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Michigan SEP candidate responds to gubernatorial debate
Granholm, De Vos trade right-wing nostrums: No choice for
working people in Michigan governors race
Statement by Jerome White, Socialist Equality Party candidate
for US Congress in Michigan's 12th District
5 October 2006
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Monday nights debate between Democratic Governor Jennifer
Granholm and her Republican opponent, billionaire businessman
Richard DeVos, was a vulgar and degrading spectacle. What emerged
from the mutual mudslinging and recriminations was the fact that
working people in Michigan are confronted with two right-wing
gubernatorial candidates who have no interest in addressing, let
alone resolving, the devastating social crisis that has engulfed
the state.
Michigans 7.1 percent unemployment rate is already the
highest in the nation. With the auto industry slashing nearly
100,000 jobs in North America, many more blue-collar and white-collar
workers in Michigan will be added to the jobless rolls.
Over the last five years, median income in the state has fallen
by 12 percent, the sharpest drop in the US. Northwest Airlines,
Delphi and other companies are demanding unprecedented wage and
benefit cuts from their workers.
More than a million residents of the state have no medical
insurance, pensions for retired workers and their dependents are
being slashed, and the state is leading the nation in home foreclosures.
This catastrophe is not limited to Detroit, Flint and other
hard-hit industrial cities, but has spread to surrounding suburbs,
like my district in Oakland and Macomb counties, which has seen
a staggering increase in the number people seeking emergency housing
and food aid.
In the course of the one-hour televised debate, the two candidates
made little attempt to conceal their disinterest in the plight
of working people. Nor did they even raise such vital issues as
the war in Iraqwhich has already claimed the lives of nearly
100 soldiers from Michiganor the trampling of democratic
rights by the Bush administration, which has already resulted
in police state measures against hundreds of the tens of thousands
of Arab-Americans who reside in the Detroit metropolitan area.
The event hardly merited the term debate. The candidates
were not trying to persuade potential voters on the basis of ideas
or policies. Instead, the two right-wing candidates slugged it
out, trying to convince the corporate and financial elite that
they could do a better job defending their profits than their
opponent.
By prior agreement, the Democrats and Republicans and the news
media excluded the gubernatorial candidates of the Michigan Greens,
the Libertarians and the US Taxpayers parties, although thousands
of Michigan voters had signed petitions to place their names on
the ballot.
Richard DeVos, who inherited hundreds of millions from his
fatherthe co-founder of Amway Corporationis the richest
man ever to run for statewide office in Michigan. He is a big
contributor to the Republican National Committee, which in return
promoted legislation that granted his company millions in tax
breaks and other incentives.
DeVos speaks for that section of big business that wants to
do away with virtually all taxation and regulation and gut whatever
remains of social spending for schools and other social services.
During the debate, DeVos repeated the Bush administrations
identification of job creation with tax cuts for the
rich and poverty wages for workers. He outlined plans to eliminate
Michigans Single Business Taxsaving corporations $2
billionand slash at least $1 billion from the states
budget, referring to social spending as fat that needed
to be cut.
For her part, the Democratic governor insisted she was no tax
and spend liberal. Granholm boasted that she had cut more
money from the state budget than any governor in Michigan
history. She added that she had been a strong supporter
of President Clintons welfare reformwhich
ended the federally guaranteed income program for tens of millions
of the countrys poorest citizens.
The governor was indignant over her Republican opponents
charge that she had failed to create a business-friendly atmosphere,
noting that she had handed over $600 million in tax cuts and other
incentives to corporations and had made similar offers to Honda,
Whirlpool and Electrolux to encourage them to invest in the state.
To prove how much she was willing to pander to the interests
of big business, Granholm recalled her efforts to keep Swedish
appliance giant Electrolux from shutting its refrigerator factory
in the western Michigan town of Greenville. I told them
they could pay zero taxes, she said, and the workers
were willing to take big wage and benefit cuts. Nevertheless,
the company shut down the 2,700-employee facility last March and
moved it operations to Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.
