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As featured on p. 218 of "Bloggers on the Bus," under the name "a MyDD blogger."

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Nader

He's in. I don't think I've made it a secret, but it may come as a surprise to some of you that in 2000, I cast my vote for Ralph Nader. I tabled for Ralph Nader. I dropped literature for Ralph Nader. I was excited by the idea of a legitimate thrid party movement in America. I thought having someone with the respectability of Nader on the ticket could get the Greens to qualify for federal matching funds. If the Internet, and particularly the political Internet, were a more mature movement, they would have. There was a nascent vote-swapping effort, where Nader backers in swing states would vote for Gore in exchange for someone in a safe state voting for Nader. That effort would have been bigger if the blogosphere was more diverse and open.

Third parties can be a refreshment for democracy, and have led many movements for positive change even in this country, despite their marginalization.

For the record, I was in a safe state, California, even though Bush stupidly came and campaigned here late in the race. I don't regret my vote. The Democratic Party of 2000 bears no resemblance to the Democratic Party of today. The rising star in 2000, the keynote speaker, was Harold I love Chris Shays Ford. Al Gore took his environmental action record and his potential for a more transcendent and transformative politics off the table. There wasn't much of a place for me in the Democratic Party of 2000 other than as a voter. Now there is that place, and while I don't think Nader had much to do with that, it's clear that in a way his worldview actually bore out. Here's what I wrote as a review of the documentary on his life "An Unreasonable Man" last year.


Everybody in the film gets an opportunity to discuss the 2000 election; some favorably, others unfavorably. My favorite moment in the film is when Eric Alterman, who pounds on Nader in soundbite after soundbite, says "I think he's a Leninist, he believes things have to get worse before they get better." And you know what, that's kind of worked out as this presumption predicts:

"On the other hand, one of the memes floating about in the Nadersphere has, I think, been vindicated: Namely the basically Leninist idea that a Democratic loss and a period of Republican governance would pull the Democrats in a more progressive direction in terms of, for example, questioning "Washington Consensus" globalization. At the time, that argument didn't make sense to me. And in some important ways I still don't think it makes a ton of sense logically. But it does seem to be what's happened. Now, was that a price worth paying for the dead in Iraq, the torture, etc.? I don't really think so."

I agree that it's too high a price to bear. But it's clear that we have a Democratic Party that has rejected Third-Way DLCism in favor of a politics of contrast (seems to me, though, that this came about more from the 2002 election and its aftermath than 2000). And it's clear that the core issues that Nader spoke about in 2000 - issues like global warming, universal health care, alternative energy, labor law changes - are the EXACT issues put forward by most of the 2008 field of Democrats. it's not clear that Nader cost anybody anything in 2000, nor did he apply sufficient pressure to effect this change. He does make the good point in the film that he wasn't let in the debates because he "wasn't a factor," only to be chastised by Democrats for being the deciding factor.


In addition, he has not supplied sufficient pressure in the years since. This is the biggest problem with Nader. He actually led something resembling a movement, albeit reluctantly, in 2000. He held rallies and spoke to concerns that a great many liberals and progressives had with the DLC era of the Clinton years. But in every non-election year he burrows underground. Public Citizen was a powerful voice in the 1960s and 1970s. Nader's accomplishments, most notably seat belts, saved hundreds of thousands of lives. And, as I wrote:

And he squandered that reputation in a 10-year permanent campaign which still continues. The film and Kuttner make the point that big business had gelded Nader's Raiders by the late 1970s by countering his public pressure for change. But I can't help thinking that all of the fine work by Public Citizen and good-government groups have been left to rot while Nader tilted at windmills. His frustration with corporate influence in both parties led him to this decision; but Nader's great successes came when he was OUTSIDE the tent; I don't understand why he felt such a need to be inside it. Who is speaking today for the American consumer? Where is the organization that can channel grassroots energy in a positive and goal-oriented direction. It's almost like Nader abandoned one cause to take up another that even he knew was unrealizable.


The public actually needs someone looking out for them, now more than ever. There's lead in our toys and huge recalls of our food and corporate executives sitting as the heads of the agencies that are supposed to regulate their core businesses. Who is doing anything about that on a continuing basis from outside the political structure? Running a shrinking campaign every four years (he got a whopping 0.38% in 2004) calls exactly no attention to those issues. He could hold a press conference every day and get a bunch of media attention to the issues he's actually been fighting all of his life. But he's abandoned those fights, left them to others, in favor of a sad and tired permanent campaign. And he's done absolutely zilch for those third parties he claims to cherish. The ideas aren't the problem with Nader; the tactics most certainly are. It's not that he's risking the election for Democrats; that would be absurd (he even said himself today that if the Democrats manage to screw this one up they should disband as a party, and he's right). But he risks the lives of those at risk, the lives he tried so hard for all those years to pay attention to, for the sake of what I have to assume is his own vanity.

It's painful to watch Nader descend to these depths, and while he might think it doesn't sully a long career, it actually does. He has a lot of good to offer the world but refuses to; he would rather stroke his ego. He's tilting at the wrong windmills, in short, and doesn't appear to even know how to tilt at them anymore. This promises to be my last post about him for the year.

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