Ralph Nader’s Last Stand?

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  • DLR'sCock
    Crazy Ass Mofo
    • Jan 2004
    • 2937

    Ralph Nader’s Last Stand?

    "Give a man a mask and he will tell you the truth.”- -Oscar Wilde



    Aquarian Weekly
    8/25/04
    REALITY CHECK/BUZZ

    James Campion

    RALPH NADER’S LAST STAND?

    This discussion was conducted over the phone lines from Nader Campaign
    Headquarters in Washington D.C. and The Desk on 8/5/04.

    In this polarized political landscape of 2004, it’s getting harder to not
    be swept up in the fervent "pick a side" mentality propagated by both The Right
    and The Left. Independent voices are as welcomed as dissenting voices were in
    the weeks after 9/11 or the weeks leading up to the Iraqi war. One such voice
    has been vilified from all sides for feeding his ego, mucking up the process,
    and aiding the enemy. He’s been begged to pack it in by the Democrats and even
    accused of getting Republican support to stay in. Yet he fights on, but for what
    purpose, to what end?
    His name is Ralph Nader and he is running as an independent candidate for
    the country’s highest office, and this space (an unabashedly long suffering
    proponent of a viable independent national political voice) thought it wise to
    give him the floor to explain his side, a side not too popular whichever way you
    lean.

    james campion: Why are running for the presidency again in 2004?

    Ralph Nader: Because the two parties are proxies of large corporations who have
    turned Washington D.C. into corporate occupied territory and are excluding
    citizen groups from trying to improve their country.

    jc: I agree with that assessment of the two-party system, but many voters,
    including those who support a majority of your issues feel that the Kerry
    campaign, despite your stance, embrace many of the same concerns. Why should a
    voter consider your independent campaign over a larger party who has a
    legitimate chance to unseat this president?

    RN: The majority of people in this country want out of Iraq. Bush and Kerry are
    pro-war, pro-occupation. No withdrawal date. The majority wants to settle the
    Israeli/Palestinian conflict with an independent Palestinian state, including
    almost 70% of Jewish Americans. Kerry and Bush are supportive of the Israeli
    military policy. Kerry and Bush both support the Patriot Act. Kerry and Bush
    both support the bloated, redundant, wasteful, and sometimes corrupt military
    budget, which amounts to half of the federal government’s operating
    expenditures. Both Bush and Kerry are for corporate globalization, NAFTA and WTO
    style. They want to expand it. Both Bush and Kerry are for the failed war on
    drugs. Both Bush and Kerry do not have a health care plan for all or a living
    wage for all. Both Bush and Kerry are for capital punishment, although Kerry is
    for a modified form. Both Bush and Kerry do not support public funding of public
    campaigns. Both Bush and Kerry will not take a stand aga!
    inst the draft. We’ve sent them letters and they’ve refused to take a stand
    against the draft.

    jc: Pretty good list. Let’s concentrate on two specific ones trumpeted by the
    mainstream media. Although Kerry has talked a good game about jobs being
    transferred to other countries, he did vote for NAFTA and is a supporter of the
    WTO. He is also a supporter of the war, whichever way he would like to slice it.
    I’ve written several times that you’re the only anti-war candidate standing, but
    why do you think it is so difficult for voters to differentiate your candidacy
    from the Kerry campaign, whose supporters continually cite that your existence
    in this race compromises their effort to oust Bush?

