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SEP demands right to participate in debates for US Senate
candidates in New York
By a reporter
3 October 2006
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Bill Van Auken, the Socialist Equality Partys candidate
for US Senator from the state of New York, demanded that he be
included in debates scheduled this month between incumbent Democratic
Senator Hillary Clinton and her Republican challenger, former
Yonkers mayor John Spencer.
In October 2 letters addressed to the sponsors of the debate
as well as to the Democratic and Republican candidates, Van Auken
insisted: Tens of thousands of New Yorkers signed petitions
to place my party and my name on the ballot because they oppose
the war in Iraq, the attacks on democratic rights and the assault
on living standards that are being carried out by both major parties.
They have a right to have their concerns heard in a public candidates
debate.
Van Auken, a writer for the World Socialist Web Site
and resident of Queens, New York, issued his statement on the
same day that the New York State Board of Elections announced
it would certify the socialist antiwar candidate for the November
7 general election ballot. Some 25,000 registered New York state
voters signed nominating petitions to place the SEP on the ballot
during the six-week petitioning period this summer.
Debates have been scheduled between Clinton and Spencer on
October 20 in Rochester, sponsored by New York City television
news station NY1 and in New York City, two days later, by WABC-TV.
In New Yorks Democratic primary, NY1, owned by Time-Warner,
refused to set up a debate between Clinton and her challenger,
Jonathan Tasani, on the grounds that Tasinis failure to
raise at least half a million dollars in campaign funds meant
he was not a serious candidate.
Once again, these kind of arbitrary and grossly undemocratic
criteria are being applied to exclude any real alternatives and
narrow the political debate to what is acceptable to the corporate
donors who finance both the Democratic and Republican campaigns,
said Van Auken.
Unlike Spencer, who calls for continuing the Bush administrations
disastrous war in Iraq, and Clinton, who supports continuing the
occupation through a revamped militarist program to win
the war in Iraq, Van Auken is demanding the immediate and
unconditional withdrawal of all US troops and calls for those
who conspired to wage this illegal war be held politically and
criminally responsible.
Spencer supported Congresss legalization of the Bush
administrations policy of torture and indefinite detention
without trial, while carrying out ultra-right election propaganda
juxtaposing images of Clinton and Osama bin Laden. For her part,
Hillary Clinton refused to wage a struggle against this legislation,
while voting in favor of the anti-immigrant wall on the Mexican
border.
Van Auken calls for a counteroffensive against the assault
on democratic rights, through the repeal of the Patriot Act, the
dismantling of the Department of Homeland Security and the defense
of all the democratic and social gains won by generations of working
people, including for immigrants.
The SEP is campaigning in this election for a break with the
two parties controlled by big business and the building of a mass
socialist movement of the working class as the only means of defending
these rights.
See Also:
Clinton and Kerry set Democrats'
pro-war agenda for 2006 election
[27 September 2006]
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