[Winona Online Democracy]

Hello,

Here are some interesting statistics and points about the Presidential
Election that most mainstream media won't address because they only rely on
a few sources for their information.

More perspectives...leads to....better understanding.

No matter what your opinions are about who "wins" this election or what
your political background is, it's still  important to address
misconceptions.  I think it's especially interesting to see who really
votes for Ralph Nader and the Green Party.  It's very different than the
media portrays it.

Look the article over, let me know what you think.  What do you agree with?
What do you disagree with?  What other perspectives should be considered?

Dwayne

=============

Why Nader Is NOT To Blame

Tim Wise, AlterNet

November 8, 2000

======================

Well, the long knives are out. Media pundits, Democratic Party officials,
and I would suspect Al Gore himself before long, have or will soon begin to
do the predictable: search out a scapegoat for why the Presidential
election turned out the way it did. With Gore having won the popular vote,
and yet having apparently lost in the electoral college, there will be a
cacophony of voices saying some constructive things -- like discussing the
need for an instant runoff/preference voting system that would better
reflect the will of the American public -- but also blaming the victory of
George W. Bush squarely on the shoulders of the Green Party and Ralph Nader.

It had begun even before midnight: television talking heads exclaiming that
if Gore lost, the blame could be laid at the door of Nader and those
presumed liberals and leftists that flocked to his campaign. Few
commentators challenged this analysis, and by the morning after -- as we
await recounts in Florida that will determine the outcome -- it has become
conventional wisdom that Nader did indeed cost Gore the election, by
swinging Oregon, Florida, and perhaps even New Hampshire to Bush II.

Such is the sorry state of political analysis, not to mention statistical
interpretation, and such is the pathetic state of the Democratic Party: so
desperate to avoid admitting its own mistakes that it would prefer to
attack a large segment of its progressive base, chastising them like
misbehaving children, as if somehow that will bring them back to the fold.
Not likely. And not a very smart move.

Most importantly, the Blame-Nader first school is wrong, dead wrong about
who is to blame for Gore's slim electoral defeat. Here's why:

First, the notion that Nader voters would all have voted for the Vice
President in the absence of their favorite from the race, is nonsense.  CNN
exit polls show that only about 47 percent of the Nader voters would have
voted for Gore in a two way race, while 21 percent would have voted for
Bush and 30 percent would have abstained from voting in the Presidential
contest altogether.

This is significant, especially in New Hampshire and Oregon, where some are
saying the Nader vote was the difference.

Looking at New Hampshire first, it is true that Bush's margin of victory
was only about 7,500 votes, and that Nader received about 22,000 votes
there. But based on the exit polling data, if Nader hadn't been in the
race, only a little less than half of those Nader votes would have gone to
Gore, and a fifth would have gone to Bush, so that in the end, Bush would
have still won New Hampshire by about 1500 votes in all.

In Oregon, where it is a virtual article of religious faith that Nader is
to blame for the Bush victory, the hype is once again overblown and flatly
wrong. Yes, Bush won the state by a margin of only about 23,000 votes, and
Nader received the votes of 54,000. But once again, based on the exit
polls, had the race been only between Gore and Bush, Gore would have gotten
47 percent of those 54,000, for a total of around 25,400, Bush would have
received 21 percent of those 54,000,  for a total of about 11,300, and in
the end, Bush would still have squeaked out a victory, by about 8,000 votes.

Which brings us to Florida. If ever there was a case to make that Nader had
been the spoiler for Gore, it would be here, where the election will likely
be decided by less than 2,000 votes. Clearly, one could look at Nader's
97,000 votes there and say, with a degree of certainty approaching
definitive, that had Nader not been in the race, Gore would have beaten
Bush among Nader voters by a two to one margin, and that would have been
enough to capture Florida's 25 electoral college votes and catapult him to
the Presidency.

It is this fact which has me anticipating a degree of vitriol,
finger-pointing and Nader bashing truly beyond anything we have seen thus
far from the Democrats. And I fear that some in the Nader camp may fall for
it, and come to regret their decision to vote for an alternative to this
broken two-party system. But they shouldn't, and here's why:

Think about this election the way you would any other competition: perhaps,
a football game.  Just a few days ago, for example, I watched as my
hometown team, the Tennessee Titans, beat the Pittsburgh Steelers thanks to
a field goal in the closing seconds of the game. Now, needless to say, if
the Titans kicker misses that field goal, the Steelers win 7-6. If he makes
it, we win 9-7.   It would have been easy to say -- and predictable and
even true at one level -- that if Al Del Greco  misses that field goal, he
is to blame, and the outcome was the result of that missed kick.

