Showing posts with label Alyson Kennedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alyson Kennedy. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Malcolm Maynard Jarrett

 



Malcolm Maynard Jarrett, May 9, 1970 (Missouri) -

VP candidate for Socialist Workers Party (2020)

Running mate with nominee: Alyson Kennedy (b. 1950)
Popular vote: 6,805 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

The Socialist Workers Party nominated Alyson Kennedy for President for a second time. Her running-mate for 2020 was Malcolm Jarrett, who had been a SWP candidate for Pittsburgh City Council the year before.

Jarrett's biography was provided online by The Militant--

Malcolm Jarrett

Malcolm Jarrett, Socialist Workers Party candidate for vice president, 49, works as a cook at a catering company in Pittsburgh. He was attracted to working-class struggle as an African American youth in eastern Missouri, as his family joined in the defense of the Black community in Cairo, Illinois, from assaults by cops and vigilantes. In these struggles, he gained a real appreciation of the support from farmers in the area. Jarrett was also influenced by the popular revolutionary movement that overthrew the apartheid regime in South Africa.

He joined the SWP while organizing protests at Southeast Missouri State University to oppose Washington’s war against Iraq in 1991. Today he stands in solidarity with protests by workers and youth against wars promoted by both Washington and Tehran in Iran and Iraq.

Jarrett has built solidarity with union battles, including the wave of strikes and protests by teachers and school workers in 2018, traveling to join actions in their support in West Virginia, Oklahoma, North Carolina and Pennsylvania.

During last year’s strike by United Auto Workers members at GM, Ford and Fiat Chrysler, Jarrett joined picket lines in Indiana, Texas and Minnesota. On a national speaking tour last fall he and Alyson Kennedy brought solidarity to coal miners fighting to get back pay stolen from them by coal bosses at the Blackjewel mine in Kentucky. The two met Uber and Lyft taxi drivers in Atlanta to discuss the exploitation they face and the need to fight for one union for all app-based, limousine and yellow cab drivers.

Jarrett has participated in fights against cop brutality and murders from the 1997 killing of Jonny Gammage to the actions of thousands of young people who marched in Pittsburgh last spring to protest the acquittal of the cop who murdered Antwon Rose II. He points out that police violence and capitalist “justice” is aimed at intimidating and punishing working people.

On Oct. 27, 2018, when an anti-Semitic killer shot down 11 Jews at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh, Jarrett joined 3,000 people protesting that night. He explains that Jew-hatred is endemic to capitalism and how the ruling boss class turns to anti-Semitic thug forces in times of deep crisis to divide and crush the working class. Working people have to be educated in what this question is all about.

Jarrett has traveled to Cuba on a number of occasions, including as part of last year’s International May Day Brigade, to offer solidarity with the Cuban peoples’ six-decade-long fight against the U.S. embargo and to be able to speak out more effectively in defense of the socialist revolution. He is now on his way to participate in the 2020 International Havana Book Fair — a major cultural and political event in Cuba, and urges others to join this year’s May Day Brigade.

Jarrett was the SWP candidate for Pittsburgh City Council last year, speaking out at a public hearing attended by 200 residents of Allegheny County against U.S. Steel’s willful pollution in the area and to call for workers control of production. Jarrett says health care in the U.S. is a disaster caused by the for-profit capitalist system. The SWP fights for universal, government-guaranteed cradle-to-grave health care, and retirement income for all.

The 2020 SWP platform was consistent with their past stance on the issues. It was interesting that mention of the COVID-19 virus was absent--

THE SOCIALIST WORKERS PARTY PRESENTS A FIGHTING WORKING-CLASS PROGRAM. WE NEED TO ORGANIZE TO FIGHT GROWING EMPLOYER ATTACKS ON OUR JOBS, WAGES AND WORKING CONDITIONS. Build solidarity with workers’ struggles to organize and defend themselves. On this course, we can build and use union power on our own behalf, and for all those suffering blows by the bosses and their government. One union for all drivers — taxi, Uber, Lyft and other app-based and car service drivers!

