What follows is the text of a new leaflet issued by the CUNY Internationalist Clubs:
The Democrats' Budget Cuts Are Targeting YOU
Militant, Mass Worker/Student Struggle Needed To Defeat These Attacks
Fight for open admissions, no tuition!
On October 6 Governor David Paterson announced massive mid-year cuts to the state budget, on top of those that were already imposed in May. The hardest hit section of the budget, with over a third of the total cuts, is higher education. Out of $500 million in budget cuts, $53 million come from CUNY, $90 million from SUNY and $35 million from the state Higher Education Services Corporation, which administers the Tuition Assistance Program (TAP) and other aid programs. Seventy percent of CUNY students depend on financial aid.
This means classes will be canceled. Professors and campus workers will be laid off or will have their hours and pay cut. More working-class and poor students will be driven out of college, or will never have a chance to go. These cuts affect everyone.
Ignoring student and faculty protests, the state and city governments agreed to raise tuition this September by about 15 percent across the board at SUNY and CUNY. Now spokespeople for the CUNY and SUNY administrations tell the New York Daily News (6 October) that it's "too soon to say whether tuition increases will be needed" yet again. This means they're already calculating the amount of the next hike they're going to impose. Last year, a report by the state Commission on Higher Education recommended annual tuition increases.
In March, Democratic New York State Assembly speaker Sheldon Silver bragged of restoring $50 million in cuts to TAP that his fellow Democrats had proposed months earlier. Six months later, Democrat Paterson plans to cut TAP and other aid by $35 million. These cuts aren't about "misplaced priorities." The Democrats and Republicans are waging war on public education for the same reason they're waging war against Afghanistan and Iraq: because this is what is wanted by the capitalist ruling class, the bankers and business owners who run this country.
Wall Street has been pushing for years to slash expenditures on public education, health, transit, etc. that it considers a drag on profits. The attacks on CUNY and SUNY students, teachers and workers are also part of the rulers' drive to remake public education to better serve their needs: militarized high-school education for most, job-oriented technical "college" for some, and "liberal" university education for an elite few.
They look to the Democrats to carry out these attacks, not some right-wing Republicans. If someone like Bush, McCain or billionaire Bloomberg were pushing this program, there would be big protests in the streets. But they figure we'll just eat it coming from the Democrats. A serious fight against budget cuts, tuition hikes and layoffs requires a political struggle against the Democrats and all capitalist parties.
Last September the CUNY Internationalist Clubs sounded the alarm: "Democrats, CUNY Trustees Vow: Tuition Increases Forever!" (Revolution No. 5, September 2008). At the time, the stock market crash had just hit and the recession was just beginning. Many hoped for a new "New Deal" and expanded aid to public
education in response. Unions turned out the vote for the Democrats. Most of the left tried to hook up with the "movement" for Obama. When the election results came in, they celebrated, we didn't. We warned that Democrat Obama was no "antiwar candidate" and his education program was the same as McCain's.
You can't fight the cuts without fighting the Democratic Party that controls the government of the city, the state, and the whole country. Yet eager to go with the flow, many left groups take the opposite tack. The day after Democrat Obama's election, the International Socialist Organization plastered Hunter College with his campaign slogan, "Yes We Can!" Next they echoed the liberal Democrats' call to "tax the rich," which actually got passed in Albany. (In contrast, revolutionaries are for expropriating the capitalists. ) Now they're trying the same tack with a rally in front of City Hall - not Paterson's office - in the midst of the mayoral campaign. Not a word in the protest call about the fact that the 90-percent Democratic City Council sought big cuts to CUNY community colleges' budget last spring, which were only narrowly averted - until the next round. In reality, it's tailor-made for liberal Democratic politicians to jump on the bandwagon.
Since the early '70s, in good economic times and bad, tuition has been rising at CUNY. This is closely connected with a racist purge of CUNY and of education in general. The imposition of tuition was a response to the victory of open admissions at CUNY in 1969, which effectively desegregated what had been an exclusive white enclave in a city of blacks and immigrants. Today public schools are more segregated than they have been in 40 years. And they are being closed to make room for anti-union, publicly funded, privately run charter schools - an Obama favorite.
The most persistent voices calling for higher tuition have come from the CUNY Board of Trustees itself. That's one reason why we call for abolishing the Board of Trustees and administration, for CUNY and SUNY to be democratically governed by students, teachers and workers. We fight for free tuition, open admissions, living stipends for students and free child care 24 hours a day.
Workers in New York have a vital interest in opposing the budget cuts and tuition purge at CUNY and SUNY: these cuts are taking away the only chance at a college education for many workers and their children. We fought for united student-worker action to defeat the tuition purge: hundreds of demonstrators
last March picked up our chant, "Students and Labor: Shut the City Down!"
Today we're calling on students and faculty to stand with the Hunter cafeteria workers who are fighting to save their health benefits and pension.
In California, where the UC system faces a huge budget cut and a whopping tuition increase, massive walkouts on September 24 brought out thousands of students as well as a one-day strike by unionists. That would be a good start here too, but to win, we need to be part of a broader class struggle against the profit system that generates endless war and racist attacks on public education.
It will take a socialist revolution that overturns capitalism and puts the working class in power to achieve the basic democratic right to higher education for all. The CUNY Internationalist Clubs want students to be part of building a revolutionary workers party to lead this struggle. Join us!
For copies, contact a club member or email cunyinternationalists@gmail.com