Article URL:
http://americanprospect.com/archives/V11-15/kuttner-r-conversation.html
--------------------------------
RALPH NADER:
A Conversation
Written by:  Robert Kuttner

Robert Kuttner: I am sympathetic to much of your diagnosis of the
dependence of both parties on corporations. But I am skeptical about
what you can really accomplish tactically. Historically, what have
American third parties accomplished in the past, and what do you hope
to accomplish?

Ralph Nader: Well, in the past, third parties have marched early and
consistently with social justice movements before either major party
came on. Whether it was the antislavery drive or women's right to
vote, the trade union movement or the populist-progressive farmers
movement, third parties in effect politicized the initiative and told
the major parties that they either had to respond or they were going
to lose part of their margin to the other major party. So if we can
build a Green Party that goes over 5 percent, the Democratic Party
won't be the same again--because it will have to take into
consideration losing, because of that margin, to the opposing major
party. And, in the volatile political circumstances in which we find
ourselves now in this country, it's harder to get to 5 percent than it
is to get to 10 percent once you get to 5 percent. Today, when you go
up to Capitol Hill or go to the White House and you ask them to do the
right thing, they tell you basically you've got nowhere to go;
whatever they do, you have to accept. We're going to see what that
attitude is after the Green Party gets over 5 percent or more in the
coming election.

RK: What are the major issues that you think the Democrats have
defaulted on, where you think you have some resonance with disaffected
voters?

RN: Well, they're no longer the party of the working family, as FDR
used to call the Democratic Party. They make no mention of
strengthening the labor laws--it's quite remarkable; it's not even on
their screen. We're down to less than 10 percent of workers unionized
in the private sector, the lowest in 60 years. They're reaping the
benefits of organized labor's grass-roots effort, telephones, and
money, but they're not expanding organized labor.

And obviously, of course, they're the biggest promoters among the two
parties of corporate welfare; they're far in excess of the
Republicans, who have some modest ideological restraints on it. The
Democrats have actually increased subsidies to the auto companies
during a period of record profit, and the subsidies to the defense
manufacturers for mergers via the Pentagon.

The Democrats have also been surprisingly bad on consumer health and
safety. Agencies such as OSHA [the Occupational Safety & Health
Administration], the auto safety agency, and the Food and Drug
Administration are as bad as or worse than they were under Reagan or
Bush. And who has expanded the number of death penalty provisions in
federal laws? Bill Clinton. Who has trampled enormously on civil
liberties, as Tony Lewis in The New York Times has pointed out in many
articles? Bill Clinton. Who wants to eliminate the national debt
entirely by the year 2013? Al Gore. I don't know any major corporation
that wants to eliminate its debt. You see, the Democrats are actually
outflanking Republicans to the right.

RK: The recent history of third parties isn't too encouraging. You
have to go back really to the People's Party, the populists of the
late nineteenth century, to find an example of a third party that
seriously influenced one or, in this case, both of the major parties.
Both the Teddy Roosevelt Republicans and the Wilson Democrats partly
took from the populist agenda. Robert LaFollette's Progressives and
Norman Thomas's Socialists perhaps influenced FDR. And to some extent,
Ross Perot pushed the balanced budget agenda on both parties. So what
do you see as the best-case scenario for your influence on
progressivism?

RN: Well, I think, first of all, any third party has an uphill fight
because of the winner-take-all political system and other ballot
access hurdles. Having said that, however, there's a huge withdrawal
from politics due to disgust, not just apathy. And there is a large
reservoir of voters to tap into for a third party, as Perot showed in
1992. These aren't just Democratic voters. They're independents;
they're even conservatives, nonvoters, young voters. And also, the
local organizing for a national political party is almost ceded to a
new party because the Republicans and Democrats don't even have
storefronts--all they think of is television and telephones. I think
we'll be a strong lever on the Democratic Party because the Democratic
Party already has lost about half the country from the get-go. And if
they start losing another quarter of the country, such as
California--because the Greens are going to take 10-15 percent
away--that's really the end of the Democratic Party.

The Democratic Party cannot sustain itself at a really shrunken level,
or it will just implode. Some people talk about a rapprochement, where
the progressive third party melds into the Democratic Party and
influences it to become a more progressive party--the New Party often
has that viewpoint. I'm not looking that far ahead. But I suspect that
the Democratic Party can't internally reform itself; it is so
indentured to a whole variety of corporate interests, and the
merry-go-round between types like [Gore Campaign Chairman] Tony
Coehlo, who go from politics into business, back into politics, that
it can't regenerate itself. And basically, it's defining itself by the
Republican Party.

