in the 12th
Congressional District and petition circulators were registered
Michigan voters. The deadline for an outside party to challenge
the petitions is July 27 at 5 p.m. If no challenge is made, the
State Board of Canvassers, a body of two Democrats and two Republicans,
is supposed to simply ratify the recommendation of the Secretary
of States office and place the candidate on the ballot.
Due to Michigans restrictive ballot access laws, Jerome
White will appear on the ballot as a candidate With No Party
Affiliation. In order to run candidates under the partys
name in the 2006 election, the SEP would have had to collect a
minimum of 31,776 signatures in order to establish a new
political party in the state. By comparison, congressional
candidates from the Democratic or Republican parties only need
to submit 1,000 signatures.
Despite these and other hurdles, such as a virtual prohibition
against petitioning at privately owned malls and other retail
locations, the SEP campaign was able to give voice to the widespread
opposition to the Bush administration and the complicity of the
Democratic Party in the criminal war in Iraq, the attack on democratic
rights and the unrelenting assault by corporate America against
the jobs and living standards of working people. The powerful
response to the SEP expressed the growing alienation of workers
towards the two-party system and a further discrediting of the
Democratic Party.
There was a forceful response to the SEP candidates call
for the immediate withdrawal of US troops from Iraq and Afghanistan
and an end to the squandering of billions of dollars, and the
lives of thousands of US soldiers and tens of thousands of innocent
Iraqis, in a war to dominate the oil resources of the Middle East.
Campaigners spoke with several returning soldiers as well as the
relatives of those in Iraq, who readily signed the SEP petitions
and expressed anger that both the Democrats and Republicans were
continuing the war and ignoring the popular opposition against
it. At least 90 soldiers from Michigan, including six from the
12th Congressional District, have been killed in Iraq.
The SEP campaign was also able to elicit a powerful response
for a socialist alternative to attacks on the working class, particularly
in Michigans auto industry, where Ford, GM and auto parts
maker Delphi are eliminating nearly 100,000 jobs and slashing
wages and benefits. Many workers expressed anger over the complicity
of the United Auto Workers union with the auto bosses, particularly
in imposing higher out-of-pocket medical expenses on hundreds
of thousands of retired autoworkers and their families, and then
going to court on behalf of GM and Ford to prevent retirees from
taking legal action to protect their promised benefits.
The growth of social inequality in Americaexpressed in
the multimillion-dollar payouts to the big oil, auto and airline
executives, on the one hand, and the declining living standards
of workers who are facing wage-cuts, higher gas prices and economic
insecurity, on the otherhas generated a deep distrust of
the entire economic order in the US. During the course of the
campaign petitioners made a case for a socialist alternative to
the profit system, as a means of establishing genuine equality
and putting an end to the vast accumulation of wealth for the
financial elites at the expense of working people who produce
societys wealth.
SEP petitioners won support in Hazel Park, Southfield, Eastpointe,
St. Clair Shores, Warren, Oak Park, Ferndale and other cities
in the 12th District, which is located in the working class suburbs
north of Detroit. They also won warm support from workers in Detroit,
who, although unable to sign SEP petitions because they did not
reside in the district, expressed solidarity with the fight against
the war in Iraq and the war against working people at home.
After filing the petitions in Lansing, Jerome White told the
World Socialist Web Site, This is a major achievement
for the working class. Being on the ballot will give us the ability
to present our socialist program to a wide audience of working
people who are looking for a way to oppose the war in Iraq and
the war of corporate America against their jobs and living standards.
The two-party system is increasingly being discredited and exposed
for what it is: a political tool of the wealthy elite to advance
their selfish interests at the expense of the vast majority of
the population. Far from opposing Bush, the Democrats have collaborated
in the criminal war in Iraq, the undermining of democratic rights
in the guise of the war on terror, and the right-wing policies
that have further impoverished working people.
I look forward to challenging my Democratic opponent,
incumbent Congressman Sander Levin, who has long claimed that
the Democratic Party represents ordinary working people. The Democrats
pro-war and pro-big business policies and Levins record
itself shows the utter fraudulence of such a claim. Levin voted
for the Patriot Act, which opened the door for government spying
and other attacks on democratic rights, and, while he expressed
initial reservations about the war, he has since voted to fund
this criminal war and against setting any date for the removal
of troops. Like the Republicans, the Democrats speak for Americas
wealthy elite, and, in many cases, they are part of the ruling
elite themselves.
The Detroit News, for example, just reported that
Levin is one of seven members of Congress from Michigan who are
millionaires or multimillionaires. In addition to collecting his
$165,000 congressmans salary, he also earns a handsome income
from renting out his Marthas Vineyard home. Levin, however,
is far from the exception. About half of the senators and one-third
of the members of the House of Representatives belong to the Millionaires
Club in the US Congress. This only underscores the enormous chasm
between working people and the Democrats and Republicans. It also
explains why the two parties are so desperate to keep the SEP
off the ballot in Illinois and other states and prevent the emergence
of a political movement that will express the interests of the
broad mass of working people.
Along with the SEP candidates in New York, California,
Illinois and other states, I intend to bring our partys
policies to the widest possible audience and lay the groundwork
for building the Socialist Equality Party as a powerful political
alternative to the two capitalist parties and their policies of
war and social reaction.
Click
here to contact the SEP and participate in the campaign.
Click
here to donate to the SEP.
See Also:
Michigan community college acknowledges
SEP right to petition
[1 July 2006]
SEP reaches halfway point
in Michigan petition campaign
[1 June 2006]
Socialist Equality Party
announces candidates in New York, Michigan and California
[21 March 2006]
For a socialist alternative
in the 2006 US elections
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party
[12 January 2006]
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