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Campaigners win broad support to place SEP candidate on ballot
in California
By Joe Kay
21 June 2006
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Supporters and members of the Socialist Equality Party in the
29th District of California have won substantial support from
workers and young people to put John Burton on the ballot for
US Congress.
Thus far, the campaign has collected over 3,000 signatures
from voters in the district, which includes parts of Los Angeles
County: Pasadena, South Pasadena, Altadena, Temple City, San Gabriel,
Glendale, Alhambra, and parts of Burbank. While this figure is
an indication of broad support among the population for placing
an SEP candidate on the ballot, it is only a third of the minimum
required: 8,951. To ensure they are able to defeat any challenges
to the signatures, supporters are seeking to gather at least 15,000
signatures by August 11, the deadline imposed by the State of
California.
An independent candidate for the US House of Representatives
in California must pay a filing fee of $1,621 or submit 3,000
signatures by July 27 to waive this fee. The signatures gathered
so far will therefore allow Burton to waive this fee. All of these
signatures can also be applied to the required signatures for
ballot status.
While petitioning, supporters of the campaign have encountered
general opposition to the US occupation of Iraq, particularly
among the substantial working class communities in the district.
There has been a strong response to the SEPs call for the
immediate withdrawal of US troops from Iraq, as well as substantial
agreement with the need for a new party of working people, opposed
to both the Democrats and the Republicans.
Petitioners for the SEP have received different reactions from
different social layers in the district. Gathering signatures
has generally been very difficult in Old Town Pasadena, a shopping
district that has many pedestrians, but most of whom come from
more wealthy sections of the population or from outside the district
entirely. In contrast, the SEP has won a significant hearing in
working class areas, particularly in northern Pasadena, South
Pasadena and Altadena, where petitioning in the first two months
has been concentrated. Many signatures have also been collected
from students attending Pasadena City College.
One incident gives a sense of the social polarization in the
district and the contrasting responses to the SEP campaign. A
petitioner asked a couple to sign and was quickly refused on the
grounds that everything is fine with how things are,
and there was no need for a new political party. The next person
the petitioner approached signed immediately after hearing the
SEPs position on the occupation of Iraq and social inequality.
Upon being told the response of the previous couple, the resident
noted, Thats because they are wealthy and they want
their wealth protected.
In the course of petitioning, SEP supporters have encountered
several residents of the area who had relatives in Iraq or who
themselves had been sent to Iraq. Few of these individuals have
expressed opposition to the SEPs positions on the war. One
woman said that she had two nephews in Iraq and that she would
support anyone who called for the withdrawal of troops.
In total, of the more than 2,500 US soldiers killed in Iraq,
258 are from California, more than any other state in the country.
In raising the demand for the immediate withdrawal of US troops
from Iraq, petitioners have sought to emphasize the support of
the Democratic Party for the initial invasion and the continued
occupation. This support is personified in the incumbent for the
29th District, Adam Schiff, who played a critical role in ensuring
that the initial Congressional authorization to use military force
was passed in 2003.
There is already deep disaffection with the two-party system,
as revealed in the primary elections held in California early
in the month. The turnout for the primaries, held to select the
candidates of the officially recognized parties, was only 30 percent,
a record low.
The Democratic Party in California has been working closely
with the Republican administration of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger,
as the two parties have come together on issues critical to the
interests of big business. This situation has added to a widespread
belief among working people that whatever the squabbling between
the two parties, they are both corrupt and subservient to the
interests of big business and the wealthy.
The struggle to expose the Democratic Party and raise the necessity
for a new party of the working class has been the central issue
in the petition-gathering process. Some workers retain hopes that
the Democratic Party can offer some sort of alternative, or else
do not believe that a new party will be viable. Others have become
so thoroughly alienated from the political setup that they argue
that all political organizations are corrupt, and they refuse
to sign the SEP petition on these grounds. The attempt to gather
the required signatures has therefore become an active process
to fight for the development of a socialist perspective among
working people against the two parties and the entire political
and social system.
Another issue that the SEP has sought to raise prominently
in the campaign is the extension of full rights for all immigrants.
