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No Time For Nader: A Letter To Nader And Mckinney Voters




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I’d thought little about Ralph Nader’s potential electoral impact until I read recent polls suggesting he was drawing 3% among likely Ohio voters, 4% in Nevada (plus 1% for Cynthia McKinney), 3% in Pennsylvania, and 5% in Missouri. This means he might once again help tip an election.

 

Most of Nader’s supporters suggest their votes won’t make the critical difference. Or explain “the lesser of two evils is still evil.” Or list Obama stands they disagree with, some of which I disagree with as well.

 

But let’s assume that the current election still hangs in the balance: that between Republican voter suppression, last-minute attack ads, latent racism, and the uncertainties of turnout among new registrants, McCain and Palin just might be able to win. If you’re a Nader or  supporter, I’d like to address this article to you, and ask how you’d feel if, by not voting for Obama, you ended up helping electing them.McKinney

 

You may believe that  and both parties are dominated by a corporate oligarchy. I wouldn’t completely disagree. You’ll probably point out when Democrats (and sometimes Obama) have supported dubious policies backed by these interests, and those examples anger me as well. But after eight years of Bush, it’s a dangerous game to assume there’s no significant difference between McCain and Obama.America

 

If McCain continues (or even accelerates) disastrous Bush policies that Obama would reverse, that matters.  It matters that the Obama campaign has engaged people in a way that could launch a major rebirth of progressive organizing—one that could continue long past the election. Electing Obama also stops a Republican consolidation of power that’s fundamentally undermined American democracy—a consolidation that more than a few Nader supporters have called “fascist,” though it’s not a word I tend to use. So yes, far too many Democrats facilitated the abuses of the past eight years. But given that our president will end up being either Obama or McCain, this question is who will be mostly likely to reverse these trends, and who will create the most favorable landscape for positive progressive change. Here are some key areas of difference:

 

The Courts. Federal courts can overrule practically any progressive initiative or authorize any regressive one. The Supreme Court justices McCain most admires have consistently extended unchecked corporate and executive power whether voting on torture, reproductive rights, Tom Delay’s midnight Texas redistricting, the ability of workers to sue their employers (or for workers to join a union), or the massively disenfranchising Indiana voter ID laws. With three likely Supreme Court retirements in the coming four years, McCain would be able to create obstacles to progressive change for a generation. 

 

Sarah Palin.  Can you say theocracy, with a major dose of ruthlessness? Do we really want someone a melanoma away from the presidency who won her small-town mayor’s race by claiming her opponent was soft on abortion and wasn’t a true Christian, fired the local officials who’d backed him, and later fired the head of the Alaska state patrol for refusing to fire her ex-brother-in-law? Since her convention speech, Palin’s embodied every character assassination scenario from the past 30 years. If you want a leader who whips up “real Americans” against dissident allies of terrorism, she’d do Dick Cheney proud.

 

Labor Rights Led by unions like SEIU and the United Steel Workers, we finally have a resurgent progressive union movement—one that raises broader social justice issues and builds broader coalitions, like with major environmental groups. But Bush’s National Labor Relations Board has created obstacle after obstacle for union organizing, including the key “Kentucky River” ruling (upheld by the Bush Supreme court) that employers could challenge the right of employees like nurses to join unions because they acted as supervisors.  Obama’s approach would be very different, both from his own experience working with unions in  and from the self interest of empowering and broadening his support base. Given the labor movement’s key role in pretty much every effort for progressive change in ’s history, the shift from hostility to supportiveness would be huge.AmericaChicago

 

Taxation and Health Care Obama’s redistributes resources downward, McCain upward. I’d like Obama to go further. But McCain wants to make Bush’s disastrously regressive tax cuts permanent, while Obama has explicitly focused on challenging tax breaks for companies like Exxon and on having the wealthiest pay a greater share. He’s called the election a referendum on thirty years of failed trickle-down politics. While he doesn’t go as far as you or I might want, it’s the right direction.