    RN: It’s very simple, all these voters you talk about believe Bush has been a
    terrible president and so anything, they think, is better than Bush. But once
    they analyze it, anything is not very good at all. In other words, they are
    falling prey to the "least worst" voter choice, which, in effect, leaves Kerry
    without a mandate. Without having any demands made on him by environmental,
    labor, minority, consumer, youth groups, because they’re so freaked out by Bush,
    Kerry can get elected with no mandates. Now, what are mandates? Mandates are the
    way voters can pull candidates toward their interests before the election, when
    they have the bargaining power. If you don’t demand anything of Kerry you are
    just basically playing a one-sided tug-of-war that you’re losing, because the
    corporate lobbies are pulling Kerry and Bush 24-hours a day in the direction of
    no health insurance for all, no living wage for all, no reduction of the
    military industrial complex, no revision of the fai!
    led war on drugs, on and on.
    Both parties are being pulled in one direction by extremely powerful
    forces, and Kerry and Bush are saying to their voters, "You’ve got nowhere to
    go, other than to stay home or vote for us, shut up and get in line." Kerry
    says, "You obviously know that Bush is worse than me" and Bush says, "You
    obviously know that Kerry is worse than me."
    The "Anybody But Bush" attitude is a brain closer. Nothings else is
    discussed, entertained, analyzed, or absorbed, not even the spillover vote from
    the Nader/Camejo candidacy, which might tip the scales in the few close races in
    the House and Senate and give the House and/or Senate to the Democrats, so if
    they don’t beat Bush, they can block him. They don’t even want to talk about
    that. It’s a kind of political hysteria that’s going on. The "politics of fear"
    at work.

    jc: I call it the "politics of the moderate", wherein the candidates of both
    parties feel they have to swing to the middle for a few months. Therefore the
    differentiation of the platforms is not distinguishable. In fact, I’m still
    waiting for a platform from the Kerry campaign, beyond being the alternative to
    crap.

    RN: Exactly, in fact Kerry’s main strategy is to take major issues off the table
    by "me too-ing" Bush; the war in Iraq, the Israeli/Palestinian issue, the
    Patriot Act, and, most importantly, where he’s getting his money. Pretty soon
    you take so much off the table you become indistinguishable from your opponent.
    George Will said on television a couple of weeks ago, "I just read the
    Democratic platform, and you know what?, it could be the Republican platform."

    jc: Let me ask you politically about the games being played right now over you
    getting on the ballot in certain states. I understand you’ve just won a battle
    to be included on the ballot in New Jersey.

    RN: Right.

    jc: What exactly is the Democratic Party doing to keep you from getting on
    ballots in different states?

    RN: As we speak, they have nine computer terminals trying to bump us off the
    Pennsylvania ballot. They hired three corporate law firms in Arizona and they
    bumped us off the ballot with all kinds of legal challenges we couldn’t afford
    to defend at $250 dollars-an-hour for our lawyers. They’ve stalled us in Oregon
    by infiltrating our convention. Under Oregon law, you can get on the ballot in
    two ways; a thousand registered voters all at once in an auditorium signing for
    you, under state election supervision, or fifteen thousand verified signatures
    around the state. So we took the convention room between five and seven in the
    evening about a month ago. Six-thirty arrived, and we got around eleven hundred
    people in the room, and the counters didn’t take signatures from half of them.
    This was done openly. Then in Illinois, the House Speaker sent some of his staff
    people over to examine our ballots, which is pretty inappropriate unless they
    took a leave.

    jc: Would you say you represent a dissenting voice of the electorate? In other
    words, if some of your principles and your main platform for running for
    president fails to make a dent, a likely scenario, do you then believe by merely
    running you’ll make transparent the two-party machinations to keep an
    independent voice out of the process.

    RN: Of course. We’re setting an example. We’re setting a framework. We’re laying
    the basis for post November 2 expansion of progressive political movement. We’re
    bringing in a lot of young people who will be the leaders of the future, who are
    presently turned off politics, and above all we’re pushing the agenda and trying
    to educate the voter to how to be much more discriminating between the two
    parties, and much more demanding. Some of the things we’ve stimulated are
    available on www.opendebates.org.

    jc: In 2000, when you and Pat Buchanan were trying to get into the debates and
    the election commission arbitrarily put out a number of 15% of the vote needed
    to participate, I wrote a piece denouncing it and interviewed Pat on the
    subject, to which he was predictably candid. ("Raging Against The Machine" -
    Issue 1/26/00) And I would think that was the strongest example of your argument
    against the fear of the two-parties right there. But how direct has the
    Democratic Party been in speaking to you on your candidacy this time around? Did
    Terry McAuliff or anyone, even Kerry himself, ever approach you directly and ask
    you to not run.

