http://themilitant.com/2017/8104/810405.html
The Militant (logo)
Vol. 81/No. 4 January 23, 2017
(front page)
US gov’t says SWP should have to turn over contributors’ names
BY EMMA JOHNSON
The Socialist Workers Party received notice from the Federal Election
Commission Jan. 5 that the agency intends to reject the party’s
application to extend its hard-fought exemption from having to file the
names of contributors to their election campaign with the government.
“The Commission concludes that the public interest would be served by
disclosure of SWP’s contributors and vendors,” the FEC’s draft opinion
states, “and that the SWP has not demonstrated a reasonable probability
that disclosing its contributors and vendors will subject those persons
to threats, harassment, or reprisals.”
The party won exemption in 1974 and has successfully won extension six
times since.
The party’s exemption fight is part of the broader class battle for
workers and working-class organizations to engage in political activity
— including election campaigns — free from spying and disruption by
government cops, the bosses and other enemies of the working class.
The commission has set a March 13 deadline for the party to respond.
The SWP’s attorneys filed a request with the FEC Oct. 31 to renew the
exemption from having to disclose the names, addresses and occupations
of contributors giving more than $200 to its candidates, as well as the
names of the campaign’s vendors.
The SWP has faced an “extraordinary history of government and private
threats, violence and harassment,” states the party’s application for
extension filed by Michael Krinsky and Lindsey Frank of the prominent
civil liberties firm Rabinowitz, Boudin, Standard, Krinsky and Lieberman.
For decades the FBI and other police agencies targeted the SWP, seeking
to disrupt its activity in the labor movement, the fight for Black
rights and the fight against imperialist war. The scope of the operation
was revealed by a landmark 13-year legal battle against the government,
won by the SWP in 1986.
The FBI was forced to admit in court that between 1960 and 1976 it
carried out at least 204 “black bag jobs” — burglaries of party offices
— deployed 1,300 undercover informers and collected over 8 million
documents on the party and its members and supporters.
The FBI’s Cointelpro Disruption Program, and similar operations
targeting the Communist Party, Black Panther Party and other groups,
were exposed and pushed back by the mass proletarian struggle to
overthrow Jim Crow, the fight against Washington’s war against the
people of Vietnam and for the rights of women. The SWP lawsuit helped
reveal the character of and deal blows to the government’s political
police.
In applying to extend the exemption over the last three decades, the SWP
has documented how government spy agencies, local cops, bosses and
rightist forces have continued to probe and attack the party. From 1990
to 2012, the FEC granted continued exemption from disclosure on those
grounds.
However, both in 2009 and 2013 some FEC officials began to say the SWP
exemption should be eliminated. They argued that socialist ideas were
becoming more “mainstream” and the party’s exemption — the only one
granted by the agency — was no longer justified.
The FEC argues that the SWP no longer qualifies because “the documented
instances of harassment have steadily decreased in both quantity and
severity.”
Continued gov’t harassment, spying
“There is well-established evidence that the SWP has been subject to
threats, harassment and reprisals from both government and private
actors for more than 70 years — from at least 1941 to 2012,” Krinsky and
Frank wrote. This alone is more than sufficient evidence that the
exemption is needed, they say, especially along with the continued
evidence of surveillance of political activity that the SWP supports and
takes part in.
They then cite 33 specific examples of continued harassment, threats and
reprisals over the last four years.
Among them is a break-in at the home of a well-known party candidate in
Omaha, Nebraska, where nothing was stolen but a smart phone containing
political contacts; smashing the window of party headquarters in Los
Angeles after a public forum against Washington’s wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan; a series of incidents of harassment by cops and threats by
individuals aimed at supporters campaigning door to door across the
country; examples of individuals who expressed support for the party but
declined to sign petitions or subscribe to the Militant for fear of
reprisal from bosses or the government; and ongoing attempts to ban
workers behind bars from receiving the Militant, which editorially
supports SWP candidates, because of its political content.
The application highlights the escalation of spy agencies targeting
unions and political activity in recent years. While government spies
and provocateurs no longer claim the “Communist menace” justifies their
violations of constitutional rights, today they say the “war against
terror” means they should continue the same assaults on political
rights. FBI-run Fusion Centers, Joint Terrorism Task Forces, special
state police units and city Muslim squads, have expanded across the
country, as well as electronic surveillance by outfits like the National
Security Agency.
“Indeed, this current surveillance is eerily similar to the extensive
surveillance of the SWP by the FBI,” the two lawyers write, pointing to
recent revelations of spying on protests against cop killings, strikes
and lockouts, actions for $15 and a union, and attacks on mosques and
Muslim communities. The SWP champions all these fights and SWP members
participate in them.
The FEC makes no attempt to counter or even discuss this documentation.
It simply ignores it.
“In today’s growing capitalist economic crisis, the rulers in Washington
increasingly fear the working class, seeing larger class battles
breaking out down the road,” John Studer, SWP national campaign
director, told the Militant. “That’s why they seek to expand spy and
disruption operations today.”
FEC says SWP too successful
The commission draft claims that the SWP no longer qualifies as a
“minor” party, which is one basis for an exemption, because the party’s
2016 presidential ticket of Alyson Kennedy and Osborne Hart received
some 12,000 votes and working people contributed $80,000 to their
campaign. The SWP received more votes in a number of previous elections,
but that was never a reason to deny the exemption.
No one can argue the SWP rivals the Democrats and Republicans today.
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump got more than 60 million votes each and
raised and spent billions of dollars.
“It’s true the SWP is getting a wide hearing on workers’ doorsteps,”
Studer said. “We wish we were bigger and could organize the working
class to challenge the propertied rulers for political power.
“But that’s a ways down the road,” he said, “and until then we deserve
the protection of the exemption for our contributors.”
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