What's interesting is to get the explanation from inside the
Democratic Party. When the party wins over the Republicans, the
explanation is that we became more like them and took Republican
issues. When they lose to the Republican Party, the explanation is
they weren't enough like the Republicans and didn't take enough
Republican issues. That means the dynamic is all toward the right part
of the arena, and we want the Democratic Party to say they lose or win
because they haven't adopted enough progressive issues or they have
adopted enough progressive issues. So, in a sense, we're challenging
the Democratic Party to contend with our Green Party issues in the
political arena. Gore can become a tremendous advocate for enforcement
against corporate crime. He can say we're going to get rid of all
these subsidies for businesses. He can say we're going to pull out of
WTO [World Trade Organization] and NAFTA [North American Free Trade
Agreement] and renegotiate trade agreements.

RK: So you would be happy if the Democrats put the Greens out of
business by becoming a more progressive party?

RN: No, I wouldn't. I'm just saying it's their option. It's an
opportunity for them to do so because it's going to cost them more and
more votes if they don't do it. Right now, it doesn't cost them any
votes. They're telling us we've got nowhere to go, and people should
either stay home or vote for the least of the worst--and every four
years, both the Republicans and the Democrats get worse.

RK:
What do you see the labor movement doing, given its alliance with the
Democratic Party?

RN:
It's just amazing, absolutely amazing. Here Gore knows he cannot win
without the AFL-CIO, yet they don't ask him to broaden his labor
agenda, not to mention the international trade agreements. So this is
an extremely weak position for the AFL-CIO to put itself in. But they
don't realize that they have a negotiating power with Al Gore that
they're not using. In fact, Al Gore is using them; he's telling them
he's for fair trade, then he's going to the White House and supporting
permanent trade relations with the communist regime of China.

RK:
Well, let's talk about the WTO. The critics of the trade system--the
WTO, the World Bank, and the IMF--have a somewhat easier time
explaining what's wrong with the current regime than coming up with a
set of institutions and principles upon which to build a different
regime that would make it possible to reconcile global commerce with
political democracy, and a managed as opposed to a laissez-faire form
of capitalism. So, if you were elected president, what set of
institutions and what set of ground rules do you imagine for
regulating global commerce?

RN:
We have to distinguish what is being done for speculative
purposes--what is being done to bail out the extensive arms of
Citigroup, Bank of America, and others in Korea and other places
around the world--from what is best for the people. I can see a very
shrunken role for the IMF and the World Bank... . The World Bank can
do most of its good work in the area of fighting global infectious
diseases, and something in terms of education, and pushing local
institutions, you know, trying to facilitate cooperatives and so on,
institution-building that way.

I would have labor treaties that have teeth, consumer protection
treaties, and food and environmental treaties. I think if we put it
all in one big trade treaty, the economic imperative is going to
always dominate, just because the corporations are always there. I
think that's the problem with the WTO, that they basically have turned
progress on its head in countries such as ours, where we've progressed
by subordinating the commercial to the human rights, labor rights, and
environmental rights imperatives. And the WTO reverses that. The WTO
basically says, to coin a phrase, "Everything is for sale." Our
democracy is for sale, our access to the courts is for sale, our
universities are for sale, our environment is for sale, and, most
assuredly, our workplace rights are for sale under the WTO.

Now I agree, there have to be some agreements dealing with tariff
barriers and other issues that really interfere with authentic
comparative advantage. And by that, I don't mean dictatorially
repressed costs such as in China or Indonesia, where global
corporations go in the name of free trade, but there's no free trade
because the workers can't organize and there's no market-determined
cost. It's all dictatorial, repressed costs. This needs to be made
more clear to the likes of [New York Times columnists] Tom Friedman
and Paul Krugman.

RK:
When I think of Ralph Nader, I think of a lot of things, but I don't
think of a foreign policy expert. What would a Nader foreign policy
look like if you were elected president?

RN:
One, we would engage in as vigorous an effort to wage peace as we are
in engaging to prepare for war.

RK:
What does that mean?

RN:
That means that we basically engage in a lot of preventive diplomacy,
a lot of preventive defense. Preventive diplomacy would have dealt
with situations like Indonesia, instead of the Kissinger diplomacy
that led to East Timor and a lot of other travails there. The same
with Vietnam. We seem to always side with the dictators and the
oligarchs and never with the peasants and the workers.

What's really amazing is that any discussion of foreign policy is
usually about current hot spots, instead of asking, how did we get
into this situation in the first place? What could we have done to
avoid it? For example, how many years did we prop up the dictatorship
of the former Belgian Congo? Now look how it's all falling apart over
there, right? Well, we had no preventive diplomacy, no preventive
defense. It's always, who's in charge, and, go out and support them as
long as they're anticommunist.

