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Kassad
27th October 2010, 13:48
http://www.pslweb.org/images/content/pagebuilder/52371.jpg

Socialist campaign in Columbus Ohio
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
By: PSL Columbus

PSL runs for state representative

On Tuesday, Nov. 2, thousands of people will get out to vote in Ohio for the midterm elections. For those in District 22, there will be an alternative to the capitalist candidates. Corey Ansel, a 19 year-old member of the Party for Socialism and Liberation, will be on the ballot on the Green Party ticket.

This is the first time that a PSL candidate has intervened in the elections in Ohio, but the momentum that has come from the Ansel campaign has been remarkable. The campaign provides an alternative for workers – a candidate fighting for their interests, raising demands such as free, quality education and healthcare for all and a comprehensive jobs program. These issues are not even mentioned by the corporate candidates running for the State Representative seat.

The campaign has mobilized dozens of volunteers in the streets. Ansel and campaign volunteers have gone door to door across Columbus to pass out fliers and talk to hundreds of workers. PSL volunteers attended dozens of community forums, union meetings, public debates and other events and put forth a socialist platform demanding “People over profits!” The campaign organized several PSL forums, volunteer meetings and days of outreach.

The campaign was different in its activism, in that it was a campaign in the streets. Ansel and campaign supporters organized transportation to the March 20 March on Washington to demand an end to the wars. They were also in the streets in April after the aid flotilla to Gaza was brutally attacked by the Israeli military. Activists from all walks of life were able to hear about a socialist alternative in the elections that demanded an immediate end of U.S. aid to Israel and stood for a free Palestine.

On Oct. 3, over a dozen campaign supporters stood up to the bigoted Westboro Baptist Church when it came to Columbus to spread its message of hate. Volunteers passed out leaflets demanding full LGBT equality and marriage rights. Students were very receptive to the campaign and many of them began volunteer work with the campaign as a result. Ansel volunteers also worked with the Communication Workers Union to organize transport to the One Nation Working Together rally in Washington, D.C. They joined hundreds of thousands of workers and worked with the PSL in distributing fliers and issues of Liberation newspaper.

On Oct. 16, members of the PSL and the campaign joined the Midwest Regional anti-war demonstration in Chicago to protest on the 9th anniversary of the Afghanistan war. Activists demanded “Money for jobs and education, not for war!”

Many local businesses, coffee shops and buildings proudly posted Ansel campaign fliers in their windows to show support for the working class campaign. Candidate Ansel was also able to speak to hundreds of students on Ohio State University and Capital University campus about the campaign and the struggle for socialism.

“When I told my dad I was working with a socialist campaign, he lectured me about it,” said Taylor Conway, a student at Capital and a campaign volunteer. “I think that’s wrong. What we need to do is get out there and change these illusions people believe about socialism. You have no idea how willing I am to fight for this.”

Ansel’s campaign was covered widely, from ThisWeek Newspaper, to the Columbus Dispatch, UWeekly and other local newspapers across the state. In addition, Ansel was interviewed by dozens of independent media websites in Ohio.

Most importantly, the PSL campaign reached thousands of workers in putting forth a message of socialism. The Ansel campaign has built an alternative for workers in the elections, which many desperately sought after the failure of the corporate parties to provide real change. The Ansel campaign is fighting to change the current system and to struggle for socialism.

However, campaign volunteers and PSL members in Ohio know the struggle does not end in the ballot box. What is needed is a mass movement in the streets struggling for workers' rights and an end to exploitation. The Ansel campaign sowed the seeds of an alternative to capitalism in Columbus. Upon that base the PSL will build a movement to fight back.

http://www.pslweb.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=14674&news_iv_ctrl=1261

RED DAVE
27th October 2010, 13:54
Does the PSL support the SPUSA LaBotz campaign for Senate IN Ohio?

RED DAVE

Kassad
27th October 2010, 14:06
Does the PSL support the SPUSA LaBotz campaign for Senate IN Ohio?

