PSL campaign sows the seeds of a new movement of poor and working people

PSL campaign sows the seeds of a
new movement of poor and working people

Villar wins highest NYC mayoral socialist vote in nearly three decades

Nov. 4, 2009

frances in en diario

After staging a vigorous campaign
that spanned working-class neighborhoods in every New York City
borough, Party for Socialism and Liberation mayoral candidate Frances
Villar received 3,517 votes. Percentage-wise, the last socialist
candidate to do better was in 1981.

“I want to thank every person who decided to use their vote
yesterday to send a message to the banks and billionaires of this city
that their time is up,” Villar said. “But our election campaign was not
only about Nov. 3—it’s about today and tomorrow, building the movement
we need for the society we deserve—a socialist society.”

The PSL was formed in 2004, and ran candidates Gloria La Riva and
Eugene Puryear in the 2008 presidential elections. This was the PSL’s
first mayoral campaign in New York City.

“For the last six
months, our party’s activists and volunteers have worked tirelessly to
bring the message that poor and working people can fight back,”
campaign co-coordinator Yenica Cortes noted. “From collecting over
14,000 signatures in just two weeks in July, to holding dozens of
street meetings and flyering team outings, we have reached tens of
thousands of people in this campaign. The 200 volunteers we had out on
Election Day was a fitting conclusion for a campaign that brought many
from our class into the world of political activism and struggle for
the first time. From today on, we will be working to build on that work
for the struggles ahead.”

The PSL decided to run Villar—a 26-year-old Afro-Dominican
student, worker and mother—to be, as a headline in the New York Metro
called her, “the real face of socialism.”

The Bloomberg re-election

Although some 36,000 New York City voters did not vote on the
Democratic or Republican party lines, over 1 million did. Bloomberg’s
narrower-than-expected victory has led some to wonder whether Bloomberg
was more vulnerable than he appeared, or whether the Democrats might
have committed some tactical error.

Bloomberg poured at least $100 million into his reelection
campaign, including the city council vote to overturn term limits, the
buying of ballot lines, and campaign expenses. Although his investment
ultimately paid off, it also had the impact of exposing for millions
the corrupt nature of U.S. democracy—which is only democracy for the
rich.

At the same time, Bloomberg’s chief opponent did not offer a
fighting program to challenge the city’s wealthy elite. He embraced the
dictatorial “mayoral control” of schools and the racist NYPD
“stop-and-frisk” policies.  

In fact, the Democratic Party leadership exists to protect the
interests of the same class of bankers and billionaires as Bloomberg
represents—despite the desires on many of the party’s members.

In
the coming weeks and months, Bloomberg will turn from candidate to
executive, continuing his programs of putting the burdens of the
growing economic crisis on the backs of poor and working people. It is
the challenge for socialists to provide a real fighting alternative for
the hundreds of thousands who hoped to defeat the Bloomberg program by
voting Democrat.

The PSL’s Frances Villar for Mayor Campaign aimed to take steps to
help provide that alternative. The party will be building on those
steps as the movement continues to grow.

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