Why do we have a missile defense system that the physicists have just
told us is not going to work, even if we wanted to put it into
place--assuming it was needed. Is that preventive defense? Is that
preventive diplomacy? Don't we need to go on the affirmative and
expand the export of democratic processes, of appropriate technology
like solar energy, encouraging the world to move into a utilization of
natural resources that redefines productivity and efficiency?

Then there's the nonmaterial aspect of it all. How much we can, for
example, rescue the languages of indigenous peoples, try to rescue a
lot of the culture that's becoming lost to them as commercialism and
Western corporatism define their culture.

RK:
How do you see the dynamics of a race with both a third-party
candidate and a fourth-party candidate? Do you see you and Buchanan
having your own debates?

RN:
Well, we may join together in putting more and more pressure on the
Democratic and Republican debate commission, which is their private
toy to exclude competition from third-party candidates and to be
lubricated by tobacco, beer, auto, and other money. This is an
incredible situation where the presidential debate in St. Louis is
being funded by a beer company, by 630,000 proud Anheuser-Busch
dollars, and the only thing left is for Gore and Bush to wear an
Anheuser-Busch cap and drink beer on the set. So we're going to put
pressure on. Over 50 percent in a poll of the people want me and
Buchanan in a debate. That's just for starters. If it goes up to
75-80, maybe there'll be an editorial initiative around the country,
and maybe they'll relent. But if they don't relent, there's nothing
keeping someone like CNN or some other big media from sponsoring
debates the two big guys can't ignore.

RK:
So it could be you debating Buchanan one on one and inviting the other
two in, and Bush and Gore can participate or not?

RN:
I don't think it's very interesting just to have me and Buchanan
debate. Maybe we could have a little theater, where we have the
look-alikes for Bush and Gore, like on Conan O'Brien's show, you know?
But I don't like a political system where everything pivots on whether
you're in the debates. Doesn't that show you how shallow our democracy
is? It works, though. Perot went from 7 percent to 20 percent. But
what we have to move for is a deep democracy and a strong democracy
that doesn't tolerate this nonsense.

RK:
What happened last time? You didn't really run a campaign.

RN:
I didn't intend to run in 1996. I got a letter in November of 1995
from David Brower and about 50 other environmental and other people
from California asking if I would put my name on. Then I started
getting more and more, and I said, well, you know, there's not going
to be any progressive presence in this campaign, so I said OK, but I
wasn't going to campaign--I wasn't going to raise money. In other
words, I did it because no one else did it.

RK:
How is it different this time?

RN:
This time I'm running a serious, deliberate campaign. We're going to
put 30 full-time organizers in the field, we're going to raise $5
million, we're going for matching funds--which takes $5,000 minimum in
each of 20 states, in denominations of $250 or less. The key is we're
running with citizen groups on the ground. I'm going into 50 states.
We've got parading, we've got op-eds, we're going in every area, like
mountain-top removal in West Virginia, we're with the people fighting
the coal companies. The homeless shelter controversy in Atlanta, where
the business district wants to squeeze out the shelters--they don't
want the homeless visible. We're with the homeless there. Fighting the
Fenway Park, the new Fenway Park boondoggle concept, we're there.
Incinerator fighting in Ohio.

What I'm trying to say is, what we're trying to do is come from the
civic movement, a la Jefferson, into the political arena, and then we
take the political movement and connect it with the civic movement.
And that way, you don't forget where you're coming from, and you're
really an authentic movement, however small it starts. There's never
been an oak tree that didn't start as an acorn.

RK: So every vote that Al Gore loses to you is Gore's to lose?

RN:
Exactly. And I think Bush is going to lose some votes too. Because in
'96 Dick Morris said I took four Republican votes for every six
Democrat ones, not counting Independents. I have no problem speaking
to conservative people about the fact that they're losing control,
like all other American citizens, over everything that matters to
them. They don't like corporate welfare, they don't like corruption of
money and politics. These aren't corporatists; these are, you
know--people call themselves conservatives. They don't like to be
ripped off when you get down to the basic areas of health care denial
and auto rip-offs and insurance rip-offs, and they don't like their
kids to be exploited by corporate commercialism. That's a real nerve
point with them. And there are a lot of other issues like that. Now,
obviously, their remedies are different; they don't want anything
regulated in many instances.

RK:
Do you think you can beat Pat Buchanan on those issues? Do you have a
better story of what ails America than Buchanan does?

RN:
Yeah, I think I have a longer history of knowing how corporations
exploit people. But he's got statements that are surprising. He wants
to cut the military budget, I'm told, significantly. And he's
beginning to pick up some of William Bennett's stuff on the commercial
exploitation of kids. But he's still a long way from being able to say
we've got to have strong health and safety standards in environment...


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