 

On health care, McCain’s approach gives total power to the insurance companies and gives companies that do provide insurance every incentive to dump all but the healthiest of their workers from the rolls. I’d prefer single payer, but Obama’s plan would be a huge step forward in the number of people covered and the affordability of care, McCain’s a vast step backwards.

 

Reproductive Rights It’s abstract unless you or someone you know is unwillingly pregnant. McCain’s explicitly backed overturning Roe vs Wade, and Palin and the Republican platform would support making abortion illegal even in cases of rape or incest.

 

Global Climate Change  Although McCain acknowledges our role in creating it, Palin who embraces the Exxon-funded skeptics (not to mention “Young Earth” creationism). This spring, McCain refused to be the deciding vote that would have ended a Republican filibuster on a bill eliminating tax breaks for the oil companies and using the money to fund alternative energy.  While progressives will have to push against Obama’s receptivity to the coal and nuclear industries, he still goes far further than any major presidential candidate in pushing green jobs as a centerpiece of his platform, while McCain supporters are left with “Drill baby drill.”

 

Iraq I wish Obama would pledge to get out more quickly. But he did speak out against the war before it happened, as part of an anti-war rally that any of us would have been proud to attend. And given that he was about to run for Senate, that wasn’t a safe or easy choice. He also does at least have a withdrawal time-table. In contrast, McCain, who helped  lead the neo-con charge to invade  since well before 9/11, talks of an indefinite occupation and jokes about “Bomb Bomb .”  It’s another area where we’ll need to push, but also another huge difference.IranIraq

 

Campaign of Fear  Do you really want to reward yet another Republican campaign based on lies and fear? That’s what the McCain/Palin campaign is reduced to. Pure slime, from Bill Ayers and “palling around with terrorists,” toRashid Khalidi and “socialism.” If McCain loses, maybe we’ll get a different politics. If he wins it’s Karl Rove on infinite replay.

 

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But the differences go beyond particular issues to how the respective presidencies would shape a broader context for progressive change. It’s easy to dismiss Obama’s community organizing background. But three years in south Chicago neighborhoods, plus several more representing the same community groups, is a serious involvement whose legacy has shaped Obama’s campaign in a powerful way. No previous president has been a community organizer, or anything close to it. No major party campaign has encouraged supporters to act with as much autonomous initiative. And none since  have brought as many new people into politics--people who represent a huge potential voice for ongoing progressive change. When Obama consciously asks volunteers to think of themselves as connected with a tradition that goes back to the abolitionist, union, suffrage, and civil rights movements he gets them thinking not only about a single campaign, but about their long-term ability to join together to shift America’s history, and that, unleashed, can be a powerful force.Roosevelt

 

It’s a force we can work with not only to help pass Obama’s legislation, but also to push him to take stronger stands. Those newly mobilized might just play a role akin to civil rights movement participants who worked to get Kennedy and Johnson elected, then set their own agenda, dragging Kennedy and LBJ into overcoming initial resistance and taking genuinely courageous positions --like LBJ staking all his political capital on civil rights and voting rights bills that he acknowledged would lose the Democrats the south for a generation. Going back further, progressives turned out to elect and reelect FDR, but also organized unions, occupied factories, worked block by block in their communities, and fought in every possible way to create an autonomous voice. Progressives can do the same with Obama, so long as we keep speaking out after the election and working to engage those who supported him.  Given the massive ability of a president to shape the national agenda, I’d rather fight for the Obama proposals I support and push him further in areas where he falls short, than spend another four years trying block an endless succession of horrific Republican initiatives. 

