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Vol. 73/No. 29      August 3, 2009

 
‘Workers need to
take political power’
New York socialists hit campaign trail
(lead article)
 
BY BRIAN WILLIAMS  
NEW YORK—A spirited campaign rally here July 16, attended by more than 60 people, celebrated the completion of the petitioning effort to place the Socialist Workers Party’s candidates on the ballot in the fall election.

Over nine days campaigners collected more than 15,500 signatures on petitions for the party’s citywide candidates, Dan Fein for mayor and Maura DeLuca for public advocate, and more than 8,000 for Tom Baumann, running as the party’s candidate for Manhattan borough president. This is more than double the legal requirement.

Fein and DeLuca are union sewing-machine operators and Baumann is a student at Hunter College. On that campus about 1,600 students, campus workers, and some faculty signed to put the socialists on the ballot. Petitioners received “a tremendous response,” said Norton Sandler, SWP national campaign director, who chaired the meeting.

City officials describe the public advocate as a “go-between” between the “people” and the government, noted DeLuca, “but New York City, like the entire country, is class-divided. When elected public advocate, I will fight for my class and put forward a program pointing to the need for the working class to take political power out of the hands of the country’s wealthy capitalist rulers.”

Pointing to rising unemployment figures, with the official nationwide rate now at 9.5 percent and actual numbers much higher, DeLuca said that unemployment insurance—for those able to get it—provides “unlivable wages for most working people.”

In response to depression conditions, “my campaign calls for guaranteed unemployment compensation at union scale for all workers until they find a job, and for a federally funded crash public works program to put millions to work at union scale to build schools, hospitals, roads, and public transportation,” she said.

The average workweek is now only 33 hours as the bosses curtail production and push speedup. “At the shop where I work, the boss said you’ll be working four days a week but you have to put out five days’ work,” said DeLuca.

She pointed to the victory won by workers at the Stella D’oro cookie factory in the Bronx. Workers there rejected steep concessions, and struck for 11 months with not one of the workers crossing the picket line. The unionists in early July won a National Labor Relations Board ruling putting them back to work with back pay. “Our campaign has given solidarity to this fight from day one,” she stated. With the company threatening to close the plant in October, the fight goes on, she added.

The spreading war in Afghanistan and Pakistan “is part of the same war Washington has been waging in Iraq,” stated Fein. “President Barack Obama is escalating what his predecessor George Bush put into motion.”

“The Socialist Workers campaign is 100 percent opposed to all U.S. wars,” Fein said. “We demand the immediate, unconditional withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.”  
 
Woman’s right to choose abortion
Fein spoke about the importance of defending a woman’s right to choose abortion, a precondition for women’s equality. In a speech at Notre Dame University in May, Obama called for finding “common ground” with antiabortion forces to reduce the number of women seeking abortions. “There is no ‘common ground,’” emphasized Fein. “For us to find ‘common ground’ is to give up a woman’s right to choose abortion.”

Rents are on the rise and so is homelessness, the socialist mayoral candidate noted. Housing should not be a commodity but a human right. The Socialist Workers campaign demands nationalization of the land and housing stock. This will halt evictions by landlords and foreclosures of farmers’ land, he said.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg is on the ballot for reelection under the Republican and Independent Party lines. He is also petitioning for a third spot for his newly created Jobs and Education Party. The mayor takes credit for an increase in reading and math scores since he took control of the school system eight years ago. The schools are not institutions of learning, however, but of social control, of instilling obedience to the bosses at one’s current or future jobs, said Fein.

“To be meaningful, education has to create the possibility for society as a whole to advance, instead of reinforcing the exploitation of the majority by the few. Until then, the only place you can find meaningful education is through political education within the workers movement,” stated Fein.

In a message to the meeting, Young Socialists leader Baumann hailed the successes of the petitioning effort. He is currently on a fact-finding visit to New Zealand and Australia to talk with workers and young people there. Learning about the struggle of working people in the Pacific will help strengthen the SWP campaign, he wrote.

The socialists’ petitions will be filed with the New York City Board of Elections on August 11, the first day that candidates can file. Over the next three-and-a-half months until the election, they will be aggressively campaigning with the working-class alternative, said Fein.  
 
 
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