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Join the fight to place Socialist Equality Party on the ballot
in Michigan
By Jerome White, SEP candidate for US Congress in Michigans
12th CD
1 May 2006
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As the candidate of the Socialist Equality Party for US Congress
in Michigans 12th Congressional District, I urge working
people and youth to join the petition drive to place my name of
the ballot and provide a socialist alternative to the two big
business parties in the November elections.
Working people in the 12th Congressional District (made up
of the Oakland and Macomb county suburbs just north of Detroit)
have been sharply affected by the two central issues confronting
the American people in the 2006 electionsthe war in Iraq
and the unrelenting attack on workers jobs and living standards
by corporate America.
The war launched by the Bush administration, on the basis of
lies, has already cost the lives of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis
and nearly 2,500 US soldiers, with countless more left physically
and psychologically damaged. Eighty soldiers from Michigan have
been killed, including nearly 20 from the Metropolitan Detroit
area. The victims in my district include soldiers as young as
19 years old who come from cities like Warren, Hazel Park and
Clinton Township, where many are forced to join the military because
of the lack of decent jobs.
The latest to die in the area was 23-year-old Army Specialist
Andrew Waits, from Oakland Countys Waterford Township, who
was killed April 13 when an improvised explosive device detonated
near his vehicle in Baghdad.
Although opinion polls show a clear majority of Americans want
US troops to be pulled out of Iraq, my opponent in the election,
12-term Democratic Congressman Sander Levin, has done nothing
to stop this illegal war. After first voting against the invasion,
Levin has since voted to fund the occupation and has opposed setting
any date for the withdrawal of US troops. He also voted for the
Patriot Act, which paved the way for the Bush administration to
spy on US citizens and conduct other attacks on civil liberties.
The Democrats have acted as Bushs accomplices because
they defend Americas corporate elite, just like the Republicans.
The war against Iraq and future wars being prepared against Iran
are aimed at establishing US dominance over the oil-rich Middle
East.
The Socialist Equality Party calls for the immediate withdrawal
of all US troops and the prosecution of all those responsible
for this illegal war. We demand the US government pay full compensation
to the Iraqi people for the destruction of their country and to
the families of US soldiers killed and injured by the war.
The war against the working class at home
The same corporate interests behind the Iraq warBig Oil,
the auto industry, and Wall Streetare also responsible for
the economic distress confronting working people in the district.
Corporations like GM, Ford and Delphi insist that younger workers
will never attain the wage levels, job protections, pensions or
lifetime medical benefits that their parents won through decades
of struggle. Even a college degree and professional skills are
no longer any guarantee of a secure and decent-paying job, as
was made clear when GM recently eliminated the jobs of hundreds
of engineers and other white collar workers at the Tech Center
in Warren.
The last decade has seen the devastation of many working class
communities in the 12th Congressional District. In Macomb County,
alone, more than 27,000 factory jobsor 22 percent of the
manufacturing work forcehave been wiped out since 2000.
A recent study documents the impact of corporate downsizing.
Over the last four years, for example, the number of people receiving
public assistance in Macomb County rose 76 percent, while food
assistance jumped 99 percent. Rising unemployment, bankruptcies,
cuts in wages and working hours and the lack of health insurance
have all led to the shrinkage of what used to be known as the
blue collar middle class.
The official poverty rate in the county has jumped 20 percent
since 1999. But this figure conceals the real extent of the crisis
because the government claims that an income of $18,850 is enough
to keep a family of four out of poverty. In reality a family needs
at least $38,532 a year, or $19.27 an hour for a full-time job,
to meet basic needs.
Throughout the county, families earning far less are missing
meals due to a lack of food, have been evicted from their apartments,
or are being forced to postpone health care or surgery because
of the out-of-pocket costs. While minorities in the county have
higher poverty rates, the report noted the gap between whites
and blacks was shrinking.
Over the last two years, the number of home foreclosures in
Macomb and Oakland counties has more than doubled, while the percentage
of homes seized by the banks throughout Michigan is more than
two-and-a-half times the national average. Hundreds of For
Sale signs sit in front of homes in my district and many
homeowners face the prospect of never being able to recover what
they owe on their homes. At the same time multi-million-dollar
tax breaks given to big business by the Democrats and Republicans
have resulted in a greater tax burden on working and retired homeowners,
while public services, including education, face regular cutbacks.
