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Peter Camejo Is Dead

Activist, candidate, and Green Party leader Peter Camejo died today at the age of 68.

Camejo ran for [California's] top office in 2002, 2003 and 2006, supporting abortion rights, universal health care and a moratorium on the death penalty. Before joining the Green Party, he also ran for president as the Socialist Workers Party nominee in 1976. In 2004, Camejo was independent Nader's vice presidential pick.

Camejo, a first-generation Venezuelan-American, was also active against the Vietnam War and a vocal advocate for migrant worker rights. He marched in Selma, Ala. with Martin Luther King, Jr.

RIP, Peter Camejo.

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    He sounds like someone... (none / 0) (#1)
    by Shainzona on Sat Sep 13, 2008 at 11:36:33 PM EST
    we could use right now.

    Sympathy to his family and friends.

    So sad (none / 0) (#2)
    by befuddledvoter on Sat Sep 13, 2008 at 11:38:55 PM EST
    I just received the notice from Ralph Mader. Very sad and he just finished his biography.  I look forward to reading it.  

    Sympathy also to his family and friends.

    Wow (none / 0) (#3)
    by txpolitico67 on Sat Sep 13, 2008 at 11:40:08 PM EST
    Sounded like the kinda guy I could whole-heartedly support.  The real progressives are leaving us far too soon.

    We must continue the fight on their behalves, as well as ours.

    May he rest.

    Progressives will miss his voice (none / 0) (#4)
    by Prabhata on Sat Sep 13, 2008 at 11:44:35 PM EST
    Maybe Matt Gonzalez will fill some of the void.

    I'm sorry to hear that. (none / 0) (#5)
    by hairspray on Sun Sep 14, 2008 at 12:08:09 AM EST
    He was an important part of the Green Party's attempt to help John Kerry's election problems in Ohio.  It was the Greens who fought for the vote recount, filing a lawsuit asking for a recount.  They did a job that the Democrats didn't  do and I thought about joining them at the time. Unfortunately Ralph Nader's face and his role in the Florida 2000 election stopped me.

    Who is Peter Camejo? (none / 0) (#6)
    by Andreas on Sun Sep 14, 2008 at 02:28:31 AM EST
    In 2003 the WSWS wrote:

    Camejo, in fact, spent some 25 years inside the Socialist Workers Party (SWP) ...

    Camejo ... joined the SWP when it was breaking with Trotskyism. He solidarized himself with the tendency within the Trotskyist movement known as Pabloism. In 1953, as a sympathizing section of the Fourth International, the SWP had broken with the tendency, led by Michel Pablo and Ernest Mandel, which rejected the fight to build an independent revolutionary party based on the working class and instead adapted itself opportunistically to the Stalinist bureaucracy in the Soviet Union and its satellite "Communist" parties, as well as to the social democratic parties and the bourgeois nationalist leaderships in the former colonial and economically backward countries of the so-called Third World. The SWP played a critical role in the formation of the International Committee of the Fourth International, which upheld the international socialist program and Marxist principles of the movement founded by Trotsky.

    By the early 1960s, however, the SWP was moving toward an unprincipled reunification with the Pablo/Mandel group. Camejo, who had just joined the party, rose to prominence within the organization as it embraced Castroism, student power and protest politics, black nationalism, feminism and other forms of identity politics. By the time he ran as the SWP's presidential candidate, the party had abandoned any struggle for the political independence of the working class and joined the middle-class radical milieu on the fringes of the Democratic Party.

    Camejo's current role was thus prepared by his tenure in the SWP and reflects the political degeneration of that party, as well as a broader layer of ex-radicals who have discovered the virtues and rewards of "working within the system."

    By the early 1980s Camejo was ready to move on, dropping his earlier socialist pretensions. He became a stockbroker, founding Progressive Asset Management and presiding over the growth of this firm, which is dedicated to "socially responsible investing" and today manages nearly $1 billion in investments.

    Peter Camejo and the Greens bid for "respectability" in California recall campaign
    By Peter Daniels, 30 September 2003

    So what's the point? (none / 0) (#7)
    by Prabhata on Sun Sep 14, 2008 at 03:28:40 AM EST
    Oh, yeah, he was a socialist, a dirty word to some who are stuck with the NAM definition. If the government helps workers, it's called "SOCIALISM", but if the taxpayers absorb the losses from corporations that are sucked dry by capitalists, like Bear Sterns, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Chrysler and S&Ls, it's called "BAILOUT", and if the taxpayers help farmers or other industries, it's called "SUBSIDIES".

    Parent
    The point ... (none / 0) (#8)
    by Andreas on Sun Sep 14, 2008 at 03:58:05 AM EST
    ... is that Peter Camejo was an opportunist - not a socialist or opponent of capitalism.

    Parent
    RIP Peter Camejo (none / 0) (#9)
    by john horse on Sun Sep 14, 2008 at 10:30:04 AM EST
    Those who fight for change outside the two-party system deserve our respect even though they are sometimes a pain in the *ss.

    I look at them as the keeper of the flame.  It takes courage to fight for your principles within the belly of the beast.

    My sympathies to Peter Camejo's family and friends.  

    Trotbot sectarianism (none / 0) (#10)
    by michael098762001 on Sun Sep 14, 2008 at 02:03:45 PM EST
    Re: "Peter Camejo was an opportunist - not a socialist or opponent of capitalism."
      Snore, having seen Peter speak several times in California, and knowing ex-Trotskyists who knew him very well, over decades, the comment above, is a sad example of the degeneration of Trotskyism (or at least the ex-Healyite version of same of the wsws website) into banality.
       Course, I might be the only other poster here who could give an off the cuff explanation of the evils of "Pabloite Liquidationism, " heh, aargh, ahem, zzzzzzz.