ELECTION 2000 RIGGED?
Will Nader Be Banned in Boston?

You walk into an election booth in November to vote for a well-known, respected
candidate
who's vigorously campaigning for president, but the candidate's name has been
excluded from
the ballot. Is the election rigged?

You'd probably ask the same question if you tuned into the presidential debates on
TV and the
candidate you planned to vote for wasn't allowed on the stage. Unless loud voices
are raised in
protest, this kind of rigged debate is exactly what will be offered.

Thanks to the exclusionary policy of the corporate-funded Commission on
Presidential Debates,
the first presidential debate -- scheduled for October 3 at the University of
Massachusetts-Boston -- is expected to lock out Green Party nominee Ralph Nader
and all other
third-party candidates.



YOU FOUGHT FOR DEMOCRACY IN SEATTLE, D.C. AND ELSEWHERE -- WILL YOU COME
TO BOSTON?

When activists went to Seattle to protest the World Trade Organization, they stood
up for
human rights and an open, democratic process against corporate interests acting in
private.
Now, a similar battle is brewing: the fight against the undemocratic Commission on
Presidential
Debates (CPD). Established by the two major parties in 1987 to enforce a closed
two-party
cartel, the CPD is underwritten by the same corporations that bankroll the
Republicans and
Democrats. (Anheuser-Busch donated $550,000 to become sole sponsor of the CPD's
St. Louis
debate scheduled for mid-October.)

The CPD has vowed to exclude third-party candidates from the nationally televised
debates if
they lack 15 percent support in polls. Such an unreasonable barrier would have
closed off the
1998 Minnesota debates to Jesse Ventura, the third-party candidate who was elected
governor
because local media and civic groups invited him to all of the televised debates
-- ignoring claims
that Ventura was an unelectable spoiler.

Elections and debates should engage citizens in a wide discussion of issues -- not
narrow the
discussion to squabbles between the two major-party candidates. In 1992, when
third-party
candidate Ross Perot was included in the debates, they were watched on average by
90 million
TV viewers, with viewership growing in each successive debate. The 1996 debates,
limited to Bill
Clinton and Bob Dole, had shrinking viewership that averaged 41 million viewers.
Third-party
candidates bring fresh issues, more viewers and new voters to the debates.



OPEN THE DEBATES NOW!

If we want to revitalize the democratic process, we need to make our voices heard
NOW.
Without the intervention of an informed public, there is no chance of opening up
the 2000
debates beyond the two major parties. The CPD's arbitrary barriers would lock out
a candidate
like Ralph Nader, who, despite undercoverage in mainstream media, has received 6
to 8 percent
support in national polls. A debate limited to Bush/Gore means there will be no
serious
discussion of issues where the major-party candidates basically agree, like trade,
globalization,
corporate welfare, military spending, capital punishment and the drug war. Can
democracy
survive on Tweedledum--Tweedledee debates sponsored by beer companies?

An independent, nonpartisan group -- the Citizens' Task Force on Fair Debates,
convened by
American University law professor Jamin Raskin -- has challenged the CPD by
recommending
more reasonable and fair criteria: presidential candidates on a suffiecient number
of state ballots
would be invited to all the debates if they have at least 5 percent support in
national opinion
polls OR if polls found that a majority of the public supports the candidate's
inclusion
(www.fair.org/articles/appleseed.html). The 5 percent threshold derives from
federal election law
-- it's the level of support required to get federal campaign funding. Recent
polls show that
most Americans want Nader and right-wing candidate Pat Buchanan in the debates.



TAKE ACTION

1) Write letters/emails and make phone calls challenging mainstream media (and
pollsters) to
stop ignoring or marginalizing third-party candidates in campaign coverage

2) Encourage TV networks to reject the exclusionary debates of the CPD and set up
their own
debates, with more inclusive criteria for participation -- leaving empty seats for
any major-party
candidate who fails to appear. See FAIR's Media Contact List for more information.

3) Demand that the Commission on Presidential Debates broaden its criteria to end
the lockout
of third-party candidates. [EMAIL PROTECTED]

4) If all of the above fails to open up the debates, take to the streets. Gather
in Boston on
October 3 and -- while the whole world is watching -- protest the farce of an
undemocratic,
corporate-sponsored non-debate: 9 pm, University of Massachusetts-Boston


For more information, visit www.fair.org/debates.html

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