RALPH
My history with
Ralph Nader goes back a long way – my dad wrote his first ads, pro bono, for
Public Citizen and Congress Watch, which made me very proud; I wrote a cover
story about his almost single-handed deep-sixing of
meaningful automobile insurance reform (“Ralph Nader Is a Big Fat Idiot”),
which has likely cost you thousands of dollars in too-high premiums over the
years (and God forbid you should be badly injured in a car crash not caused by
a wealthy driver whose fault you can prove); and then of course there was “the
election.”
So it was with
some interest I watched his announcement on Meet the Press yesterday. And the truth is, I
think much of what he has to say makes sense.
Under Bush, especially, it’s all been about skewing the equation ever
further toward corporate interests and the rich.
I favor
Instant Runoff Voting, which would let folks vote for a third-party candidate
like Nader as their first choice – but specify a second-choice candidate (like
Gore or Bush), in the event their first choice failed to win.
With that system,
you’d encourage more points of view, more vigorous discussion – all good, in a
democracy – and, especially, encourage more people to remain engaged in the
process.
Failing that
system, Nader could still have run as he did in 2000 (and is doing again now). But what he can’t do is what he tried to do
on Meet the Press, and has been trying to do ever since the disastrous outcome
of 2000: escape blame for what happened.
He said on MTP – how
come people blame me? Why don’t they
blame Gore for not winning his home state of Tennessee?
Why don’t they blame Katherine Harris and Jeb
Bush and the Supreme Court?
And there’s a
simple answer:
On a planet with 6 billion people at the
time, there was only one person – Ralph Nader – who could with half an hour’s
effort been reasonably expected to keep this disaster from happening.
All he would have
had to do was issue a statement three days out saying, in effect: “Listen, if you live in Texas
or Massachusetts,
vote for me. But if you live in a swing
state like Florida or Ohio, vote for Gore.”
Gore would have
won; Nader’s stature and ability to make progress on the causes he cared about
would have been enhanced; there would be no war in Iraq; Bin Laden would have been
dead by now, if 9/11 had even occurred at all; we would lead the world in stem
cell research and in the development of alternative energy.
Sure, Gore would
have won if he had carried Tennessee
– but how, in half an hour’s effort, could he have done so? Does Nader think he didn’t try?
Sure, George W.
Bush could have had an epiphany and dropped out of the race, or Katherine
Harris could have asked to be indicted for crimes against democracy. But those are not reasonable scenarios.
The Nader
scenario was not only reasonable, it was urged on him,
in some form, by thousands of people, including many of his closest lifelong
allies.
It’s hard to imagine anyone in all of
human history who could so easily have made such a positive difference with so
little effort.
So go ahead and
run, Ralph. But when the time comes, you’d
better beg your supporters in swing states to vote for the progressive in the
race, which will be the Democrat. And,
boy, did you ever blow your chance to be a hero, in 2000 – and perhaps to
extract a promise from Al Gore to support Instant Run-off Voting.
STRAIGHT TALK FROM 59 LOBBYISTS
“I’m the only one
the special interests don’t give any money to,” says John McCain – there’s no way
they’re going to gain access to him. This
short video tells a different story. And
this one shows
him telling us Iraq
would be easy . . . and then, years later, telling us he always knew it would
be hard. This is not to vilify John
McCain; but once you tell everyone you’re the straight talker, you’re the guy
the lobbyists can’t reach, you more or less invite
scrutiny.
Five minutes well
spent, and perhaps shared with your Uncle Art.
KARL ROVE SHOULD GO TO JAIL
I don’t get this
angry easily, but the gist of the “60
Minutes” report last night – about our wonderful Justice Department
basically finding a pretext to send the Democratic governor of Alabama to prison for
seven years (where he resides today, whisked straight from the courthouse in
shackles) – is so outrageous that enough
is enough. Even Republicans are stunned. Rove is the one who needs to be in jail, and
Bush needs to pardon Siegelman yesterday.