James E. Harris (born 1948) is an Americancommunist politician,[1]perennial candidate, meatpacker, trade unionist, and member of the National Committee of theSocialist Workers Party.[2][3] He was the party's candidate forPresident of the United States in 1996, 2000, and 2012.[4][5] Harris also served as an alternate candidate forRóger Calero in 2004 and 2008 instates where Calero could not qualify for the ballot due to being born inNicaragua.[6][7][8] He served for a time as the national organization secretary of the SWP and was a staff writer for the party's newspaper,The Militant,in New York.[3]
Harris was born inCleveland, Ohio and attendedCleveland State University, where he was a founding member of theBlack Student Union.[9] He became a member of the Student Mobilization Committee Against the War in Vietnam and later served on its national staff in Washington, D.C.[3] He was later an organizer in theYoung Socialist Alliance and ran for the school board in Cleveland as a Socialist Workers Party Candidate.[3][10][11] Harris was endorsed by mayoral candidateSydney Stapleton, but was defeated in the general election.[11] A supporter of theCuban revolution, Harris participated in the secondVenceremos Brigade to Cuba in 1969 along with hundreds of other youth from the United States.[1] Brigade members cut sugar cane for a couple of months in order to maximize the country's sugar production.[1]
In 1977 Harris moved from Atlanta toNew York City in order to join the staff of the National Student Coalition Against Racism, which supportedschool desegregation.[12] He later became a national chairperson of the coalition.[3][12] In1988 Harris was the Socialist Workers Party candidate in New York for theUnited States Senate.[13] Harris finished seventh with 11,239 votes.[14] Harris lived and worked inDetroit in the early 1990s and was a member of theUnited Auto Workers.[3] He also helped found thePeoria, Illinois branch of the Socialist Workers Party.[3]
The Socialist Workers Party nominated Harris as their presidential candidate in the1996 presidential election,[15][16]Laura Garza was his running mate.[3] He supported abortion rights, proposed raising the minimum wage to $12, and was broadlynoninterventionist.[16] The ticket drew drew 8,476 votes (0.01% of the national popular vote) and spent a total of $180,000.[16][17]
Harris once again ran for president in 2000 withMargaret Trowe as his running mate.[18] In the state of Florida, Harris was initially rewarded 9,888 votes inVolusia County despite winning a total of just above 500 statewide.[19] After requesting a recount he was found to have only received 8 votes, a "computer disk glitch" was described as the cause.[19]
In 2004 and 2008, Harris was a stand-in candidate forRóger Calero instates where Calero could not qualify for the ballot due to being born inNicaragua.[6][7] He was on the ballot in roughly a quarter of states both times and received 7,411 and 2,424 votes in both campaigns.[8] Harris was then the SWP candidate in the2009 Los Angeles mayoral election, receiving 2,057 votes (0.89%).[20] Carlos Alvarez, the other far-left candidate (from theParty for Socialism and Liberation) received 1.11%.[21]
In 2012 Harris ran for President withMaura DeLuca as his running mate.[8][22] The ticket received 4,115 votes, the lowest total in the party's history, with one of the party's house candidates performing better than the ticket.[23] He was on the ballot in Colorado, Iowa, Louisiana, Minnesota, New Jersey, and Washington and was a declared write-in candidate in the state of New York.[24]
On the 60th anniversary of theKorean War's ceasefire, Harris joined the Socialist Workers Party delegation toPyongyang.[25] He endorsedRachele Fruit for president in 2024.[26]
SWP leader James Harris from Washington, D.C., told the crowd he first met Bailey in 1971 when she was there building the April 24 march against the U.S. rulers' war in Vietnam, an action that turned out to be well more than half-a-million-strong.
James Harris, the new organizer of the [Young Socialist Alliance] branch.
| Party political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by James "Mac" Warren (1992) Róger Calero (2008) | Socialist Workers Party nominee for President of the United States 1996,2000,2004,2008,2012 | Succeeded by |
| Notes and references | ||
| 1. In the 2004 election, Harris was used as a stand-in candidate in states were Calero could not be listed on the ballot. This was because Calero did not meet the requirements to be President. Harris was also a stand-in in the 2008 election. | ||