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Illinois SEP candidate Joe Parnarauskis addresses retired
state workers at candidates debate
By Tom Carter
6 October 2006
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At a debate hosted by the American Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees (AFSCME) on Wednesday in Urbana, Illinois,
retired state employees angrily confronted the Democratic candidate
over cuts in social programs and the diversion of money from their
union pension fund. The debate was between the state Senate candidates
for the 52nd Legislative District: SEP candidate Joe Parnarauskis,
Democratic candidate Michael Frerichs and Republican candidate
Judy Myers.
The workers received Parnarauskis warmly and applauded his
remarks. They listened attentively to his call for an end to the
war in Iraq, the repeal of the Bush administrations anti-democratic
measures, and socialist policies to provide decent-paying and
secure jobs, quality health care and education for all, and a
secure and comfortable retirement for older workers.
The SEP candidates insistence on the need for a break
with the Democrats and the two-party system resonated in a meeting
dominated by workers bitter reproaches against the Democratic
Party and its right-wing policies. About a dozen workers shook
Parnarauskiss hand and several indicated that they remembered
when Tom Mackaman, the SEPs candidate for state legislature
in the 103rd District in the previous election, addressed the
same forum in 2004.
Midway through the debate, the official format broke down when
workers in the audience began shouting and interrupting the Democratic
candidate, Frerichs, demanding to know why the Illinois Democrats
had raided their pension fund and why funding for social services
such as education had been slashed.
The debate began with opening remarks from the three candidates,
followed by questions from a moderator.
Both of Parnarauskiss opponents claimed that their number
one priority was education, blaming low funding for downstate
schools on the relatively higher funding for suburban schools
in the Chicago area. Attempting to pit downstate workers and farmers
against workers in Chicago is a long-standing ploy in southern
Illinois politics, and the Democratic and Republican candidates
sought to outdo one another at this game.
We need to focus on downstate, not Chicago, said
Myers. She said that while she opposed tax hikes that would
drive businesses away, she thought that 51 percent of new
state revenues should go to education. In order to come up with
more money for education, she said, we need to get our house
in order and tighten our belts.
Frerichs, for his part, said it was a question of fairness,
citing the nearly $20,000 annual expenditure per pupil in certain
Chicago suburbs in comparison with the $5,100 expenditure downstate.
Education, he said, would drive economic development and attract
more business. In his proposal for more equal schools,
he called for a small statewide raise in the income taxwhich
must be a flat tax according to the Illinois constitutionand
for those funds to be distributed exclusively downstate.
In his opening remarks, Parnarauskis, spoke to the issues confronting
working people in the election, advancing the socialist perspective
of the SEP and referring to the three-month struggle the party
waged to gain ballot access.
This forum gives voters a chance to hear a candidate
the Illinois Democrats spent hundreds of thousands of dollars
to try to keep off the ballot. They did not want a socialist candidate
in the electionsa candidate who would give voice to the
popular opposition to the war, the attack on democratic rights,
and the pro-big business policies pursued by both the Democrats
and Republicans.
This debate takes place only days after two watershed
events in American historyevents that demonstrate the bipartisan
consensus in favor of war and social reaction. On Thursday of
last week the US Congress voted to make torture the official policy
of the United States.
Under the Military Commissions Act of 2006, the president
can identify a person as an unlawful enemy combatant.
That person can then be arrested, tortured, and jailed indefinitely
without legal recourse.
Then, last Friday, the US Senate voted 100-0 to approve
an additional $70 billion to finance the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Not one senatornot oneRepublican or Democrat, voted
against this bill. It should be clear to everyone, following that
vote, that the Democratic Party, no less than the Republicans,
is a party of war, which is willing to defy the will of the people
in order to further the imperial aims of the United States.
The 100-0 vote last Friday demonstrates that behind the
Democrats complaints over Bushs handling of the war,
they are committed to continuing the illegal occupation of Iraqan
occupation that has already cost the lives of 100,000 Iraqi people
and more than 2,700 US soldiers. Moreover, hundreds of billions
of dollars have been squandered on the war that could have been
spent to meet the needs of working people: for jobs, health care,
education, housing.
I am the only one at this debate who rejects entirely
the framework of the so-called war on terror, which
has nothing to do with the protection of the American people.
The events of 9/11 were used as a pretext to implement long-standing
strategic aimsaims to further the interests of corporate
America and crack down on political dissent at home.
If the US government was so interested in the security
of the American people, why are tens of millions without economic
security? Why did they turn their backs on the people of New Orleans
during Hurricane Katrina?
Or for that matter, in Danville, near where I live, thousands
are without jobs, health care, decent schools. The unemployment
rate is officially 8.4 percent, but we all know that in reality
its even higher. The median household income is a meager
$30,000.
The Democrats pitch to you has always been that
you cant do any betterthat the Democrats are the lesser
of the two evils. But under the Democrats, weve had plant
closings, mass layoffs, cost-cutting, wage-slashingjust
like with the Republicans.
