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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Illinois election board certifies SEP candidate for November
ballot
By Tom Carter
22 September 2006
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The Illinois State Board of Elections voted unanimously yesterday
afternoon to certify Socialist Equality Party state Senate candidate
Joseph Parnarauskis for the November 7 ballot. The election board,
which had delayed certification of the SEP candidate for three
weeks, was under order by Sangamon County Circuit Court Judge
Patrick Kelley to fulfill its statutory duty and place the SEP
candidate on the ballot by 2 p.m., September 20, or face being
held in contempt of court.
Parnarauskis has now been officially recognized as a candidate
for the midterm elections, and his name and party affiliation
will appear on the ballot in the 52nd District, which includes
the east-central Illinois cities of Champaign, Urbana and Danville.
Attorneys for the Illinois Democratic Party, which has carried
out a three-month campaign to bar the SEP from the ballot, have
indicated that there will be no further appeals or efforts to
remove Parnarauskis.
Parnarauskis said today, This
is not only a victory for the Socialist Equality Party, it is
a victory for citizens in the 52nd district and throughout the
country; it is a repudiation of the undemocratic efforts by the
Democratic Party to deny voters in my district the right to vote
for a candidate of their choice.
Parnarauskis thanked all of the people around the world who
wrote letters to the Illinois election board defending his right
to run, as well as those who gave financial aid, whose support
was critical in overcoming this attack. The Illinois Democrats
spent hundreds of thousands of dollars in the campaign to keep
the SEP candidate off the ballot, and deployed dozens of their
key personnel. This included attorneys from a top Chicago law
firmwith close ties to the leading powerbrokers of the Illinois
Democratic Party machinewho spent hundreds of hours concocting
bad-faith arguments to challenge Parnarauskiss nominating
petitions.
Yesterday, as the board prepared to vote on Parnarauskiss
candidacy, Democratic member William M. McGuffage looked frantically
for a way out of the judges order. He asked, Shouldnt
we just certify [Parnarauskis] with objections? Isnt there
an objection pending?
Steve Sandvoss, the general counsel for the State Board of
Elections, replied that no, there were no objections pending,
as Kelleys ruling had found that the objection had been
overturned on August 31. McGuffage continued, Well, there
was no notice of appeal? to which Sandvoss replied that
the Democratic attorney representing the objectors, Courtney Nottage,
had indicated that the Democrats will appeal neither the decision
by Judge Kelley nor the decision by the board not to sustain the
objection. McGuffage then sighed and threw in the towel, voting
aye to the motion to certify Parnarauskis for the
November 7 ballot as the Socialist Equality Party candidate in
the 52nd state Senate legislative district.
McGuffage led the Democrats repeated efforts to block
the certification of the SEP candidate. On August 31 the Democrats
deadlocked the eight-member bipartisan board in a 4-4 tie, along
straight party lines, and blocked the certification despite the
fact that the boards own examiner and legal counsel had
recommended that Parnarauskis be placed on the ballot. Again on
September 7, even after the Democrats failed to get a majority
to uphold their objections, McGuffage and his fellow Democrats
refused to vote for certification, producing another 4-4 impasse.
During the September 7 board meeting McGuffage sneered at the
signatures on Parnarauskiss petitions, saying, Have
you ever gone to a shopping center and seen people signing petitions?
They will sign anything. You put a petition in front of them and
they will sign it. These remarks epitomized the Democrats
hostility towards the workers and students who dared to nominate
a candidate not controlled by the two big business parties.
The election officials of Champaign and Vermilion counties,
as well as the Danville Election Commission, were formally notified
yesterday at 2 p.m. that Parnarauskiss name had been added
to the ballot.
From a legal standpoint, the Democrats attempt to block
Parnarauskiss access to the ballot by locking him in legal
limbo until the ballots would have been printed wound up backfiring.
The limit beyond which there can be no petitions for judicial
review of a candidates certification is 10 days after the
boards vote on objections to nominating petitions, i.e.,
August 31. Judge Kelley ruled that this was the final act
of the board despite the continued delaying tactics by the Democrats.
Since the board was deadlocked until weeks after that date, when
the SEP won its lawsuit and won Parnarauskiss certification,
it was too late for the Democrats to seek a reversal through the
court system.
Even after the boards certification there were indications
that the Democrats might make a last ditch effort to seek a judicial
review. Late Thursday afternoon the attorney for the SEP, Andrew
Spiegel, received a phone call from Courtney Nottage, the attorney
for the Democratic objectors, who said that the Democrats might
still take additional legal action to remove Parnarauskis from
the ballot. Several hours later, however, Nottage notified Spiegel
that the Democrats had decided not to seek any review of the boards
decision and had dropped their efforts against the SEP candidate.
The struggle to secure Parnarauskis a place on the ballot lasted
170 days. During the 90 days leading up to June 26, the deadline
for filing nominating petitions, SEP members and supporters gathered
nearly 5,000 signatures in the district, well above the legal
requirement of 2,985. Then, after the treasurer and chief legal
counsel of the Democratic Party in Illinois, Michael Kasper, filed
the original objections on July 3, it took 80 days of administrative
and judicial hearings, as well as a painstaking records examination
of the SEP petitions, to finally secure a place on the ballot.
In the final analysis, what our case has shown is the
real state of democracy in America, and the completely antidemocratic
nature of the entire political system, said Parnarauskis.
Illinois massive signature requirements are some of
the highest in the world. And, as we found out, even if you meet
them, the two parties simply proceed to throw up additional obstacles.
They wage a concerted campaign to remove you from the ballot,
and even if you prevail, ultimately, after countless administrative
and judicial hearings, you have exhausted enormous resources.
The operative principle of the American political system is exclusion,
not inclusion.
I look forward to an aggressive campaign to bring a socialist
platform to voters in my district. The Democratic Party locally
and nationwide is aware that students and working people are fed
up with their claims to represent the interests of working people
when, in fact, the Democrats are the second party of war and big
business. That is why they fought so hard to keep me off the ballotbecause
I fight for a program that advances the interests of working people,
and not the profit interests of corporate America.
See Also:
Judge orders election board to certify
Illinois SEP candidate
[20 September 2006]
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