MILLIONS NEED JOBS TODAY! Our unions need to fight for a federal government-financed public works program to put millions to work at union-scale wages building hospitals, schools, housing, mass transportation and much more that workers need. Fight for a sliding scale of hours and wages to stop layoffs and the effects of runaway prices. Cut the workweek with no cut in pay! For cost-of-living clauses in every contract that raise pay and retirement benefits to offset every rise in prices!

Demand immediate national government unemployment benefits at union scale for all those thrown out of work as long as they need it.

WORKERS NEED THEIR OWN PARTY, A LABOR PARTY. For our unions to lead a class break from the parties of the bosses, the Democrats and Republicans. A labor party can organize workers in our millions to fight in our own interest and in the interests of all those exploited and oppressed by capital. It can chart a course to take political power out of the hands of the capitalist rulers and establish a workers and farmers government.

WORKERS CONTROL OF PRODUCTION. Workers need to fight to wrest control of production out of the hands of the bosses. Employers care about profits, not the dangerous conditions we’re forced to work under. This is the only road to take control of and enforce safety and health on the job. Demand the bosses open their books for inspection by workers and consumers. Workers control of production is a school for learning to run the economy ourselves, in the interests of all producers, a crucial step alongside building a labor party to fight to take political power.

FARMERS — WORKERS’ ALLIES ON THE LAND. Fight for immediate government relief to fully cover farmers’ production costs, including living expenses for themselves and their families.

No more foreclosures! Nationalize the land, guaranteeing its use by those who live on and till it, not “repo” seizures by absentee bankers, landowners, or capitalist farmers.

AMNESTY FOR ALL UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS in the US, a life-and-death question for the unions to unite workers and cut across divisions the bosses use to drive down wages. For access to driver’s licenses for all.

OPPOSE WASHINGTON’S WARS. US hands off Iran, Venezuela and Cuba. US troops out of Afghanistan, Korea, the Middle East. End US colonial rule in Puerto Rico.

FOR RECOGNITION OF ISRAEL AND OF A CONTIGUOUS PALESTINIAN STATE. The leaders of Arab states, of Israel and Palestinian leaders need to meet and recognize both the state of Israel and an independent Palestinian state. For the right of Jews to return to Israel as a refuge in the face of capitalist crisis, Jew-hatred and murderous violence.

CUBA’S REVOLUTION — AN EXAMPLE. The Cuban Revolution in 1959 showed it is possible for workers and farmers to transform themselves in struggle, to take political power and uproot capitalist exploitation. End the US rulers’ economic war against Cuba; US out of Guantánamo.

FIGHT POLICE BRUTALITY! Demand that cops who kill and brutalize people be prosecuted. Fight racist discrimination and the entire capitalist injustice system, with its frame-ups, “plea bargains,” onerous bail and “three strike” prison sentences, all of which disproportionately hit workers who are Black. For the right to vote for ex-prisoners and all workers behind bars.

HEALTH CARE FOR ALL. Fight for universal, government-guaranteed cradle-to-grave health care, and retirement income for all.

WOMEN’S RIGHT TO ABORTION. Defend women’s right to unrestricted access to family planning services, including the right to safe, secure abortions.

DEFEND POLITICAL RIGHTS. Defend the right to vote, to free speech and assembly and to bear arms, under attack from Democrats and Republicans alike. Defend freedom of worship. Stop FBI and other government spying, harassment and disruption. No to reactionary “cancel culture” and efforts to shut up people by public lynching through social media.

DEFEND RIGHTS OF PRISONERS. End solitary confinement. End suppression of the Militant, books and other newspapers by prison authorities. Abolish the death penalty, an anti-working-class weapon in the hands of the rulers.


One of America's more enduring third parties, the SWP had dropped to the third tier and was now competing with and in some cases eclipsed by other parties and activists on the Left that had originally splintered or were purged from/by them. Some critics charged the SWP with being a cult sitting on the shelf beyond their expiration date.

