Eric Chester | |
|---|---|
Chester speaking to delegates at theSocialist Party USA National Convention inSt. Louis,Missouri, October 19, 2007 | |
| Born | Eric Thomas Chester New York City, U.S. |
| Education | University of Michigan (BA,PhD) |
| Occupations |
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| Political party | Socialist Party USA |
| Parent(s) | Harry Chester Alice Fried |
Eric Thomas Chester is anAmerican author,socialist political activist, and formereconomics professor.
Born in New York City, he is the son of Harry (an economist on the research staff of theUnited Auto Workers) and Alice (a psychiatrist né Fried) Chester. His parents were socialist activists from Vienna. They were forced to flee Austria after the Nazis invaded in February 1938, both because of their political activities and because they were Jewish.[citation needed]
Since the UAW is based inDetroit, Michigan, Chester spent much of his youth in the Detroit area.[citation needed]
In October 1965 he was arrested inAnn Arbor, Michigan, in the first draft board sit-in as part of one of the first acts of civil disobedience against the American government's warfare against the people ofVietnam. He served 15 days in the Washtenaw County Jail.[1]He was one of several students who were reclassified for immediate induction into the army because of their participation in the sit-in. A landmark decision by the U. S. 2nd Circuit Court ruled that the draft could not be used to punish protestors.[2]
Chester helped to form the Radical Independent Party inAnn Arbor in 1970. RIP elected two members to the Ann Arbor City Council in April 1972.[3] It later merged into the MichiganHuman Rights Party.[citation needed]
Chester moved toBoston, Massachusetts, in 1973. He taught economics at theUniversity of Massachusetts-Boston from 1973 to 1978, where he helped to organize the faculty-staff union, an affiliate of theNational Education Association.[4] He was also active in theNew American Movement during this period.[citation needed]
In 1978, Chester moved toBerkeley, California. He taught as an adjunct for a semester atSan Francisco State University. He worked as a cab driver inSan Francisco, where he became involved in protests by drivers opposed to a substantial increase in the number of cabs on the street.[5][6] The protests won a significant roll-back.[citation needed]
Chester joined theSocialist Party USA in 1980. He was the Socialist Party USA's candidate for vice president in 1996.[7] He campaigned for the Socialist Party USA's presidential nomination for the 2000, 2004 and 2008 elections, but lost toDavid McReynolds, Walt Brown and Brian Moore respectively.[citation needed]
Chester moved to Washington's Olympic Peninsula in the fall of 2007. He was active in protests against the Border Patrol's decision to set up roadblocks along the only highway in the area.[8][9]
Chester moved toGlasgow, Scotland, UK, in the fall of 2009 and stayed until the summer of 2021. He was actively involved in theScottish Peace Network. He took part in protests against an arms fair being held in a venue controlled by Glasgow City Council.[10][11] Following the protests, the city council decided that it would carefully consider whether to permit future arms fairs in their venues.[citation needed]
In his research, Chester seeks "to probe beneath the surface", while keeping in mind that "the goals and actions of decision makers, as well as their envoys, are frequently in marked contrast to their public statements."[12] His work relies heavily on primary archival sources.
He has published seven books. Two of the first four, Covert Network and The U. S. Intervention in the Dominican Republic, looked at "the connections between U.S. foreign policy and social democrats.” during the Cold War.[12]
The remaining two books of the first four, Socialists and the Ballot Box and True Mission, looked into U. S. socialist history. A specific focus was the need for a socialist politics entirely independent of the two mainstream parties.[citation needed]
The last three books arose out of a single research project, examining the suppression of dissent during the First World War. The books are The Wobblies in Their Heyday, Yours for Industrial Freedom, an IWW anthology, and Free Speech. A final forthcoming book in this series will focus on the repression of progressives during this same period.[citation needed]
| Party political offices | ||
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| Preceded by | Socialist Partyvice presidential candidate 1996 (lost) | Succeeded by |