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SEP candidate in Michigan to be certified for November ballot
By our reporter
29 July 2006
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The Bureau of Elections on Friday informed the Socialist Equality
Party that there were no challenges to the qualifying petitions
of Jerome White, the SEP candidate for US Congress in Michigans
12th District. This means that White will be officially certified
as a candidate for the November elections at the next meeting
of the State Board of Canvassers in mid-August.
On July 19, the SEP submitted petitions bearing the names of
5,045 voters to the Secretary of States office in Lansing,
Michigan. This was well over the 3,000 signatures required to
place an independent candidate on the ballot for US Congress in
the district, which covers the working class suburbs north of
Detroit. The deadline for challenges was 5 p.m., Thursday, July
27.
Due to Michigans restrictive ballot-access laws, Jerome
White will appear on the ballot as a candidate With No Party
Affiliation. To run candidates under the partys name
in 2006, 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.
White is challenging US Representative Sander Levin, a 12-term
Democratic incumbent with close connections to Detroits
Big Three automakers and the United Auto Workers union bureaucracy.
While expressing initial reservations over the invasion of Iraq,
Levin has voted to continue to fund the criminal war and opposed
setting any date for the withdrawal of US troops from the Middle
Eastern country.
Like SEP candidates in New York, California and elsewhere,
White is fighting for working people to reject the pro-big-business
and pro-war policies of the Democrats and Republicans and to build
a political movement based on the international unity of workers
and a socialist alternative to the profit system.
Despite the many obstacles thrown in the path of third-party
candidates, the SEP won a powerful response from workers, students
and young people in cities like Warren, Hazel Park, Southfield
and Ferndale, where there is a broad opposition to the war and
the attacks on jobs and living standards, and a growing disgust
with the Democrats cowardly complicity with the Bush administration.
Thousands of working people signed the SEP petitions in order
to find a way to express their aspirations and interests, which
are routinely ignored by the two big-business parties.
The 12th Congressional District typifies the social crisis
that afflicts the US as a whole. It is home to the GM Tech Center,
a large Chrysler factory and scores of supplier plants. Workers
and their familieswho have long been described by politicians
and the news media as middle class workersare
being hard hit by the downsizing of the auto industry, demands
for wage and benefit cuts, and the rising cost of living. Earlier
this year Ford, GM and auto parts giant Delphi announced 85,000
job cuts in North America and the United Auto Workers bureaucracy
announced its willingness to collaborate with the auto bosses
to impose further contract concessions in upcoming negotiations.
A recent article in the Detroit Free Press noted that
charities in Macomb County are being overwhelmed by the soaring
demand for basic needs like clothing, food and shelter, particularly
by younger and once financially stable people, asking for help
for the first time. At United Way for Southeastern Michigan, calls
to its 2-1-1 help line reached 6,700 last monthdouble the
number of calls received in June 2005. This isnt just
an urban/suburban thing, said United Way President and Chief
Executive Officer Michael Brennan, who introduced the groups
new promotional campaign to the media Tuesday. This is a
regional problem.
The Salvation Army reports a similar situation, with this years
demand for food services up 50 percent, compared with 16 percent
over each of the past two years. Russ Russell, director of development
for the groups Eastern Michigan Division, said, 180,000
more people have come to us this year than they did last year
by this time... Its like...having the entire population
of Flint coming to our doorstep for help at one time.
The Democratic Party, which has long dominated the politics
of the Detroit Metropolitan area, has done nothing to alleviate
these conditions. On the contrary, it has offered policies in
Michigan that differ in no substantial sense from the Bush administrations
national policy of tax cuts for big business, deregulation, cuts
in social spending and other measures that have boosted the profits
of the wealthy at the expense of working people.
After the announcement that he had qualified for the ballot,
SEP candidate Jerome White said, I want to thank all those
who fought to place the SEP on the ballot in Michigan. We had
to overcome many obstacles thrown in the way of parties that oppose
the two-party monopoly, and in particular socialists who seek
to provide a political voice to the millions of working people
who are disenfranchised within a political system that subordinates
every aspect of life to the profit needs of Americas wealthy
elite.
Placing the SEP on the ballot in Michigan is a major
achievement for the working class that will put the party in a
strong position to advance a socialist alternative to the escalating
war in the Middle East and the war being waged by corporate America
against working people at home.
Click
here to contact the SEP and participate in the campaign.
Click
here to donate to the SEP.
See Also:
SEP in Michigan files petitions to place
US congressional candidate on ballot
[20 July 2006]
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