The Kennedy/Jarrett ticket finished 12th place nationally, earning roughly only half the number of votes they won in 2016. They were on the ballot in 6 states: Tennessee 0.08%, Washington 0.06%, Vermont 0.05%, Louisiana and Minnesota 0.02% each, and Colorado 0.01%.

Election history:
2019 - Pittsburgh City County (Penn.) (Socialist Workers) - defeated

Other occupations: cook

Notes:
Washington State trivia alert!!! Kennedy personally came to Olympia to be on hand when the petition to place her name on the ballot with Jarrett was submitted to the Washington Secretary of State.

Friday, May 7, 2021

Osborne Gallego Hart

 


Osborne Gallego Hart, May 9, 1952 (Buncombe County, N.C.) -

VP candidate for Socialist Workers Party (aka Independent aka Unaffiliated) (2016)

Running mate with nominee: Alyson Kennedy (b. 1950)
Popular vote: 12,465 (0.01%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

A Kennedy/Hart ticket sounds like a dream ticket for liberal Democrats in the 1980s, but in 2016 it meant Alyson Kennedy and Osborne Hart of the Socialist Workers Party.

In his most excellent Ballot Access News website for Feb. 13, 2016 Richard Winger reported and observed,"On February 12, the Socialist Workers Party announced that its 2016 national ticket will be Alyson Kennedy for president, and Osborne Hart for vice-president. This is only the second time that the SWP has nominated a woman for President; the first time was in 1972, when Linda Jenness ran. The Socialist Workers Party has now nominated a presidential candidate for 18 elections in a row. Besides the Democratic and Republican Parties, the only other U.S. political parties that ever did that were the Prohibition and Socialist Labor Parties."

In the course of those 18 elections the SWP had shifted their emphasis from Trotskyism to Castroism and in the process had experienced a number of splits and splinters. By the 2016 election the Party appeared to have stabilized, although others in the Left thought of it as an almost cult-like political entity with rigorous demands on their followers.

The SWP provided a campaign biography of Hart--

Osborne Hart, whose father was a career soldier, spent his youth traveling around the world with his family.

Since getting involved with the civil rights movement in the 1960s, Hart has been a lifelong fighter for Black rights. He’s joined struggles against police brutality and school segregation and the movement to bring down apartheid in South Africa and free Nelson Mandela.

He was politically active in the 1970s in the fight to end Washington’s war against the peoples of Vietnam and Indochina.

Hart joined the Socialist Workers Party in the mid-1970s and for decades has been part of helping to build and strengthen the labor movement. He’s lived in Atlanta, San Francisco, New York, Detroit and now Philadelphia and has worked in industry, including as a meat packer, steelworker, loading trucks in a TJX warehouse and on the railroads. He currently works at Walmart.

He joined actions in defense of United Steelworkers-organized oil refinery workers forced on strike in 2015, demanding workers control over safety to counter bosses’ speed-up drives, job cuts and attacks on unions.

Hart, 63, ran for mayor of Philadelphia in 2015, gaining a wide hearing among working people. He participated in protests against cuts in Medicare, demanding free, government-funded medical care for all; against police bru
tality and in solidarity with workers fighting concession demands by steel giant ArcelorMittal. He explained the need for independent working-class political action, urging workers to fight for a labor party based on the unions, to challenge the Democrats, Republicans or other capitalist parties.

Over the past five years, Hart has joined in building protests in Philadelphia against the relentless drive by state and city governments to slash funds for public education, with massive layoffs and spiraling class sizes. These moves have been accompanied by assaults on teachers’ and other school workers’ wages, pensions, health care and their unions.

Hart is active in the fight against government attacks and discriminatory laws against undocumented workers, protests against deportations and efforts to organize the unorganized.

He’s spoken out and built meetings in defense of the Cuban Revolution, demanding Washington end its 55-year-long economic embargo of the island and return the territory containing the U.S. naval base at Guantánamo to Cuba. He was part of the international movement that won freedom for the Cuban Five, revolutionaries imprisoned in the U.S. for working to defend their country’s socialist revolution.

