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California SEP candidate denounces anti-immigrant law
No US-Mexico border fence! Defend immigrants rights!
Unite North American workers!
Statement by John Burton, Socialist Equality Party candidate
for US Congress, 29th District of California
6 October 2006
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I condemn the bill passed last week by the US Congress to build
a 700-mile fence along the US-Mexico border. This act poses a
grave threat not only to millions of immigrants, but also to the
democratic rights of US residents and citizens.
The bill instructs the Department of Homeland Security to construct
a fence covering parts of California, Arizona, New Mexico and
Texas and to implement an expansive surveillance system, including
unmanned aerial vehicles, ground-based sensors, satellites,
radar coverage, and cameras.
The legislation has two aims, both reactionary. It seeks to
divert social tensions within the US over declining living standards
by scape-goating immigrant workers, who are unjustly blamed for
the consequences of policies put in place by the American ruling
elite, and to provide another pretext for the militarization of
every aspect of society.
Immigrants, whether documented or not, have not caused the
decline in US wages and benefits, nor the deepening crisis in
social services such as health and education. Undocumented workers
create social wealth and pay millions in payroll and other taxes.
The responsibility for the problems facing working people in the
US lies squarely with the American corporate-financial elite and
its two-party system, which spends hundreds of billions of dollars
on wars of aggression while enacting massive tax cuts for the
rich. Profits for major corporations are at record levels thanks
to an orgy of wage- and job-cutting and the gutting of social
programs.
To derail a movement against these policies, politicians in
both the Republican and Democratic parties are whipping up the
crudest forms of anti-immigrant chauvinism, pitting one section
of workers against another. I call on workers of all nationalities
to oppose such divisiveness and unite to end the plundering of
social resources by the super-rich.
The immediate effects of this bill on immigrant workers will
be devastating. The fence will drive thousands of impoverished
immigrants to cross in more dangerous areas, with the result that
even more poor workers will perish attempting to enter the United
States across the great deserts of the Southwest.
Construction of the physical border fence will be accompanied
by a program headed by defense contractor Boeing to create a virtual
fence which, according to an article in the Washington
Post of September 21, rests heavily on adapting military
technology from the battlefield to the border. Among the
technologies proposed is a network of the same ground-based sensors
that are currently used to track and kill fighters opposing US
occupation forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.
There is an inseparable link between domestic and foreign policy.
Militarism and war abroad lead to political repression at home.
The same methods used in the occupations of Iraq and Afghanistanwhere
opposition is crushed with brutal violenceare being prepared
to confront an inevitable mass movement of social and political
opposition to the American ruling elite.
The American people are being conditioned to accept military
and state intrusion into every aspect of daily life. The battle
to safeguard the border against a supposed invasion
by hordes of Mexican immigrants is, like the so-called war
on terror, a political fiction contrived to justify the
most brutal and repressive measures. The very fact that politicians
and media demagogues routinely link poor workers with the terrorists
who destroyed the World Trade Center points to the deeply reactionary
and anti-working class essence of the bogus war that is relentlessly
promoted by the government, the media and both parties to justify
an unprecedented attack on democratic rights.
The construction of a fence along the US-Mexico border will
be a new step in the direction of a military-police dictatorship
in the United States. The bill on the border fence goes hand-in-hand
with a raft of other police-state measures.
Congress passed just a day earlier legislation to authorize
the Bush administrations torture program and subject anyone
deemed an alien unlawful enemy combatant to kangaroo
military commissions, stripping them of constitutional protections
and the fundamental right to challenge their confinement and treatment
in US courts. This follows the Bush administrations defense
of its previously secret program of domestic spying, including
eavesdropping on phone conversations and amassing data banks on
millions of American citizensall without the legal requirement
for court warrants.
With the immigration bill, the Democratic Party has once again
fallen into line behind the right-wing proposals of the Republicans.