    RN: Every time I talk to McAuliff, he says, "I hope you withdraw."

    jc: But have they promised you anything if you bowed out, tried to cut a deal?

    RN: No. (laughs) Did they promise anything to Dennis Kucinich, a loyal Democrat,
    who campaigned for two years, and they handed him his head and refused him every
    one of his proposals for the Democratic platform? These guys are massively
    arrogant. It’s their way or no way. They’re unlike European majority or
    plurality parties who negotiate with small parties and coalitions. The arrogance
    here is unprecedented.

    jc: I’d like to get to some items that have been reported and I have touched
    upon recently in previous columns regarding the Edwards choice for vice
    president and your alleged public, or not so public recommendation of him. A lot
    of people I talked to inside thought once that was accomplished it would serve
    as an appeasement to get you out of the race. How true was that nugget?

    RN: Not true at all. This is just part of trying to make Kerry a better
    candidate, as far as wrongly injured people given their day in court, which
    Edwards should be champion, but is not. That’s been taken off the table too. You
    hear the Republicans ragging against wrongfully injured people’s right to go to
    court, an all-American right that goes back to the challenge of King George, the
    right of trial by jury that the colonies accused him of taking from them, and
    the Democrats can’t stand up for people who the business press has shown
    wrongfully injured and defrauded and are finding hard just to get a hearing in
    court with all the tort reform that is going on in state and federal
    legislature.

    jc: How do you feel about your impact on the 2000 race, one of the closest in
    this nation’s history?

    RN: The Democrats should be going after the Republican thieves who stole the
    election from their candidate, instead of the Green Party, but they’re into
    scapegoating, because they don’t want to look at their own internal weaknesses
    and infirmities.

    jc: Many categorized your campaign, especially the Democrats, as that of playing
    the spoiler, and putting Bush, a sub-standard president, in office in the first
    place. Of course I applauded the Gore defeat merrily. So thanks for that.

    RN: Well actually it could have come out very well for the Democrats, because
    Gore did win nationally and in Florida in respect to a statewide count. The
    Republicans stole the election from Gore before, during, and after the Florida
    election. Secretary of State Katherine Harris, Jeb Bush, the Supreme Court, and
    all the shenanigans with falsely designating ex-felons and the crazy ballots did
    them in.

    jc: I’m so sick of hearing, "We won the popular vote!", when that’s not the name
    of the game.

    RN: Yeah, well you’d think since they won the popular vote they’d start the
    rollback of the Electoral College, and they’re not even doing that.

    jc: But you must admit there is some credence that your 2004 candidacy threatens
    the Kerry campaign to some degree.

    RN: Not so. Either campaign could benefit from our agenda. In late October I
    sent to the RNC and the DNC a 45-page document called "Agenda Inquiry for the
    Common Good". Inside are 25 issues the Democrats could pick up on and landslide
    Bush, like living wage. That’s worth four, five million votes right there that
    they wouldn’t get. You’ll also find on there the letters we’re sending to Bush
    and Kerry. I mean, look, we sent them a letter to take a stand on the draft,
    they won’t take a stand on the draft. We’re going to send them a letter
    basically asking them to campaign in Hawaii and Alaska, which Democrats and
    Republican never travel to, because Hawaii is Democrat and Alaska’s Republican.
    So they carve the country up into these districts and they abandon these people,
    and they really resent it. I just came back from those two states. To me, if you
    run for president, you campaign in 50 states. You could flunk both parties just
    on the grounds that they’re carving up the countr!
    y into single party districts.

    jc: Regardless of what happens in this election, do you have a positive
    viewpoint for the political process at large as a result of this campaign?

