
Clifton DeBerry, 1964 Presidential
candidate of the Socialist Workers Party.
Clifton DeBerry (1924-2006)
was an American
communist and two-time candidate for President of the United
States of the Socialist Workers
Party. He was the first black American in the 20th
Century to be chosen by a political party as its nominee for
President.
Biography
Early years
Clifton
DeBerry was born in 1924 in Holly Springs, Mississippi
. He worked as a house painter and was a
trade unionist.
In the
1940s, DeBerry left his native South and moved to Chicago
, where he
worked in a factory owned by International Harvester. He
became active in the
Farm
Equipment Workers Union and joined the
Communist Party. DeBerry grew critical
of the official Communist movement, however, and in 1953 he joined
the
Socialist
Workers Party, a
Trotskyist
organization.
During his Chicago years in the late 1950s, DeBerry found it hard
to keep a job. "I would get a job and it would last only 3 days. I
would go from one job to another.
The FBI
would visit
my boss and I would be fired." DeBerry gave up on the
city and moved to New
York
in 1960.
Political career
DeBerry's career as a political activist began in earnest in the
1950s. In 1955 he helped organize a mass protest in Chicago to
protest the
lynching of
Emmett Till back home in his native Mississippi.
DeBerry spoke out in defense of the
Cuban Revolution, in support of African
liberation struggles, and demanded withdrawal of U.S. troops from
Vietnam.
DeBerry
marched for civil rights in Selma, Alabama
and Memphis, Tennessee
and was a supporter of Malcolm
X in the 1960s. He was a delegate to the founding
conventions of the
Negro Labor
Congress and the
Negro
American Labor Council.
DeBerry ran for Councilman in the
borough of New York in the election held
in the fall of 1963. He received 3,514 votes in the race.
When DeBerry ran first in
the 1964 campaign
he was the party's first
African
American candidate as well as the first African American
candidate for President of any existing party (he was preceded in
1960 by marginal candidate
Clennon
King).
DeBerry's running mate was Ed Shaw, a printer from Illinois
.
In March of 1965, the SWP announced DeBerry as its candidate for
Mayor of New York.
In
1970, he ran for
Governor of New York and polled
5,766 votes.
DeBerry ran again in
United States
presidential election, 1980 as one of three candidates the
party had that year, the others being
Andrew Pulley and
Richard Congress.
Matilde Zimmermann was the
vice presidential candidate on
all three tickets.
Death and legacy
Clifton
DeBerry died of heart failure on March 24, 2006 in a hospital near
his home of Union City, California
. He was 82 years old. A memorial meeting was
held in his honor by the Socialist Workers Party in New York City
on April 29, 2006.
Footnotes
- Socialist Workers Party Election Platform. New York:
Socialist Workers Party, April 1964. Page 1.
- Joel Britton, "Meeting Set to Celebrate Life of SWP leader
Clifton DeBerry," The Militant, vol. 70, no. 14 (April 10,
2006). Online at
http://www.themilitant.com/2006/7014/701405.html.
- Britton, "Meeting Set to Celebrate Life of SWP leader Clifton
DeBerry," op. cit.
- Britton, "Meeting Set to Celebrate Life of SWP leader Clifton
DeBerry," op. cit.
- James Kirkpatrick Davis, Spying on America: The FBI's
Domestic Counterintelligence Program. Westport, CT: Praeger
Publishers, 1992. Page 61.
- Britton, "Meeting Set to Celebrate Life of SWP leader Clifton
DeBerry," op. cit.
- Britton, "Meeting Set to Celebrate Life of SWP leader Clifton
DeBerry," op. cit.
- Socialist Workers Party Election Platform. New York:
Socialist Workers Party, April 1964. Page 1.
- Federal Bureau of Investigation, COINTELPRO material,
http://www.icdc.com/~paulwolf/cointelpro/swp.htm#deberry.
- Federal Bureau of Investigation, COINTELPRO material, op.
cit.
- Joel Britton, "Meeting Set to Celebrate Life of SWP leader
Clifton DeBerry," op. cit.
Works by Clifton DeBerry
- Marxism and the Negro Struggle. With Harold Cruse and George Breitman. New York: Pathfinder Press,
1965.
- The Case for an Independent Black Political Party [with]
American Poltiics and the 1968 Presidential Campaign, by
Jack Barnes. New York: Socialist Workers
Party, 1967.
- Murder in Memphis. Martin Luther King and the
future of the Black Liberation Struggle. With Paul Boutelle,George
Novack, and Joseph Hansen. New
York: Merit Publishers, 1968.
- "Report on Black Struggle," in May 1968 Plenum
Material. New York: Socialist Workers Party, 1968.
External links