He calls for the immediate release of Oscar López, a fighter for Puerto Rican independence framed up and jailed in the U.S. — much of it in solitary confinement — for more than 34 years.

Hart was one of the few third party VP candidates to take his campaign near my neck of the literal woods when he visited Olympia, Wash. Apparently the electioneering efforts up here paid off as The Evergreen State gave the SWP their highest popular vote percentage.

The Kennedy/Hart ticket made the ballot in 7 states: Washington (0.13%), Tennessee (0.11%), Minnesota and New Jersey (0.06% each), Utah (0.05%), Colorado and Louisiana (0.02% each). It was their strongest popular vote result since 1992. One wonders how much of that was due to the temporary migration of Sanders followers who felt disenfranchised.

Election history:
1976 - US House of Representatives (Ga.) (Independent) - defeated
2001 - Mayor of Detroit (Nonpartisan) - primary - defeated
2004 - US House of Representatives (Mich.) (Independent) - defeated
2006 - Governor of Pennsylvania (Socialist Workers Party) - defeated
2007 - Philadelphia City Council (Socialist Workers Party) - defeated
2008 - US House of Representatives (Penn.) (Socialist Workers Party) - defeated
2012 - US Senate (Penn.) (Socialist Workers Party) - defeated
2015 - Mayor of Philadelphia (Socialist Workers Party) - defeated
2017 - Mayor of New York City (Socialist Workers Party) - defeated
2018 - US Senate (Penn.) (Socialist Workers Party) - defeated

Other occupations: meat packer, truck loader, Walmart worker, railroad employee

Notes:
Was a write-in in the 1976 election. Andrew Young was the winner.
Was a write-in in the 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2017 and 2018 elections.

Monday, December 7, 2020

Maura DeLuca

 



Maura DeLuca, September 24, 1978 -

VP candidate for Party for Socialist Workers Party (2012)

Running mate with nominee: James Edward Harris Jr. (b. 1948)
Popular vote: 1,796 (0.00%)
Electoral vote: 0/538

The campaign:

In keeping with what was becoming a tradition of nominating ineligible candidates, the Socialist Workers Party in 2012 selected James E. Harris with under-35 years of age Maura DeLuca as his running-mate. Alyson Kennedy, the 2008 VP nominee, was called in to act as the stand-in VP in a half dozen instances.

The SWP appeared to be in sort of a cryogenic holding pattern, not helped by the growing number of ex-members who charged the Party with using cultish methods of manipulation over their dedicated followers.

DeLuca, who moved to Lincoln, Neb. in early 2012, left her temporary job at Kawasaki Motors in order to campaign. A co-worker there had supplied her with an electioneering quote that does indeed capture the essence of the SWP: "Every four years the bus driver changes, but we need to change the whole road we're on." She went on a national tour, including visiting a labor strike in Longview, Wash., probably one of the few candidates on a Presidential ticket to ever show up in that city. On the same trip she visited a strike in Kent, Wash.

Washington has been a solid blue state in every Presidential election since 1988 and has voted for Democrats for Governor since 1984. As a result, broadly speaking, this means the Democrats take this state for granted in the general Presidential election and the Republicans write us off as a waste of energy. So when any member of a national ticket visits us at all that becomes big news.

"I'm a factory worker. I have worked in union and nonunion plants and have seen that our strength comes when we organize and come together, women and men fighting shoulder to shoulder, against speedup, cuts in wages, longer hours, whatever," DeLuca was quoted in The Militant. Although Washington is considered blue, labor unions have been watching their political clout diminish in rural counties and the political division here is now urban/rural = blue/red. This is a microcosm of what we have seen happen across the country and by 2012 that shift was well underway. So the SWP had their work cut out for them. But instead of turning to the SWP, working class blue collar rural counties like mine (logging, Pacific Ocean fishing, cranberries, oysters) who voted for McGovern in 1972, Carter in 1980 and didn't have a single Republican in county public office for the second half of the 20th century, are now deep Red, and I don't mean May Day Red but Republican Red.