    RN: Well, we’re keeping the hope for a progressive agenda alive in the country.
    We’re giving voice to tens of millions of people. We’re the underdog candidates
    for tens of millions of American underdogs who get pushed around and defrauded
    and harmed and disrespected and excluded and underpaid and laid off and denied
    health care. That’s a pretty big constituency in this country, and it’s a pretty
    sad commentary on the Democratic Party that it chooses not to vibrantly
    represent these people because it wants to privately raise tens of millions of
    dollars in commercial interests to keep up with the Republican campaign finance
    fund-raising party. So we think that’s a very important role that we’re playing.
    In my book, "The Good Fight" I quote Eugene Debs’ "The American people can
    have anything they want, the problem is they don’t seem to want anything at all,
    or at least it seems that way on Election Day."
    We are all prisoners of an exclusive two-party monopoly with a barrier
    called an electoral college and we’ve got to break out of prison. We have to
    liberate our minds, begin voting our conscience, and stop voting for politicians
    who go to Washington and month after month vote against their supporters.

    jc: Do you foresee anyway come October that anyone can convince you on either
    side to step aside and throw your support for either national party candidate?
    Even if you are only on seven to ten to twelve ballots nationwide, do you see
    any way you’re not still standing come the first week of November?

    RN: No, because all they can offer are words by politicians who’ve left a trail
    of broken promises to millions of Americans over the last decades. We’re not
    interested in words; we’re interested in deeds. They’ve had many years to
    demonstrate good deeds, and instead they’ve have sold our democracy, our
    elections, and our government for a mess of corporate pottage. They’ve turned
    over the U.S. government to an increasingly smaller number of giant
    multi-nationals, who’ve turned Washington into corporate occupied territory, and
    have no allegiance to our country or communities other than to control or
    abandoned them to China or elsewhere as they see fit. Check our web site,
    http://www.votenader.com/ and you’ll see how we’re challenging Kerry and Bush
    almost once or twice a week on various issues.
  • Pink Spider
    Sniper
    • Jan 2004
    • 867

    #2
    RN: The majority of people in this country want out of Iraq. Bush and Kerry are
    pro-war, pro-occupation. No withdrawal date. The majority wants to settle the
    Israeli/Palestinian conflict with an independent Palestinian state, including
    almost 70% of Jewish Americans. Kerry and Bush are supportive of the Israeli
    military policy. Kerry and Bush both support the Patriot Act. Kerry and Bush
    both support the bloated, redundant, wasteful, and sometimes corrupt military
    budget, which amounts to half of the federal government’s operating
    expenditures. Both Bush and Kerry are for corporate globalization, NAFTA and WTO
    style. They want to expand it. Both Bush and Kerry are for the failed war on
    drugs. Both Bush and Kerry do not have a health care plan for all or a living
    wage for all. Both Bush and Kerry are for capital punishment, although Kerry is
    for a modified form. Both Bush and Kerry do not support public funding of public
    campaigns. Both Bush and Kerry will not take a stand aga!
    inst the draft. We’ve sent them letters and they’ve refused to take a stand
    against the draft.
    That about sums up why Kerry or any other corporate Democrat will never ever get my vote. Their minor social differences from the Republicans cannot make up for the major similarities in foreign and economic policy.

    There must be candidates run against them now, because tomorrow they'll throw even more rules at third parties to rig the system in their benefit even further. What the Democrats are doing to Ralph now, by getting him thrown off the ballots and denying voters a real choice is proof of this.
    Last edited by Pink Spider; 08-21-2004, 04:08 PM.

    Comment

    • Big Train
      Full Member Status

      • Apr 2004
      • 4011

      #3
      Which is why I say, if yuo doubt either candidate, vote for the thrid party. It isn't throwing your vote away if it creates a better choice next time around. 5% is all it takes..

      Comment

      • JCOOK

        #4
        Who is Ralph Nader

        Comment

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