Once again, my opponent Sander Levin has done nothing to oppose
these conditions. First elected to Congress in 1982, Levin has
established close ties with the auto bosses and the United Auto
Workers union. The Democrats alliance with the union bureaucracy
has long been used to prevent working people from building an
independent political movement to defend their own interests against
the profit system.
Levin and the UAW promote the lie that the destruction of jobs
and living standards of American autoworkers is not the product
of the capitalism but the fault of workers in Japan, Mexico and
other countries. By promoting protectionist trade measures against
China, Japan and Europe, the Democrats and the union bureaucracy
have sought to divide American autoworkers from their class brothers
and sisters throughout the world. Such a road can only lead to
future wars, as the US battles its European and Asian rivals for
control of markets, raw materials like oil and access to cheap
labor.
The SEP fights for the international unity of the working class.
Workers in every country are confronting the same transnational
corporations and they can only defend their jobs and living standards
through a common fight for socialism. A decent-paying job, safe
working conditions, quality education, affordable housing and
heath care must be social rights for all working people.
Workers today produce more wealth than ever before. As a society
it should therefore be easier to guarantee such basic needs to
everyone. But under capitalism, the wealth created by working
people is monopolized by the wealthy few. To guarantee a future
free from war, inequality, and poverty, economic life must be
reorganized to meet the needs of the working people.
The massive industries can no longer be the personal assets
of a handful of multi-millionaires and billionaires. They must
be turned into public enterprises under the democratic control
of the working class in order to meet the needs of society as
a whole. Working people must establish control over all business
decisions affecting work, safety, hiring, and hours and have the
right to ratify the selection of all managers.
To fight for this socialist program, the working class must
build a powerful political movement against the Democrats and
Republicans and the profit system they defend. That is the aim
of the SEP campaign in the 2006 elections.
The struggle to gain ballot access
Because Americas ruling elite understands that the slightest
crack in its political monopoly will open the floodgates for mass
opposition to its reactionary policies the Democrats and Republicans
are desperate to keep third party candidates, and, in particular,
socialists from getting on the ballot.
The SEP must gather 3,000 signatures of registered voters before
July 20. In practice this means we must gather at least 5,000
signatures because the Democrats and Republicans who control the
local election boards often use every technicality possible to
disqualify signatures.
Despite these obstacles SEP supporters have received an enthusiastic
response to our petition campaign. The wrenching and rapid political
experiences over the last two yearsfrom the debacle in Iraq,
to the exposure of government spying and torture, to Hurricane
Katrina and rising gas priceshave made many more people
receptive to the program of the SEP
During a campaign at Macomb Community College, for example,
a student and former Marine who was wounded in combat in Ramadi,
Iraq, stopped and signed the petition. In addition to his concern
about the war, he said several of his friends work at Delphi,
the bankrupt auto parts company that is wiping out 24,000 jobs
and demanding a wage cut from $27 an hour to $12.50.
Another young worker who delivers supplies to Beaumont Hospital,
one of the largest employers in the district, signed the petition
and said, Bush keeps saying the economy is getting better.
Well maybe his economy is getting better, not mine.
Across the street from GMs Technical Center, campaigners
also won a warm response. Mike, a young cook from Warren, said,
Lots of my friends are over in Iraq and theyre
not very happy being there. They went in headstrong about the
war, but now theyre saying Whats the point of
being there when the people are trying to kill us? They
are literally guarding oil fields. If this was about liberating
Iraq, why are they protecting oil fields?
I was huge for this war when it started too. But its
turning into another Vietnam. The media has enormous power to
manipulate public opinion. The press just prints things to fool
the people, like the business about weapons of mass destruction.
Its all about the corporations and the almighty dollar.
The ExxonMobil CEO is getting hundreds of millions of
dollars, somewhere like $145,000 a day. Instead of giving the
big boys such money, they should lower the gas prices. Im
making the minimum wage, and I can hardly afford to drive my car
to my job.
My friends and I have concluded that the corporations
are controlling everythingincluding the politiciansand
that it is time we start fighting back.
These remarks express the sentiments of growing numbers of
workers and youth. The SEP campaign will give voice to the popular
opposition to war and inequality and provide a conscious political
direction for such a struggle. I appeal to all who support such
a fight to join our campaign to provide a socialist alternative
to the two-party system.
See Also:
For a socialist alternative
in the 2006 US elections: Statement of the Socialist Equality
Party
[12 January 2006]
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