 

You may think the election’s already won, so your vote won’t make a difference. That may be true in , , and , but as in 2000 and 2004, Nader’s campaigning in states most at risk, with an effort in every major swing state and a final week’s focus on , , ,  and . Obama’s four or five point lead in key battleground states is certainly better than being five points down. But if you knock out two or three percent for voter suppression, two or three for last-minute slime ads and potential racial backlash, and two or three because not all the new voters will show up, he could still well lose the election. As Tom Hayden points out in the Progressives for Obama blog, “Kerry won Wisconsin in 2004 by 0.38 percent, New Hampshire by 1.37 percent, Pennsylvania by 2.5 percent; he lost Iowa by 0.67 percent, New Mexico by 0.79 percent, Ohio by 2.11 percent and Nevada by 2.59 percent.”  As someone supporting or considering supporting Nader or , you could well make the key difference.McKinneyPennsylvaniaMichiganMinnesotaOhioFloridaIllinoisNew YorkCalifornia

 

Even assuming Obama does win, the margin of his victory will be key to his leverage following the election. Wavering senators or congressional representatives aren’t going to add in third party votes when they decide how far to go to support (or improve) Obama’s initiatives. But the more he wins by, the more mandate he has for shifting  in a fundamental direction from everything Bush has represented.America

 

Maybe none of this matters to you. Maybe you feel, “the worse the better.” and are gleefully cheering as American (and global) capitalism melts down. Maybe you like the idea of dancing at the apocalypse, and assume that the revolution will follow. But crashing empires get ugly. Real people get hurt and even die—witness Katrina. Add in climate change and a McCain administration would mean gambling with global catastrophe.

 

It may feel pure to vote for a candidate who will never get in power, so will never disappoint us. But this election isn’t about abstract purity. It’s about finally halting a Republican machine that wages preemptive wars, smashes unions, purges African Americans from the voting rolls, puts Exxon in charge of energy legislation, passes over a hundred billion dollars a year of regressive tax cuts, and brands everyone who disagrees with them an ally of terrorism.

 

Either we stop these trends or we don’t. And the ballot’s the most direct way to do this. If we place all our hopes in awaiting some future popular uprising, we throw away a concrete opportunity to stop the disastrous path of the past eight years. We also give away a chance to elect someone who has actually been part of our progressive movements, from Obama’s anti-apartheid student activism, through his community organizing, to his speaking out at the anti Iraq-war rally.  We can cast a symbolic vote for Ralph Nader or Cynthia McKinney.  Or vote for Barack Obama and actually help shape the political landscape. It would be a tragedy if because of our own desire for pure and uncomplicated stands, we helped throw away a historic chance to move forward.Chicago

 

Paul Rogat Loeb is the author of The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear, named the #3 political book of 2004 by the History Channel and the American Book Association. His previous books include Soul of a Citizen: Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time. See www.paulloeb.org To receive his articles directly, email sympa@lists.onenw.org with the subject line: subscribe paulloeb-articles

Person

Begging for scraps

By D.c., Kim at Nov 05, 2008 02:49 AM

  Eight years ago I fell victim to the empty kind of thinking that went into this article.  I voted for Gore instead of Nader.  I believed the "wasted vote" nonsense.  The worst part?  I even talked my husband out of "wasting" his vote.  I regret it to this day, and I\'ll never do it again.  What have the Democrats done to deserve this blind loyalty?  Am I the only one who remembers the last Democratic president?  He was the one who didn\'t have the guts to veto "welfare reform."  He was the one whose decision to villify the poor yet again was directly responsible for my inability to earn the degree I was working so hard on.  You see, welfare reform allowed my state to drop subsidized childcare for university students.  How do you go to class without someone to watch your preschool-aged child?  The answer is that you don\'t.  Of course, that president also promised healthcare reform.  Here we are, almost 20 years later, and that reform still hasn\'t gotten taken care of.  It certainly didn\'t during that Democratic tenure.

  What did we get instead?  We got continued sanctions against and bombing of Iraq.  We got a man who viewed women as little more than play things to be used and cast aside.  We got the Internet "bubble."  We got NAFTA.  Do I need to go on?

  Articles like this perpetuate the two-party system.  We are not a democracy.  We are an oligarchy, and we will be until enough of us refuse to go the way of the "lesser of evils" and take a stand.  We must vote our conscience.  We must scream and fight.  Real change has come because of those who refused to be tamed.  The suffragettes were thrown into jails, forcefed, beaten in the streets.  They didn\'t get the vote by giving in.  The got it by fighting back.  Shutting your mouth and turning your back will only allow the Democrats to stick a knife into it.

