The Militant (logo)  
   Vol. 68/No. 40           November 2, 2004  
 
 
SWP candidate for president starts
final leg of campaign in Miami
(front page)
 
BY LAWRENCE MIKESH
AND ALEX ALVARADO
 
MIAMI—“We say, U.S. troops out of Iraq now!” said Róger Calero, Socialist Workers Party candidate for president, speaking October 12 at a meeting of Veye Yo, a Haitian rights organization here. Given the new brutal offensive by U.S. occupation troops and the Iraqi military in Fallujah and elsewhere in central Iraq that has resulted in mounting deaths, including many civilians, this demand has urgency, he said.

“We also stand with you and others fighting for the withdrawal of U.S. and United Nations forces in Haiti,” Calero added.

“The SWP says workers and farmers need to have our own voice, a political voice,” Calero said. “Every four years they tell us we have to vote for one of their candidates—the Democrats or Republicans. Regardless of who is elected, Bush or Kerry, the ruling class will continue its exploitation of working people worldwide,” he said.

Many in the audience nodded their heads when Calero said, “If you have difficulty distinguishing between Bush and Kerry it’s because they have no differences on the fundamentals. They stand for capitalism, the plundering of Iraq, Afghanistan, Haiti. Bush says, ‘We’re killing the terrorists.’ And Kerry responds by saying, ‘We’ll do it better!’

“We need to begin to think and act independently from the capitalists and build our own party,” the socialist candidate continued. “We have to break from the parties of the bosses in this country and around the world.”

Third parties like the Libertarians or the Greens are also for upholding capitalism, Calero said. The Ralph Nader/Peter Camejo “independent” campaign does the same thing by serving as left pressure on the Democrats.

“The only thing we’ve got is ourselves, but we are the vast majority,” Calero said. “We say, if you don’t have a union, organize one. If you have one, make it more effective. Our unions are weak today, but it’s what we’ve got. What we need to do is transform them.” The socialist campaign, he said, is for a labor party based on the unions that fights in the interests of workers and farmers.

“Why do you come so late to the elections?” one worker in the audience of 50 asked. “Can you help us organize a union here?”

“We don’t come late to the elections,” stated Calero. “They try to keep us out. The parties of the rich have a virtual monopoly on the airwaves, television, and the newspapers. The last thing they want is working-class candidates on the ballot. Our campaign doesn’t end in November because the fight doesn’t end in November. I know that among you there are many who know how to begin to organize unions.”

“Are you representing one union or many?” another worker asked. “I am part of a union. I need to be in it to protect myself. It costs to be in the union. I am thinking about withdrawing from it to put my money in a fund, because the union is often not there for me.”

Calero responded, “Our unions are weak today. There are many obstacles placed in front of us. But, it is up to us to change that. We must organize on the shop floor and use the structures of the union to fight the bosses. We must keep our fire on the employers who are the source of the problems we face.”

Three people in the audience approached campaign supporters after the meeting to purchase one of the new SWP campaign T-shirts.

This final day of a two-day visit here that began with campaigning at 5:30 a.m. outside the International Longshoremen’s Association hiring hall near the docks of the Port of Miami. Calero was joined by Lawrence Mikesh, SWP candidate for U.S. Congress in Florida’s 21st District, and other campaign supporters. This was followed by a talk at Florida International University’s north campus and a public meeting at the Miami campaign hall.

“Internationally,” the socialist candidate said at the FIU meeting, sponsored by the Africa New World Studies department, “Washington and its imperialist allies use their economic dominance and military threats to prevent semicolonial countries from being able to develop. About 2 billion people worldwide—one-third of humanity—have no access to modern energy. We support the right of countries from Iran to north Korea and Brazil to decide what energy sources they want to use, including nuclear power. Electrification is a prerequisite for economic and social advances, and it’s an elementary step to the advancement of the working class here and around the world,” Calero said.

“The debates between George Bush and John Kerry,” he continued, “are absent of almost any content about the real conditions and problems facing working people today in this country and internationally. We urge everyone here to break with the parties of capitalism and vote for the SWP in this election,” the socialist told the 20 people present, mostly students.

“Our campaign offers a real working-class alternative. We say let’s mobilize the collective power of workers and farmers to fight effectively against the employers and their parties. If we mobilize union power we can have safer working conditions and a way to fight back. And we need our own party, a labor party based on the unions, that will fight for our interests 365 days a year.”

Workers in this country face a daily grind because of the employers’ offensive to increase their profits, Calero said. “We see the results of this in a faster pace at work, deteriorating safety on the job, a longer work-week, a longer working year, and a longer working life. Working people have less and less access to affordable health-care and the parties of the employers have our Social Security pensions in their sights.”

“You kind of touched upon it earlier, but could you discuss factors that cause limitations of electricity in Third World countries?” asked one student.

“It has to do with the world economic system, imperialism,” said Calero. “We live in a class-divided society. There are those who own the factories, mines, mills, and banks, and there are those of us who have to work for them. The world is carved up by a handful of imperialist powers. In this system there are large contradictions. Semicolonial nations that have fuel and resources are prevented from using their national wealth to develop. Paraguay is a major exporter of electricity, but the toiling majority of that country is not allowed to use it.”

Another student asked, “What would you do about health care?”

“We should fight for universal health care for all and it should come under a federally funded and protected program,” Calero replied. “There is absolutely no reason why workers shouldn’t have free access to health care.” Calero pointed to the example of what was accomplished by Cuba after 1959, when workers and peasants toppled a U.S.-backed dictatorship and opened the first socialist revolution in the Americas. Cuba, Calero said, has the largest number of doctors serving around the world. “How is it possible for a Third World country to do this? It’s because workers and farmers took power in Cuba. We need to do the same here.”

That same evening Calero spoke at a public meeting at the national headquarters of the 2004 Socialist Workers campaign along with Nicole Sarmiento, SWP candidate for U.S. Senate in Florida. Twenty-five people attended, including a young worker who came to the FIU North meeting earlier that day. Pablo, a young worker attending the event, had first been introduced to the SWP campaign when he ran into local candidates soap boxing at the Government Center transportation hub in downtown Miami.

The previous day, about 15 garment workers gathered after work across the street from the Point Blank Body Armor plant in Oakland Park to speak with Calero. Several of the workers wanted to discuss the current situation in the plant, which was recently unionized after a two-year struggle. The campaigning took place under a banner hung from the trees that read in English and Spanish, “It’s not who you’re against, but what you’re for! Vote Socialist Workers Party in 2004!”

Socialist Workers Party candidates across the United States

 
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Socialist candidates campaign in Puerto Rico  
 
 
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