This perspective has received a strong response from Hispanic
workers, who make up a substantial portion of the population of
the district. In the spring, hundreds of thousands of workers,
mainly Hispanic, marched in Los Angeles in opposition to right-wing
attacks on immigrant rights. Petitioners have raised the need
to connect the struggles of immigrant workers with the struggles
of the working class as a whole.
One worker who has been in the United States for 27 years as
a resident voiced concern over the growing attack on immigrant
workers. Its never been like this before, she
said, referring to the atmosphere of hostility toward Hispanic
workers promoted by the political establishment. She agreed very
strongly with the SEPs condemnation of both sides of the
official political debate in Washington. On the one hand, a section
of the Republican Party has sought to whip up national chauvinism
in order to divide workers and channel discontent over social
conditions behind the scapegoating of immigrant workers. On the
other hand, the Democrats and a section of Republicans, including
the Bush administration, have sought to implement a guest
worker program, which would ensure a ready supply of cheap
labor for US corporations. (See SEP
candidate in California: Extend full rights to all immigrants!).
Though the resident could not sign the petition because she
is not a citizen and is not registered, she took a number of pamphlets
and statements to give to her relatives. The SEP has encountered
many workers who wanted to sign the petition but could not because
they are not citizens. Campaigners have raised the demand for
the extension of full political rights to all workers in the US.
No one should be denied the ability to participate in the political
process.
Petitioners have countered the reactionary positions of the
Democrats and Republicans with the struggle to build a unified
movement of working people of all nationalities, throughout the
US and around the world.
While campaigning, the SEP has had to confront the difficulty
of finding good places to petition in order to meet the extraordinary
burden placed on independent candidates seeking ballot status.
The figure of 8,951 signatures comes from the antidemocratic requirement
that candidates gather signatures from 3 percent of the registered
voters of the entire district. Like many districts in California,
the 29th District is gerrymandered in order to provide a safe
Democratic seat. This means that many of the individuals who are
willing to sign the petition actually reside outside of the district.
As a consequence, campaigners must speak to hundreds of thousands
of people in order to get the requisite signatures, and must petition
in all areas of the district.
To some extent, it is easier to find places to petition in
California than in other states, due to a California Supreme Court
ruling that some areas on private propertyincluding shopping
malls and large parking lotsfunction as public spaces with
certain protections for free speech. In other states, such as
Michigan, petitioners are routinely ejected from areas in front
of stores and malls. In Illinois, city officials have sought to
deny the SEP the right to petition in front of the public library.
However, in spite of these greater protections, SEP petitioners
in California have still had many difficulties. Shopping malls
will place restrictions on the area and manner in which campaigners
are able to petition that make it difficult to speak to people.
Stores will often demand that petitioners leave, either without
giving any grounds for violating free speech rights, or claiming
that the stores are isolated, with their own parking lots, and
therefore do not constitute public spaces.
Two incidents in the campaign highlight the antidemocratic
character of the whole ballot-access process. In one instance,
campaigners were petitioning at a Trader Joes grocery store
in Burbank when one person who signed the petition made the statement,
What you are doing is what America is all about. Five
minutes later, the managers of the store came outside and demanded
that the petitioners leave.
In another incident, a resident argued in favor of the occupation
of Iraq, on the grounds that it would bring democracy to the country.
The petitioner pointed out that just in order to get on the ballot,
the SEP required 9,000 signatures. The resident responded, We
dont really have a democracy here in the US. After
some discussion on the contradiction of this positionthat
the American military could bring democracy to Iraq even as it
was being eliminated in the USthe resident agreed to sign
the petition.
While the SEP has won significant support, there is still an
enormous number of signatures that must be collected in the coming
weeks. To reach the goal of 15,000 signatures by August 11, supporters
must gather an average over 1,500 signatures per week. This means
a substantial increase in the current rate of signature gathering.
Getting on the ballot will provide the SEP with an important
opportunity to fight for a socialist alternative for working people
in Southern California. John Burton will be speaking at a public meeting
in Pasadena on June 22, and we encourage all WSWS readers and
supporters in the area to attend and help with the campaign in
whatever way possible.
To contact the SEP and help with the campaign, click
here.
To donate to the SEP,
click here.
Visit the SEP Campaign web site at www.socialequality.com
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