When your union donates money to the Democratic Party,
what do they use the money for? Your dues go to pay the legal
fees of lawyers who try to keep genuine workers candidates
off the ballot. Lawyers for the Illinois Democrats, Courtney Nottage
and Michael Kasper, were paid more than $300,000 for their 80-day
legal effort to keep my name off of the ballot. By one estimate,
the Democrats spent close to a million dollars overall.
I say, the priorities of economic life must be radically
changed, from the further enrichment of corporate executives and
wealthy investors to meeting the needs of ordinary people, and
that requires transforming the basic levers of the economy into
public utilities under the democratic control of ordinary people.
Voters of the 52 district: make your vote count this
November! Vote for the Socialist Equality Party!
Republican candidate Myers left midway through the debate,
citing a prior engagement, leaving Parnarauskis and Frerichs.
At this point, the event assumed more the character of a debate
between the workers in the room and the Democratic candidate.
AFSCME, part of the AFL-CIO, has officially endorsed Frerichs,
but the hostility to the Democrats on the part of rank-and-file
union members was clearly demonstrated in the balance of the debate.
One retired worker asked a question from the floor, prefacing
his question by pointing out that he had voted Democrat in every
election since 1952. Now, he said, when the pension
system was raided, the Democrats controlled the governors
mansion and both houses of Congress. What assurances do I have
that voting for a Democrat is going to protect the pension system?
He was referring to the decision made by the Illinois Democrats
to remove over a billion dollars a year over the past two years
from the state employees pension fund to pay for other state
expenses.
Frerichs attempted to defend himself by saying, This
has gone on under Republicans and Democrats. Both parties have
done it.
Parnarauskis pointed out that this was not much of a defense,
and was a good reason for workers to break with the two-party
system. The SEP candidate added, My position, and the position
of the Socialist Equality Party, is that there are plenty of resources,
given todays level of productivity and technology, to meet
all social needs and dramatically raise living standards. I view
a comfortable standard of living, job security, retirement, health
care, housing, and education to be basic social rights.
I reject the claims of the Republicans and Democrats
that decent-paying jobs, pensions, health benefits and social
services have become unaffordable. In reality, they are being
sacrificed to provide ever more obscene levels of personal wealth
for the top one percent in American society.
I would never vote for a pension raid, or any similar
attack on the living conditions and wages of working people. I
would expose to the voters of Illinois any senator making such
an attack. I propose the creation of a guaranteed annual income,
indexed to inflation, to provide a comfortable standard of living
for all.
Subsequently, a school bus driver, at the top of her voice,
told Frerichs of the increased difficulties for school bus drivers
under the Democrats. Her route had been expanded, she was expected
to complete it in less time, and she was expected to pick up mentally
handicapped students along with other students, which poses a
safety risk.
Frerichs had to shout over the workers to deliver his response,
which was to reiterate his desire to raise income taxes a few
percentage points in order to provide additional funds for downstate
schools. He tried to distance himself from the states governor,
Rod Blagojevich, and the Chicago-based Democratic Party leadership.
The only good thing about Blagojevich, Frerichs said,
is that he wont be running for reelection after
this years vote.
One worker asked Frerichs about the attempt to reinvest a portion
of the state pension fund that was invested in Coca Cola, which
is notorious for union-busting and low wages overseas. Frerichs
responded that he was opposed to investing money in countries
that are really, really bad to their people, like the Sudan, where
theres a genocide.
The worker interrupted, The Sudan? What about Halliburton
in Iraq? They are making so much money over there they dont
know what to do with it!
Frerichs responded that he agreed, and the federal government
was spending millions where they didnt need to be
spending it. At this point, another worker interrupted:
This has been going on for more than four years! The Democrats
are doing it just as much as the Republicans!
Frerichs was on the defensive for the rest of the debate, and
Parnarauskis had a number of opportunities to clarify the program
of the SEP.
Fundamentally, Parnarauskis concluded, the
differences between the Socialist Equality Party and both big
business parties come down to one basic difference of principle:
should economic life and the allocation of resources be determined
by social needs and the common good, or should they be subordinated
to the profit system and the profit requirements of big business?
I insist that social needs take precedence.
Following the forum, Jane, a retired AFSCME worker, followed
Parnarauskis out of the room and indicated that she would vote
for the SEP. I agree with you, she said. You
are right in what you say. She took a copy of the SEP election
program to share with her family.
In addition to the AFSCME debate, Parnarauskis participated
in the American Association of University Womens debate
in Danville on Monday, as well as the Champaign Womens Club
debate on Tuesday. At each he was approached by workers afterwards
who indicated their support for the SEP campaign and pledged to
vote socialist in November.
See Also:
Illinois SEP candidate speaks
at forum on public education
[29 September 2006]
For a socialist alternative
in the 2006 US elections
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party
[28 September 2006]
SEP candidate on Illinois
ballot fight: "A victory for democratic rights"
[26 September 2006]
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