-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the July 15, 2004
issue of Workers World newspaper
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WWP CANDIDATES SAY: NO TO BUSH LITE, 
YES TO AN INDEPENDENT WORKERS' VOICE

If Sen. John Kerry were the subject of a beer ad, it might go something 
like this: "Bush lite-fewer promises, same bad taste."

Let's get real. Democratic candidate Kerry is no savior of poor and 
working people. He's hardly a "lesser evil" at all. While the Democratic 
Party's voting base-people of color, women, lesbian/gay/bi/trans people, 
labor and other working-class people-is steadily moving in an anti-war, 
anti-corporate direction under the blows of the Iraq occupation and the 
economic crisis, Kerry is busily trying to drag everyone in the opposite 
direction.

What a difference 12 years makes. In 1992, then-Democratic candidate 
Bill Clinton promised a peace dividend, a massive jobs program, national 
health care, an end to the persecution of lesbians and gays in the 
military, and much more. Of course, he betrayed every single one of 
these promises when he came to office. Clinton's strategy was to pose as 
a progressive while carrying out the right-wing agenda of the capitalist 
ruling class for war, privatization and repression.

Fast-forward to 2004. John Kerry isn't even bothering to make those 
kinds of promises to get elected. He's openly pro-war and pro-
occupation. He pays lip service to gay rights and immigrant rights, but 
opposes same-sex marriage and supports police roundups of immigrant 
families. Kerry and the Democratic leadership are counting on people's 
fear and anger at George W. Bush to override common sense and make 
them 
vote for their candidates, whose program is fundamentally the same as 
the current Commander-in-Thief.

It's no secret that Bush and the clique around him are dangerous. 
Millions of progressive people feel obliged to hold their noses and vote 
for Kerry in Nov ember to get Bush out. But the truth is, Kerry's goals 
are nearly indistinguishable from Bush's.

Kerry's support among Black, Latin@, Asian, Arab and Native voters is 
weak, and with good reason. Kerry has surrounded himself with a nearly 
all-white retinue. He either hasn't seriously addressed the issues of 
highest concern to the oppressed communities and other workers--like 
jobs, health care and education--or else he has taken an opposite 
position, like his support for the occupation of Iraq.

Kerry has given workers and progressive people plenty of reasons to 
oppose him.

* Trying to shore up support among [EMAIL PROTECTED], Kerry addressed the National 
Council of La Raza June 29, promising a "comprehensive immigration 
reform bill in his first 100 days as president" for undoc umented 
workers to get citizenship more easily. Hours later, he stabbed 
immigrants and [EMAIL PROTECTED] in the back.

Speaking on the Telemundo TV network, Kerry said he opposed issuing 
drivers' licenses to undocumented workers, the same position taken by 
right-wing Cali fornia Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. Even worse, he came 
out in support of the racist raids by the Immigration and Nat urali 
zation Service (now part of the so-called Department of Homeland 
Security) that are terrorizing immigrant families from Texas to 
California. (Los Angeles Times, July 1)

* Also June 29, Kerry spoke at a meeting of Jesse Jackson's Rainbow/PUSH 
organization, his first attempt to reach out to a Black civil rights 
organization. Kerry tried to ride the coattails of the 40th anniversary 
of the civil rights law of 1964, but the best promise he could come up 
with was a tuition tax credit for college students and a vague promise 
to give additional federal aid to states that keep tuition increases 
below the inflation rate. (Chicago Tribune, June 30)

If Kerry were serious about supporting the Black community, this would 
have been the perfect opportunity to announce a massive jobs-creation 
program to address the double-digit unemployment facing African 
Americans. But no. Not a word, either, about the heinous police 
brutality against Stanley Miller, a Black man, captured on videotape in 
Los Angeles. No apology for his support of the racist war of aggression 
against Iraq, or for the fact that he wants to keep U.S. military 
personnel-overwhelmingly working class and youths of color-in that 
occupied country indefinitely. No change in his position to send even 
more youths to kill and die in Iraq.

Earlier, Jesse Jackson complained that while he was prepared to campaign 
for Kerry, he had not been asked to. The truth is that Kerry doesn't 
want his campaign to be associated with the memory of the great civil 
rights struggles or any progressive movement, including Jackson's 
populist challenges to the Democratic Party mainstream in 1984 and 1988. 
Reverend Jack son, we have a proposal for you: Come and campaign with 
us, the candidates who embrace this legacy and are really fighting for 
jobs, peace and social justice!

Kerry has uttered not one word about the scandalous 2000 Florida 
elections that publicly exposed the disenfranchisement of thousands of 
African American voters. When members of the Congres sional Black 
Caucus 
were seeking the support of just one senator to support their petition 
challenging the Florida vote that gained Bush the presidency, Kerry and 
the other 99 senators were nowhere to be found.