The Harris/DeLuca ticket won 1,796 popular votes out of the 4,120 cast for the Party as whole (the lowest in their Electoral history). They were on the ballot in Minnesota (0.04%) and New Jersey (0.02%), and were write-ins for Connecticut. Shortly after the election DeLuca relocated to Omaha, Neb. and within a few months was running for Mayor.

Election history:
2006 - Governor of New York (Socialist Workers Party) - defeated
2009 - New York City Public Advocate (Socialist Workers Party) - defeated
2013 - Mayor of Omaha, Neb. (Nonpartisan) - primary - defeated

Other occupations: sewing machine operator, welder, union activist, Kawasaki Motors worker, writer, wind turbine factory, electrical power assembly worker

Notes:
Speaks Italian and Spanish.
Opponents in 2006 included Eliot Spitzer (winner) and Jimmy McMillan.
Winner of the 2009 election was Bill de Blasio.
Joined the SWP in 2005.

Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Alyson Kennedy

 






                                                                      Above, 2008 ; Below, 2012


Alyson Kennedy, June 11, 1950 (Indianapolis, Ind.) -

VP candidate for Party for Socialist Workers Party (2008, 2012)

Running mate with nominee (2008): Róger Calero (b. 1969), James Edward Harris Jr. (b. 1948)
Running mate with nominee (2012): James Edward Harris Jr. (b. 1948)
Popular vote (2008): 7,577 (0.01%)
Popular vote (2012): 2,324 (0.00%)
Electoral vote (2008, 2012): 0/538

The campaign (2008):

The Socialist Workers Party launched their national ticket of Róger Calero and Alyson Kennedy in Jan. 2008. There was one slight problem-- Calero, who was born in Nicaragua, was ineligible to hold the office he sought. Many states would not allow him to be listed on their ballots, so the stalwart perennial James E. Harris returned as a stand-in. Kennedy remained the running-mate in all states.

Calero was not only not born a US citizen, but he had nearly been deported stemming from an arrest back in 1988 concerning a felony-level sale of marijuana. This case came up in 2002 when Calero attempted to re-enter the US after a journalistic trip to Cuba.

The Calero/Kennedy ticket made the ballot in Delaware, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, and Vermont. They were write-ins in Connecticut. The Harris/Kennedy ticket made the ballot in Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Louisiana, and Washington. They were write-ins in California and Georgia.

In a decline from the previous election, the SWP tickets had their best showings in New York and Vermont (0.05%), Louisiana (0.04%), Minnesota (0.03%), Iowa and Washington (0.02%). Official popular vote tallies vary somewhat depending on the source.

The campaign (2012):

In keeping with what was becoming a tradition of nominating ineligible candidates, the SWP selected James E. Harris with under-35 years of age Maura DeLuca as his running-mate. Kennedy was called in to act as the stand-in VP in a half dozen instances. Kennedy was simultaneously running for Cook County State's Attorney (Ill.).

The SWP appeared to be in sort of a cryogenic holding pattern, not helped by the growing number of ex-members who charged the Party with using cultish methods of manipulation over their dedicated followers.

The Harris/Kennedy ticket won 2,324 popular votes out of the 4,120 cast for the Party as whole. They were on the ballot in Washington (0.04%), Iowa (0.03%), Louisiana (0.02%), and Colorado (0.01%). They were also write-ins for California and Georgia.

Election history:
1977 - Mayor of Cleveland, Ohio (Nonpartisan) - primary - defeated
2000 - US Senate (Mo.) (Independent) - defeated
2012 - Cook County State's Attorney, Ill. (Socialist Workers Party) - defeated
2016 - US President (Socialist Workers Party) - defeated
2019 - Mayor of Dallas, Tex. (Nonpartisan) - defeated
2020 - US President (Socialist Workers Party) - pending

Other occupations: coal miner, teacher, Walmart worker, garment worker

Notes:
Winner of the 1977 election was Dennis Kucinich.
Was a write-in candidate in 2000.
A member of the SWP since 1975.