In the Senate, more than half of the Democrats voted in favor
of the bill, which passed overwhelmingly by a vote of 80-19. In
the House of Representatives, the vote was also lopsided: 283-138.
Among the Democrats voting for the bill were the two liberal
senators from California, Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer.
To the extent that there is opposition from some Democrats,
it is based on concerns that repressive measures against immigrants,
if not coupled with other provisions, will disrupt a ready supply
of cheap labor. Before she voted for the bill, Feinstein pushed
for it to include an amendment that would create a guest
worker program for agribusiness, which depends heavily on
immigrant labor.
Feinsteins position reflects the hypocrisy of the American
ruling elite. Big business welcomes undocumented workers because
they are denied any semblance of rights to fight for decent wages
and working conditions. This is why the Bush administration had
first pushed for comprehensive reform, which would
militarize the border in conjunction with a nationwide guest
worker program. This program would make immigrant workers
completely dependent upon their employers for their right to stay
in the country.
Although my opponent, Democratic incumbent Representative Adam
Schiff, voted against the bill, he issued no public statement
critical of it. His weekly email instead brags about his co-sponsorship
with the notorious xenophobe David Dreier, the Republican representative
from the adjacent 26th Congressional District, of new legislation
to criminalize the digging of border tunnels.
The mass demonstrations held earlier this year, especially
in Los Angeles, expressed broad opposition to the proposed fence
and other anti-immigrant measures. But the passage of the new
bill underscores the futility of a political perspective based
on the notion that mass pressure on the Democratic Party can persuade
it to oppose the Bush administration and the Republicans, and
defend democratic rights.
Neither big business party offers any solution. The only humane
and progressive response to the flow of immigrants into Californiadesperate
for work to feed and clothe their familiesis a socialist
foreign policy, one geared to the cooperative development of the
worlds resources in order to end poverty, raise living standards
and achieve social equality. This is the direct opposite of the
foreign policy of the American capitalist ruling elite and its
two parties, which exploit, oppress and plunder the peoples of
the world in order to maximize the profits of US-based transnational
corporations.
Mass impoverishment in places such as Central and Latin America
compels people to leave their homes. This poverty is itself the
result of predatory policies pursued by US imperialism in its
so-called backyard to the south, including US-sponsored
military overthrows of elected governmentsChile, Argentina,
Braziland support for fascist and military dictatorships
and death squad regimes. By these and other means, the American
government has assured its corporate elite access to raw materials,
markets and cheap labor.
Raising wages and expanding social programs cannot be accomplished
by walling out immigrants. There must be a massive redistribution
of wealth through the elimination of the gargantuan military budget
and the restructuring of the tax code to fund health and education,
while providing quality jobs for all US residents. The giant corporations
and banks should be turned into public utilities, controlled democratically
to meet social needs, rather than for the drive for private profit
and the further enrichment of a financial oligarchy.
The question of immigration goes to the heart of the SEPs
program: internationalism. We categorically reject all appeals
to nationalism and chauvinism, the stock-in-trade of the AFL-CIO
trade union bureaucracy.
I call for full political rights and social benefits for all
workers, documented or undocumented, regardless of their national
origin. I further uphold the right of all workers to live and
work in whatever country they choose.
The working class is an international class. Workers in all
countries and of all nationalities are exploited by the same transnational
companies. The interests of working people can be defended only
through a common struggle against the common enemy.
I call on workers in California to help fight for this program
by writing in my name, John Burton, for US Congress in the 29th
Congressional District. Join the Socialist Equality Party and
the fight for international socialism!
See Also:
Why Hillary Clinton voted for the anti-immigrant
wall
[4 October 2006]
US Congress legalizes torture
and indefinite detention
[29 September 2006]
SEP candidate in California
denounces politically motivated IRS investigation: Government
probe of Pasadena church: a witch-hunt against Iraq war critics
[30 September 2006]
Socialist Equality Party launches
write-in campaign in California: Make your vote count! Write in
John Burton for Congress!
[29 September 2006]
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