  I did not vote for Obama yesterday.  He is not my savior.  He isn\'t even a safety net.  He is more of the same.  He has done nothing to earn my respect, my trust or my vote.  Instead, I voted for Cynthia McKinney.  I voted for someone who actually believes in something.  I voted for someone who has risked and lost her career because she stood up for what she believed in. Can Obama say that?  No, he can\'t.  Not today and not tomorrow.  In fact, when he had the opportunity to stand up for something, he instead threw a longtime friend and advisor to the wolves.  He\'s just another rich, male, Ivy League grad on his way to the White House.  He\'s just another puppet for Wall Street.  He\'s just another campaign slogan.  Same as it ever was.

  The worst part of this is that "progressives" will slink back into the shadows now.  They won\'t hold Obama\'s feet to the fire.  After all, they were willing to give him their votes for nothing.  Why would that change now?  Even with a white Democrat in power, "progressives" are loathe to criticize him.  They gloss over his faults, they accuse the media of being overly harsh.  Can you imagine the addition of race into the equation?  In fact, I foresee a large element of the "progressive" movement screaming racism when someone does try to hold Obama\'s feet to the fire.  The fact that he will face real racist opposition will only serve as a cosmetic justification.

  So, Mr. Loeb, you got your wish.  Obama is President Elect.  Is the world any different today?  I\'m not going to hold my breath.

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587340

Re: No Time For Nader: A Letter To Nader And Mckinney Voters

By Hammick, Adam at Nov 04, 2008 11:32 AM

What would be the likely consequence of voting for Obama? For a third party? Voting the latter seems bound to increase death and suffering in the world if it likely strengthens McCain.

I read ZNet nearly every day but am embarrassed to admit that I didn\'t even know who McKinney was until two days ago. Why are Nader and she even running on separate tickets?

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583275

Re: No Time For Nader: A Letter To Nader And Mckinney Voters

By Emersberger, Joe at Nov 03, 2008 19:26 PM

Sorry . meant to say "stay home in numbers that dwarf those who cast votes for Nader and McKinney".

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583275

Re: No Time For Nader: A Letter To Nader And Mckinney Voters

By Emersberger, Joe at Nov 03, 2008 19:19 PM

David,
Obama is much worse than not being an "ideal  candidate".
Chomsky suggests voting for Obama in swing states but "with out illusions" It is annoying to see people like Michael Moore and Paul Loeb have so much problem with the "without illusions" part.

I hope Obama wins because  - of course- the differences between him and McCain, however small, do matter in a job as important as US president. If the presidential race where between two Republicans (say George W Bush and McCain) and I lived in a swing state I would vote for Bush in that nightmare scenario. I would not , however, minimize the reasons people have for being totally repelled by Bush.

What bothers me about Loeb\'s essay is that way he downplays the legitimate reasons leftists have for being repelled by Obama - and an electoral system dominated by corporate power. He\'d be much more convincing if he didn\'t do that,. Leftists aside, regular people who don\'t identify themselves as "leftists" can spot the same old BS when they see it (especially after the bailout Obama voted for) and will stay home in numbers that dwarf those who cast votes for McCain or Obama.
 
Note: I write this as a Canadian who will not get to vote in the US election. Like most of the world I will only get to watch and suffer the consequences.)

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Person

Obama vs. Nader

By Lane, David at Nov 03, 2008 15:02 PM

Look, none of us need waste time and energy typing out a list of the reasons Obama is not the ideal candidate.  Anyone who reads Z knows that he is not.  Nor will I bore with the typical \'Nader can\'t win\' rant, although it does have some force.

Instead, I\'ll give you my short-paragraph pitch for Obama over Nader.  Because of decisions like Atkins v. VA and Roper v. Simmons, our government has stopped executing mentally retarded people and juveniles.  An Obama Court will give us more decisions like these, a McCain Court fewer.  Yes, there are other life/death issues that impact a far greater number of people, but the death penalty is something I work on every day, so it\'s close to home.  If Obama gets elected, fewer people will be executed in this country.  Please vote for Obama.

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