The Blame Game
Nader wasn't a traitor
by Doug Ireland
The Progressive magazine, December 2000
The hysterics among those Democratic liberals and party familiars
among the blabbering classes who accuse Ralph Nader of creating
a constitutional crisis are spouting no sense. There is no constitutional
crisis, only an election law dispute in one state. It appears
that only in two states did Nader receive votes larger than Bush's
margin of victory: New Hampshire (which would not have changed
the electoral college outcome) and possibly Florida.
Nader did receive nearly 100,000 votes in the Sunshine State,
but as he kept repeating during the campaign, only Al Gore could
beat Al Gore. That's what happened in Florida. If Gore loses there,
it's because he failed to carry the seniors, who were supposed
to be the Democrats' firewall-exit polling shows that he split
them evenly with Bush. Gore failed to achieve the substantial
margin of victory he needed among seniors to win the state with
the largest percentage of over-65ers because of his credibility
problems. Too many different Gores-from the Gore of the mythical
"lockbox" to the Gore who proclaimed himself the candidate
of "smaller government"-showed up during the debates
and the campaign for the older voters to take him at his rhetorical
word. As one disgruntled Democrat put it: "I believe in everything
Al Gore says- until he says it."
It was the triangulators running both the Gore and Bush campaigns
who, in trying to steal the other's issues, further blurred the
marginal differences between (in Nader's phrase) the "do-little
party and the do-nothing party." (After the Los Angeles convention,
Gore's handlers told him that, having solidified his base with
populist rhetoric, he needed to move to the center; he did so-and
sank in the polls.) That's what made this a close election. And
if you're still looking for a different culprit, blame the Democrats
who control Palm Beach County for adopting the idiotic and deceptive
"butterfly ballot," which so confused older voters that
some 19,000 ballots (more than enough to give Gore the state even
before the recount) were thrown out by a judge because folks voted
twice.
National exit poll totals indicate that only 40 percent of
the nearly 2.7 million votes Nader received might have gone to
Gore had the legendary consumer and workers' rights advocate not
been on the ballot-20 percent would have voted for Bush, while
more than 40 percent were new voters who otherwise wouldn't have
bothered to vote. Turnout nationally appears to have ticked up
only one percentage point over 1996-probably attributable to new
Nader voters. (In Madison, Wisconsin, for example, Naderites registered
53,000 new voters.)
In some places, the Nader vote-much of it newly registered-probably
helped down-ballot Democrats. Nader made a California campaign
stop in Republican Rep. Brian Bilbray's district and denounced
his environmental record, which may have made the difference in
Democrat Susan Davis' eyelash-close victory. In Washington, if
Maria Cantwell finally edges out a victory over Sen. Slade Gorton,
it will likely be the new Nader voters who put her over the top.
The Greens generally avoided running candidates in swing districts.
An exception was New Jersey, where running a full slate enhanced
the party's ballot position. While Nader hardly campaigned there,
local Green candidates still got more than 5,000 votes in two
swing districts, making the difference in centrist Democrat Maryanne
Connelly's loss in the 7th District, and forcing freshman Rep.
Rush Holt into a recount. That should have the Democratic high
command worried, for Nader is gearing up to run Green candidates
in dozens of House districts.
Although he failed to achieve the 5 percent national threshold
for Federal Election Commission recognition, Nader's great achievement
was injecting a radical, systemic critique into the national discourse
for the first time since such ~ thinking was ostracized by the
Cold War. And in the process, J he mobilized and trained tens
of thousands of younger, single-issue militants in electoral politics-despite
the vicious attacks on him by the well-paid Stepford activists
from the Washington-based issue lobbies umbilically tied to the
Democrats and the Clinton White House.
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