Socialist Workers Party campaigns in Los Angeles:

‘We need our own party, a labor party’

By Bernie Senter
March 16, 2020
Retiree Ernest Williams, left, in North Long Beach Feb. 27, tells SWP candidate for vice president Malcolm Jarrett, right, and campaigner Bernie Senter that half his pension goes for medical expenses. SWP calls for government-guaranteed cradle-to-grave health care, Jarrett said.
Militant/Deborah LiatosRetiree Ernest Williams, left, in North Long Beach Feb. 27, tells SWP candidate for vice president Malcolm Jarrett, right, and campaigner Bernie Senter that half his pension goes for medical expenses. SWP calls for government-guaranteed cradle-to-grave health care, Jarrett said.

LOS ANGELES — The Socialist Workers Party candidates for president and vice president, Alyson Kennedy and Malcolm Jarrett, campaigned among workers at the Farmer John pork processing plant here Feb. 28 during shift change.

“It’s good you’re here in the community and I can meet and talk with you,” said Roberta Young, one of dozens of workers who stopped to talk with them. Kennedy works as a cashier at Walmart and Jarrett is a commercial cook in Pittsburgh.

“The rich and their parties — the Democrats and Republicans — think they know what’s best for working people,” Jarrett told her. “The bosses they serve say they can’t afford to pay higher wages and then just want us to work harder.”

Pedro Albarran (with hard hat), Farmer John worker and union leader there, introduces SWP presidential candidate Alyson Kennedy to co-workers during plant gate campaigning Feb. 28. He told them that Kennedy and running mate Malcolm Jarrett “are workers like you and me.”
Militant/Deborah LiatosPedro Albarran (with hard hat), Farmer John worker and union leader there, introduces SWP presidential candidate Alyson Kennedy to co-workers during plant gate campaigning Feb. 28. He told them that Kennedy and running mate Malcolm Jarrett “are workers like you and me.”

“I work in the bacon department and make $12.83 an hour,” Young said, and that isn’t a wage you can live on.

“I just got back from Arizona where 1,700 copper workers have been on strike against Asarco for five months,” Kennedy said. “After going without a raise for 10 years plus facing the bosses’ demand for another four-year wage freeze and doubling or tripling of health care costs, they said, ‘No more.’ It’s an example of what workers need to do.”

While speaking with Josue Rodriguez, Kennedy noted that the way the government is dealing with coronavirus shows how capitalism not only can’t solve humanity’s problems, but makes them worse. She pointed to the lack of accurate information, inadequate testing and medical care, the bureaucratically imposed lockdowns, all implemented by the capitalist rulers the world over, which leave people on their own.

Kennedy contrasted health care under capitalism — where it is a commodity, sold to those who can afford it, to maximize profits — and Cuba where it is guaranteed to everyone.

Rodriguez knew about Cuba’s health care system. “Cuba is not scared of the coronavirus because they have a system that takes care of people,” he said. “But in Mexico, the way they treat people there is the same as here. The problem is the system. They exploit people.”

Pedro Albarran, a union leader at the processing plant, joined the candidates and introduced them to his co-workers. “As workers we don’t have representation in government,” he told Zenaida Lagunas. “They are workers like you and me. They are part of the fights for better conditions on the job, health care and fair wages.”

Lagunas said her health care insurance doesn’t cover medicine or anything serious.

“The capitalist system can’t be fixed. It will take a movement of millions to get rid of it,” Kennedy said.

“People need to stand up for themselves and become confident,” Lagunas said.

Victor Jarman was skeptical about the campaign. “Politics is just another hustle. People in Congress and the Senate are some of the richest people there are,” he told Kennedy. “What specifically do you people want to do?”

“The two-party system is a trap,” Kennedy replied. “They try to make us think we can make change by picking the least bad of candidates they put forward. It’s a scam.” The Socialist Workers Party 2020 platform says workers need a labor party based on the unions, a party that organizes working people to fight all year round for the interests of all the oppressed and exploited.

Workers need to begin organizing in defense of their own interests. “Workers need to bring solidarity to fights like the Asarco copper miners on strike in Arizona and Texas,” Kennedy told him. “And the ongoing fight in Florida for the right of the formerly incarcerated to vote. A referendum there to do this passed by over 60% in 2018 but the state government is trying to gut it.”

Workers they met at the plant gate bought two books by SWP leaders, 14 copies of the Militant and two subscriptions, and contributed $30.

Talking to workers on their doorstep

Jarrett met Ernest Williams while campaigning in North Long Beach Feb. 27. “I worked for the City of Long Beach,” Williams said. “Now that I’m retired I’ll have to pay half my pension, $1,200 a month, to have health care.” Jarrett pointed to the campaign plank in the Militant that says, “Health care for all. Fight for universal government-guaranteed cradle-to-grave health care, and retirement income for all.”

The SWP candidate told Williams that he had just returned from participating in the Havana International Book Fair in Cuba. “I met doctors who traveled to Africa to help eradicate the scourge of Ebola. It’s an example of the revolution’s internationalism,” Jarrett said.

Their attitude is similar to that of Malcolm X, he said, showing Williams the book Malcolm X, Black Liberation, and the Road to Workers Power by SWP National Secretary Jack Barnes. “Malcolm X said you don’t have to wake people up to their oppression but to their worth,” said Jarrett. Williams bought the book and one other, along with a Militant subscription.

Kennedy and Jarrett also spoke at a Militant Labor Forum Feb. 29. “Cubans are very honest about the problems and challenges they face,” Jarrett said, coming back to his experiences in Cuba. “They have blackouts sometimes and a shortage of gasoline, results of the U.S. rulers’ economic war on Cuba.

“But you see a determination to defend their revolution,” Jarrett said. “One soldier told me, ‘We’ve faced this embargo for 60 years. We’ve had to ride bicycles in the past because of lack of gas. They’re not going to beat us.’

“The Cuban Revolution is an example for working people in the U.S. to emulate,” he said.

Those at the meeting kicked in $2,381 toward the $25,000 campaign fund.

Deborah Liatos contributed to this article.

See directory to contact party campaign office nearest you.