* Kerry is moving to assure the super-rich and the corporate monopolies 
that he will carry out their goal of world domination, only with more 
finesse and savvy than Bush. A new Kerry policy paper, reported in the 
July 2 Boston Globe, documents these aggressive plans that echo the 
current occupier of the White House. They include "forceful action" 
against Iran, full support for Israel's construction of a 425-mile 
apartheid wall to imprison the occupied Palestinian population, and a 
pledge to isolate Yasser Arafat and other Palestinian leaders.

Add this to Kerry's earlier threats to Cuba, Venezuela and other 
sovereign countries trying to remain free of U.S. domination. Add it to 
his June 29 pledge of support for the new U.S.-puppet regime in Iraq: "I 
believe it is critical that the president get real support, not 
resolutions, not words, but real support of sufficient personnel, troops 
and money, to assist in the training of security forces in order to be 
able to guarantee a rapid real transition, and most importantly, in 
order to provide adequate security on the ground."

Kerry's message is clear: more war, more money for the Pentagon, more 
body bags. Anyone feel a draft?

* The Democratic Party is moving to block candidates to the left of 
Kerry from getting on the ballot, even if they have successfully 
navigated the biased state laws designed to keep third parties off. On 
July 2, Ralph Nader, who is running a progressive reform campaign, 
accused Kerry and the Democrats of "dirty tricks" to keep him off the 
ballot in Arizona. Based on a minor technical error in the complicated 
petitioning process, the Democrats got a judge to invalidate 70 percent 
of the signatures gathered by Nader supporters and ban him from the 
November ballot. The pro-war Democratic leadership fears Nader will 
attract rank-and-file Democrats with his anti-war platform. (Associated 
Press, July 3)

These are only the most recent offenses. Don't forget that Kerry, who is 
from Massachusetts and who takes the lesbian, gay, bi and trans 
community's support for granted, opposes same-sex marriage rights. Don't 
forget that this former federal prosecutor voted for the USA Patriot Act 
and, unlike more than 300 cities around the countries, has not demanded 
its repeal. Don't forget how he showed his contempt for the whole 
working class earlier this year when he willfully skipped a Senate vote 
on extending unemployment benefits. His vote would have passed the 
amendment; instead it went down to defeat, and millions of jobless 
workers have suffered.

What about Boston? This major city in Kerry's home state is the site of 
the Demo cratic National Convention, where he is expected to become the 
party's official nom inee. Has Kerry done anything to address the 
pressing issues for workers and oppressed peoples there? No, he hasn't.

Kerry hasn't taken a stand against the racist forces, led by Mayor 
Thomas Menino and City Council President Michael Flaherty, who are 
trying to re-segregate the city's public schools under the slogan 
"return to neighborhood schools." With one call to Menino and Gov. Mitt 
Romney, Kerry could end the stonewalling that has prevented Boston 
school bus drivers and monitors, teachers, firefighters and others from 
getting a decent contract. All he would have to do is threaten to pull 
the DNC out of Boston. Instead the Demo cratic Party and Kerry campaign 
are putting pressure on the unions to accept a rotten compromise. So 
far, the unions are standing tough with community support.

No one should be surprised that the "progressive" Kerry is so 
indifferent to the struggles of people of color, LGBT people and union 
workers on his own turf. After all, Kerry is a wealthy member of the 
ruling class in that old-money state. His wife, Teresa Heinz-Kerry, is a 
billionaire and heir to the Heinz ketchup fortune. If Kerry becomes 
president, his family will be the richest ever to occupy the White 
House.

That's why workers need their own voice in this election, the Workers 
World Party election campaign: John Parker, an African American man from 
Los Angeles, for president, and Teresa Gutierrez, a Latina lesbian from 
Queens, N.Y., for vice president. We are two workers, two people of 
color, two socialists, two longtime fighters against war and for the 
rights of all poor and working people. We stand for everything Kerry 
does not: Immediate withdrawal of the troops from Iraq, abolishing the 
Pentagon, same-sex marriage rights TODAY, a massive program to create 
living-wage union jobs, and much more.

Join us in the streets of Boston July 25 for the National March on the 
Democratic Convention to Bring the Troops Home Now, sponsored by the 
ANSWER coalition (Act Now to Stop War & End Racism). We'll be there, 
not 
to pressure Kerry to be more "reasonable," but to help expose him as the 
corporate stooge he is. We'll be there to join with all those who are 
organizing an independent fight-back movement. That's the best way to 
change the political climate, no matter who is in the White House.

--John Parker & Teresa Gutierrez Workers World Party candidates for 
president and vice president

- END -

(Copyright Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to copy and 
distribute verbatim copies of this document, but changing it is not 
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