RED DAVE

They've never really asked us for a formal endorsement or anything, but I know La Botz personally and have supported his campaign from the start, despite some of our political disagreements.

Kassad
27th October 2010, 16:13
You can become a fan of the PSL State Representative campaign on Facebook here: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Corey-Ansel-for-Ohio-State-Representative-District-22/339946616158?ref=ts

Information on PSL candidates can be found at www.VotePSL.org

Sosa
27th October 2010, 19:43
the PSL has a a pretty nifty iphone app.

Lolshevik
27th October 2010, 19:51
Sigh. I was going to run for State House over here in Iowa, but I'm just a few months too young to take office in a hypothetical victory scenario. I figured people wouldn't take the campaign seriously if I couldn't even win in theory.

Solid campaign. I'm sure it must be pretty energizing for people to hear a State House candidate talk about imperialism, the power of capital, war etc. So it's no surprise that you're finding a good echo on this. I don't know if the PSL has a branch over there but if it does then I hope this campaign grows it!

One question though. Why run on the Green ticket? Didn't you bust my balls a while back when I was in Socialist Alternative for defending Nader? (A position I now recognize as wrong, by the way.)

BuddhaInBabylon
27th October 2010, 20:10
love the PSL.

Kassad
27th October 2010, 22:21
Sigh. I was going to run for State House over here in Iowa, but I'm just a few months too young to take office in a hypothetical victory scenario. I figured people wouldn't take the campaign seriously if I couldn't even win in theory.

Solid campaign. I'm sure it must be pretty energizing for people to hear a State House candidate talk about imperialism, the power of capital, war etc. So it's no surprise that you're finding a good echo on this. I don't know if the PSL has a branch over there but if it does then I hope this campaign grows it!

One question though. Why run on the Green ticket? Didn't you bust my balls a while back when I was in Socialist Alternative for defending Nader? (A position I now recognize as wrong, by the way.)

Thanks for the support. We've had a lot of success here with it and it is one of the reasons the PSL Columbus branch has grown exponentially. We do have an official branch here now, as well as others in Ohio.

The Secretary of State here has totally reorganized the way political parties gain ballot access in Ohio and the Green Party ticket was the only way to easily get on the ballot without filing thousands of signatures and having loads of money. That's why we're on the Green ticket on the ballot, but the entire campaign has been about the PSL. There's no focus on Green politics, since they're much less radical here in Ohio than they are nationally (which isn't saying much, but it's an observation of how the Ohio Green Party isn't even demanding socialized medicine).

gorillafuck
27th October 2010, 22:31
The Green Party is allowing your party to use it's place on the ballot?:confused:

Jazzhands
27th October 2010, 22:35
The Green Party is allowing your party to use it's place on the ballot?:confused:

are they even allowed to do that?

bricolage
27th October 2010, 22:44
have fun.

Kassad
27th October 2010, 22:50
The Green Party is allowing your party to use it's place on the ballot?:confused:

No. On the ballot, it will say "Corey Ansel: Green", but the whole campaign is centered around the PSL. We don't have the ability to gain ballot access yet and it's not exactly easy in Ohio.

gorillafuck
27th October 2010, 22:52
No. On the ballot, it will say "Corey Ansel: Green", but the whole campaign is centered around the PSL. We don't have the ability to gain ballot access yet and it's not exactly easy in Ohio.
But doesn't the Green Party have to say that that is alright? It's odd that they would.

Not to derail the thread, I'm just curious.

Kassad
27th October 2010, 23:09
But doesn't the Green Party have to say that that is alright? It's odd that they would.

Not to derail the thread, I'm just curious.

No worries. We got the nomination democratically and it was approved by the Ohio Green Party central committee, which was aware that Ansel was a PSL member. They realized it was more about the message of progress, social justice and workers rights than it was about party titles, but there was a decent amount of dispute. We just managed to win out in the end.

Kassad
29th October 2010, 15:42
have fun.

Will do.