In fact, the governors handouts to big business have
not stopped the hemorrhaging of jobs in Michigan, which has lost
200,000 manufacturing positions over the last five years. In the
face of this undeniable reality, the Democratic governor launched
into an anti-Mexican and anti-Chinese tirade, confirming the old
adage that patriotism is last refuge of a scoundrel.
The problem in Michigan, Granholm declared, was unfair
competition from China, the free trade policy with Mexico,
and trade barriers that were supposedly keeping US companies from
penetrating world markets.
Granholm repeated the charge made in her attack ads against
DeVos that he had slashed thousands of jobs at his Michigan-based
Amway company while opening up manufacturing facilities in China.
Her protectionist ranting was only interrupted when DeVos noted
that her political ally, former Democratic President Bill Clinton,
had championed the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
with Mexico, which she now denounces.
National chauvinism has long been the stock-in-trade of the
Democratic Party and its allies in the trade union bureaucracy.
From their racist attacks on Asian workers and the smashing of
Japanese cars, to their tirades against Mexican workers for stealing
American jobs, the United Auto Workers union and the Democratic
Party establishment have promoted nationalism to conceal the fact
that it is the capitalist profit system, not foreign
workers, which is responsible for the devastating job loss. The
flag-waving and American-first campaigns have coincided
with never-ending demands that workers sacrifice wages and benefits
to save the US auto industry.
What has this produced? 600,000 workers have lost their jobs
over the last three decades, wages have stagnated, and brutal
conditions have returned to the factory floor. At the same time,
compensation for the top corporate executives, including those
responsible for driving the US auto industry into the ground,
has skyrocketed, with CEOs making tens of millions each year.
The truth is that the global capitalist system is victimizing
workers on every continent. Just days after Ford announced plans
to eliminate 44,000 jobs in North America, Europes second
largest automaker Peugeot-Citroen announced that it would wipe
out 10,000 jobsor 7 percent of its workforce.
It is critical that workers reject the chauvinist demagogues
who want to weaken and divide the international working class,
and instead launch a common fight to defend the jobs and living
standards of all workers, regardless of where they live.
Whether a Democrat or Republican politician has occupied the
governors seat in Lansing, the impoverishment of the working
class in Michigan has continued unabated. That is because the
representatives of both these parties, including my opponent in
the 12th Congressional District, Sander Levin, defend the capitalist
profit system and speak for the corporate and financial elite
that has enriched itself at the expense of working people.
That is why I am running for US Congress in Michigan and why
the Socialist Equality Party is working to build a powerful political
movement of the working class against the two parties of war and
social inequality. I call for an emergency program to provide
economic security to Michigans working people.
* I demand a moratorium on all foreclosures and evictions.
No one should be made homeless because of the loss of a job.
* I demand the launching of a massive public works programpaid
for by sharply raising taxes on the wealthyto hire the unemployed
and rebuild the cities and rural areas. This must include a crash
program to construct schools, medical clinics, mass transportation
and cultural and recreation centers, and hire tens of thousands
of new teachers, doctors and other health care providers.
* The auto industry, upon which so many lives depend, can no
longer be the personal asset of big Wall Street investors and
corporate CEOs, who have proven incapable of protecting the interests
of the masses of working people who produce the wealth, let alone
the needs of consumers for safe, fuel efficient and affordable
transportation. The auto industry must be transformed into a public
enterprise, democratically controlled by committees of workers,
technicians, and other experts dedicated to the interests of working
people.
I urge Michigan voters to study the program of the Socialist
Equality Party (see For
a socialist alternative in the 2006 US elections) and
to vote for me in the November 7 election.
See Also:
Fords job massacre:
A corporate crime
[16 September 2006]
A symbol of American manufacturings
decline: Ford to slash 44,000 jobs
[16 September 2006]
The Delphi crisis: Socialism
and the American autoworker
[11 April 2006]
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