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SEP candidate for US Senate wins support at Buffalo New York
forum for disabled
By our reporter
21 October 2006
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Wednesday and Thursday Bill Van Auken, Socialist Equality Party
candidate for US Senate from New York, took his campaign to Buffalo
where he addressed an SEP campaign rally of students and workers
near Buffalo State College.
He also received a warm response when he spoke before more
than 50 people at an October 18 candidate forum sponsored by the
Western New York Independent Living Project in Buffalo. The family
social service agency provides independent housing as well as
numerous other services for the mentally and physically disabled.
The agency has faced constant budget cuts from both the state
government in Albany and the federal government.
Van Auken was the only candidate running for federal office
who accepted the invitation to speak. Many of those in the audience
have been particularly hard hit by the recent 18- inch snow storm
that hit the city October 12 and 13. The early storm snapped thousands
of trees, causing downed power lines.
More than 400,000 people in the counties of Erie, Genesee,
Orleans and Niagara were initially without power. Nearly a week
later, 100,000 residents still remain without power. There is
an estimated 10 million cubic yards of debris throughout the area
from fallen trees and branches. Due to failed sump pumps many
homes have flooded.
Many residents are angry that the Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) did not arrive until five days after the storm.
The FEMA damage assessment teams only arrived on October 18 to
assess damage in the four counties and determine whether the area
is eligible for federal public and individual assistance. Michael
Beeman, FEMAs acting director of response and recovery,
suggested that Washington is not likely to provide a disaster
declaration that would trigger increased aid. We do not
have a catastrophic event here, he told the media.
Thirteen people have died as a result of the stormthe
majority from carbon monoxide fumes due to improper venting of
generators and space heaters. In addition, 170 people have been
hospitalized due to heart attacks in the effort to remove debris,
carbon monoxide poisoning, and other injuries.
Members of the audience pointed out they were among those who
could least afford this disaster, including even the purchase
of a generatoran item that is a necessity for those requiring
life support systems. Audience members also expressed concern
over whether FEMA or any other agencies would reimburse them for
the cost of replacing insulin and other medicines spoiled by lack
of refrigeration during the power outage.
Van Aukens remarks began by addressing the situation
in Buffalo, condemning the wholly callous and inadequate government
response. He continued,
I do not claim to be an expert on all of the issues confronting
the disabled in the state of New York and nationally, which was
one of the reasons I was grateful for the opportunity to come
here and learn more from you.
I do know enough, however, to understand that the federal
government in Washington, the state government in Albany and on
down to county and city governments have been relentlessly slashing
what are already inadequate programs to assist the physically
and mentally disabled as well as compensation for workers injured
on the job and even care for the many thousands of soldiers who
are returning from Iraq with serious wounds and mental trauma.
As a socialist, I believe that the true measure of a
society is not how many billionaires it can produce or how much
wealth can be piled up by a financial oligarchy at the top, but
rather how the most vulnerable members of that societychildren,
the elderly, the poor, the sick and disabledare treated.
The abysmal indifference shown by Americas ruling
elite and both major political parties to the conditions of all
of these sectors is an indictment of a social order driven by
private profit rather than human need.
Again and again, the politicians, Democratic and Republican
alike, claim that there is no money for decent public education,
to fund health care, create jobs or support programs that allow
the disabled to lead decent, independent and productive lives.
How is this possible? Since 1972, the GDP has grown 50
percent. In other words, there are substantially more resources
to solve societys pressing problems, not less. Yet in this
same period, working people have seen their real incomes decline,
while vital social programs are starved for funds. Where has the
money gone? Since 1979, the top 1 percent of the US population
has seen its share of the wealth more than double, to over 40
percent. Wages, meanwhile, now account for the lowest share of
national income in 60 years, while profits are at their highest
since the 1960s.
This vast upward redistribution of wealth has been achieved
through the tax cuts, budget cuts and subsidies to the corporations
and the rich implemented by successive administrationsDemocratic
and Republican alikeover the past 25 years.
And, while the politicians claim that there is no money for
social programs, they have no problem spending $2 billion a week
to continue an illegal war in Iraq, which is opposed by the great
majority of the Americans. Indeed, as its last act before going
home to campaign for reelection, the US Senate voted unanimously
to approve another $70 billion in war spending, Hillary Clinton
among them.
My party stands for fundamental change. While my opponent
Hillary Clinton wants to continue the war in Iraq, we call for
the immediate end to the war and the withdrawal of all US troops.
This war is being fought not to further the security of the American
people but to serve the interest of the oil companies. As long
as the occupation continues, more lives will be lost.
We stand for the defense of democratic rights against
the most serious threats ever posed since the founding of the
American republic. Democrats like Clinton decided to sit on their
hands while Congress passed a law that allows the president to
lock up anyone without charges on his sole say-so that the individual
is an enemy combatant, a term so vaguely defined that
it could include any political opponent of the government.
The SEP proposes concrete measures to promote social
equality, starting with the repeal of all of the tax cuts implemented
since the Reagan administration, raising taxes on the accumulated
wealth of the super-rich and closing the loopholes used by the
corporations to avoid paying taxes. The tax burden for the vast
majority of working people should be significantly reduced.
We call for the present capitalist setup, in which huge
corporations and banks which determine the conditions of life
for millions are privately owned, to be replaced by a socialist
system of public ownership and democratic control of the economy.
We advocate an economic system based on the principle of satisfying
human needs, not the creation of profit and the accumulation of
vast personal wealth.
Establishing social control over these corporations would
provide the resources to ensure free universal, comprehensive
medical coverage for all, state-funded housing construction to
provide affordable homes and money for high quality public education.
My opponent Hillary Clinton, needless to say, opposes
such a solution, and for good reason. She reported a family income
of over $7 million last year and she is the biggest recipient
of campaign contributions from the healthcare lobby, the drug
companies and the Wall Street banks.
The precondition for achieving any of the goals I have
outlinedending the war, the defense of democratic rights
and the allocation of resources to meet vital social needsis
breaking the political monopoly exercised by the two parties controlled
by big business, the Democrats and Republicans.
This is the purpose of the Socialist Equality Partys
campaign in the 2006 election. We are in this election not merely
to win votes, but to build a new political movement of working
people, independent of the two big business parties, to fight
for our interests and for the socialist transformation of society.
Following the SEP candidates remarks, a number of questions
were asked about the governments response to the Buffalo
storm, the position of the SEP regarding solar power, and low-income
housing. The most discussion centered on opposition to the war
in Iraq.
A worker in the audience declared, In my opinion the
war is with the Democrats and Republicans. They are waging a war
here against us. While they spend billions of dollars for the
military, people here do not have what they need. The Iraq war
is based on lies.
Many stayed to thank Van Auken for attending and took the SEP
election program to study.
See Also:
SEP campaign reaches students in New York
[19 October 2006]
Message to US troops by SEP candidate
for US Senate from New York: For an immediate end to the Iraq
occupation, bring the troops home now!
[18 October 2006]
Statement by New York SEP candidate Bill
Van Auken: Hillary Clintons immigration policy and the death
of Daniel Basilio
[13 October 2006]
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