But then again, one could also look back at the entire game and find a
number of other things, which, had the Titans done them right, the game
wouldn't have come down to that kick in the first place, and so those
things could just as logically be seen as the problem. An interception at a
crucial moment, a fumble, or a penalty flag that hurt an offensive drive.
Any one of those things goes differently, and the Titans have more than
enough points at the end of the game, and don't need the 3 points that Del
Greco can give them. They can just run out the clock and hit the showers as
winners.

The same is true in the presidential contest.  Sure, if Nader isn't
running, a plurality of his voters goes to Gore, and he wins Florida. But
taking that singular fact to be the key factor, and making it, in effect,
the missed field goal by Gore as the clock runs out, is silly. There were,
as with the Titans game, plenty of other factors that could have and should
have gone Gore's way in Florida,  but because they didn't, Nader became a
factor. And whose fault is that?

Consider this: Gore lost in Florida among white women (many of those soccer
moms who Clinton carried, and many of whom would normally have been reached
by a Democratic candidate talking about education, health care, abortion,
and other key issues) by a 52-45 margin, with the Nader factor being
negligible among this group. And he lost among seniors, a group that
rightly should have been concerned about Bush's plans to partially
privatize social security: a plan that twelve years ago rendered Pierre
DuPont (the only Republican willing to float the concept) an asterisk in
American political history, and a laughingstock. Here too, among the
traditionally Democratic constituency of seniors, the Nader factor was
negligible.

Even more to the point, Bush received the votes of 12 times more Democrats
than Nader did,  and 5.25 times more self-identified liberals than Nader
did in Florida, indicating that progressive voters and those who might have
been seen as a natural lock for Gore, actually were stolen not by the
Greens, but by the Republicans.

Now folks, when your base is more likely to vote for George W. Bush than
Ralph Nader, this not  only is bad news for Nader, but also makes quite
clear that Gore -- not Nader -- is to blame for his loss in Florida. In
all, 19 percent of voters there described themselves as liberal. If Nader
got  3 percent of these, this represents a little less than 6/10ths of the
overall popular vote that could have been "taken" from Gore by Nader voters
on the left: those who are being blamed for Gore's defeat. But if 16
percent of liberals voted for Bush (which they did, for some reason), this
represents 3 percent of the total popular
vote "stolen" from Gore by Bush voters on the left. That 3 percent is more
than the Nader total in
Florida, which was 2 percent.

The same thing happened in Oregon, where Bush outpolled Nader among
Democrats by a margin of 3.5 to 1, and where Bush took 43 percent more of
the self-described liberals than Nader. And in New Hampshire, where Bush
took six times more Dems from Gore than Nader did, and twice as many
self-described
liberals.

What all this means is simple: Al Gore has no one to blame but himself, and
his inability to rally voters sufficiently around his watered-down agenda
and lackluster campaign. Gore actually lost  nationwide among voters who
said they prioritized world affairs, despite the fact that Bush would be
hard-pressed to name a small fraction of world leaders, and has no foreign
policy experience whatsoever.

And just to make clear that Nader was not Gore's Achilles heel, consider
this: nationally, Bush got twice as many self-described liberals as Nader
did, over seven times more Clinton voters than Nader did, and among those
who said "government should do more" (a typically liberal/progressive
position statement), Bush took eight times more of these natural Democratic
voters than did Nader.

Of course, it should not be necessary to say any of this. It should be
obvious that when an incumbent Vice-President, in an administration that is
generally given high marks for the state of the economy, and who serves in
time of relative world peace, can't defeat a man who is probably the least
qualified, weakest Republican nominee in the past 36 years, there is
something amiss  -- and it isn't the third party candidate.

Keep in mind, 66 percent of the American public says the nation is on the
right track. That is significantly more than said this same thing in 1996,
when only a little over half felt that way. And  yet, when almost half the
population thought the nation was not headed in the right direction, Bill
Clinton was able to put together a landslide victory. Meanwhile, Gore, with
two-thirds of the public happy about the direction of the country,appears
to have lost. How could that possibly be the fault of Ralph Nader?

And of course, had Gore carried his own home state, along with either
Clinton's home state of Arkansas or the traditional Democratic stronghold
of West Virginia, then Florida would be an irrelevancy.

 But don't look for that kind of honesty from the Democratic Party, or
Democrat-friendly spinmeisters in the media. When in doubt, they always
look left for a scapegoat, when the real  culprit for their troubles is
looking back at them from the mirror.

So don't believe the hype. If you voted for Nader, don't feel guilty or
conflicted for one minute. And don't mourn, organize!

After all, the next President of the United States will be the weakest in
decades, unable to get away with the right-wing plans about which we have
been warned. And the Democrats, though we might not have
actually cost them the election, have been put on notice. They can no
longer ignore the voices of those committed to democratic (small-d)
principles.

In the final analysis, it's not that bad a day after all.

Tim Wise is a Nashville-based writer, lecturer and activist. He can be
reached at:

[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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