Fighting for a working-class alternative to the Republicans and Democrats
The US presidential election takes place on 5 November along with the election of vice president, all 435 seats in the House of Representatives and 34 of the 100 seats in the United States Senate. 13 state and territorial governorships and numerous other state and local elections will also be contested. BW Sculos, Vice President of Rio Grande Valley United Faculty (TFA/NEA) (personal capacity), Edinburg, Texas, explains what the Independent Socialist Group (the CWI’s co-thinkers in the US) is calling for.
Socialist Party
October 30, 2024
Both Democrat and Republican corporate party campaigns represent a continuation of a status quo that has increased the power and wealth of corporations, continued to spread profit-making war around the world, and done little good for the vast majority of people. Endlessly voting for the Democratic ‘lesser evil’ has allowed the Republican Party to push politics further and further rightward. We need an independent pro-worker campaign that earnestly pursues policies that actually benefit all of us – not just the very rich. There are two such options in Jill Stein’s Green Party campaign and Cornel West’s independent campaign. Working people should support both of these campaigns as a step towards building an independent party of and for the working class.
We call for a vote for Stein in states where she is on the ballot, and a vote for West in states where Stein is not on the ballot but West is. In states with neither, we call for writing in Stein. This is the best way to win the strongest possible vote for an independent left campaign. These are not wasted votes. Voting for either the Stein or West campaigns is voting based on our values and interests. The real wasted vote is a vote for either the Republicans or Democrats while they continue to betray the needs of the vast majority of people. Voting for left independent politicians is an important part of helping to organise a mass working-class party.
In addition to voting, we need to remain active beyond the election, regardless of which corporate party might take power. We should organise mass protests against Trump and the right wing, as well as opposition to the capitalist and imperialist agenda of Harris and the Democrats. The working class needs a mass socialist movement to fight for a genuine alternative to the corporate duopoly that plagues the US and working-class people everywhere.
Who are the independent and left candidates standing?
There are hundreds of independents, Greens, and left candidates running for office across the United States. Nick Wurst, Independent Socialist Group (ISG) and SMART-TD Local 1473 & Railroad Workers United (personal capacity), looks at a number of those campaigns.
Dan Osborn – Nebraska
In Nebraska, union steamfitter Dan Osborn continues his working-class bid for the US Senate, taking on Republican Party (RP) incumbent Deb Fischer. Uncompromisingly independent, Osborn has refused endorsements from the Democratic Party (DP) and taken no corporate money. Since our initial article in February, Osborn has secured endorsements from the state trade union federation AFL-CIO and out-fundraised his opponent, accepting donations from working-class people and unions. “Unlike Deb Fischer, I’m not taking corporate PAC money from Pfizer, Boeing, Facebook and JBS,” Osborn said in a statement. “No one’s going to own me when I get to Washington.”
His campaign has highlighted important working-class issues like increasing the minimum wage, making it easier to join unions, and stopping government handouts to “hugely profitable pharmaceutical corporations”. Osborn’s campaign demonstrates once again that it’s possible to avoid the trap of the corporate Democratic Party. The Osborn campaign is the most exciting development in the current elections with a serious chance to win and is the only independent campaign with major union support. If Osborn wins in Nebraska, it lends credibility to the idea of running as an independent.
One key idea that ISG would raise is for the Osborn campaign to help launch an effort for a new party for working people, one which would identify and run more candidates on a similar platform to the Osborn campaign, with the same no-corporate-money pledge, and with internal democracy. If Osborn gets to the Senate, he will face tremendous pressure to ‘play ball’ and compromise with the corporate parties in the spirit of ‘getting things done’. A party which can mobilise supporters to rally public pressure will help him break deadlocks and stay true to the working-class people who elected him.
Green 13 slate – New Jersey
The Green Party has firmly maintained political independence from the capitalist class and its two parties. Many on the left are drawn to it and run campaigns on its ballot line, using it as a vehicle to get on ballots where doing so as an independent is difficult. Not all Green Party candidates or state Green Parties are left or run on strong progressive programmes and this is why the ISG does not endorse the Green Party as a whole.
The New Jersey Green Party, demonstrating the importance of maintaining a ballot line and the opportunity for leftists to use its ballot line, is fielding candidates for a US Senate seat and all 12 House of Representative seats. The candidates’ platforms highlight a wide range of issues, including calling for universal healthcare, ending the housing crisis, and establishing a federal jobs guarantee. For example, the Christina Khalil for US Senate campaign “supports a myriad of solutions including access to public banking, increasing the minimum wage…and the expansion of public housing.”
Jason Call – Washington
Jason Call is a Green Party candidate for US Congress in Washington state’s 2nd district. Call got involved in the Democratic Party in 2016 because of Bernie Sanders’s support for the party, getting elected to the Democratic Party State Central Committee. He campaigned for the 2nd congressional seat in 2020 and 2022 as a ‘progressive’ democrat, following the failed strategy to try and reform the Democrats championed by Sanders etc. He left the Democrats in 2023, realising “the sad truth is that the Democratic Party, like the Republicans, is owned and controlled by Wall Street and the war machine”.
He was recently arrested on the campaign trail with Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein when they attended a protest at Washington University against the ongoing war in Gaza. His campaign programme highlights “Medicare for all, tuition-free college, climate emergency, strengthening labour, and ending endless war.”
Eduardo Quintana – Arizona
Quintana is a Green Party candidate for Senate, running on a pro-worker, pro-climate, anti-war platform. However, in an example of the dirty tricks used by the corporate parties, as well as the problems with the primary system, the Democrats and Republicans both planted candidates in the Green Party primary to run against Quintana. The Arizona Secretary of State, a Democrat, even declared the Democrat plant as the winner of the primary, until the Greens managed to correct the record.
Joshua Bradley – Raleigh, North Carolina
In North Carolina, Joshua Bradley is a joint Green Party and Socialist Party USA (SPUSA) candidate for the Raleigh City Council. Bradley was heavily involved in the Occupy movement in Raleigh and is involved in both the Green Party and the SPUSA .
His campaign has five main themes in its programme: “Housing justice, racial justice and equity, workers’ rights, environmental justice, non-discrimination and community inclusion.” The joint effort is reminiscent of the 2020 Hawkins/Walker Green Party campaign for president. Hawkins and Walker won the candidacy of both the Greens and the SPUSA and were supported by several other left groups, including the ISG.
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