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By G. William Domhoff

A Commentary on the Nader 2000 Campaign.
 
March 29, 2002

   Ralph Nader’s decision to challenge Albert Gore Jr. in the
Democratic presidential primaries in 2000 will go down in history
as a major turning point for Americans who seek greater equality
and fairness for everyone in all areas of life. from the personal
to the economic to the political. Already it has had several
positive consequences in energizing egalitarian activists inside
and outside the electoral arena. Not that it was an easy decision
for Nader; he needed a lot of convincing, and almost went along
with those who urged that he run as a third-party candidate because
of the “impurity,” “corruption” and timidity of present-day Democrats.

In the end, however, Nader was persuaded by comparative political
studies of many dozens of countries.
They show it is rare for a third party to develop in a “single-member
district plurality” electoral system, which is what the United
States happens to have through historical accident and political
compromise. In the few countries with such a system where there
is a third party, it is usually one that represents a specific
region or ethnic group. These third parties can have an impact
when they choose which major party to join with to form a parliamentary
majority, but such post-electoral coalitions are not to be in
the United States because it has a presidential, not a parliamentary,
system. Single-member plurality districts and a strong presidency,
itself rooted in one giant single-member district called the
United States, dictate that coalitions must be formed before
the election by people who want to avoid being governed by their
least-favored candidate. Hence the two pre-electoral coalitions
called the Democratic and Republican parties, which have been
dominated by rival factions of the ownership class since the
1790s.

Nader not only grasped this structural logic, but he learned
from the disastrous history of previous third
parties, especially the Progressive Party of 1948. The formation
of that party led to bitter battles between “liberals,” who stayed
with the Democrats, and “progressives” (mostly Communists, socialists
and pacifists), who backed former Vice President Henry Wallace
as the third-party candidate. The campaign received only a little
more than 1 million votes, about half of them from New York alone.
Worse, it set in motion the events that completely destroyed
the strong left-liberal coalition built slowly during the New
Deal and war years. Nader also knew that the Peace and Freedom
Party of 1968 and the Citizen’s Party of 1980 had zero positive
impact.

Nader further understood that the two major political parties
are now in part an extension of the
government, first of all because the government “registers” citizens
as “members” of one or another party, which means the party cannot
control its own membership by refusing admittance or initiating
expulsions. Then the government conducts “primaries” in which
any member of the party can run on any platform he or she so
desires, thereby contending with fat cats and hired guns for
control of the party. From a governmental perspective, the “Democratic
Party” is the name for one of the two structured pathways into
government. It is a shell. That’s a far cry from the days when
court house gangs controlled nominations in the South and city
bosses decided on candidates in most big cities in the North.

Nor was it lost on Nader that insurgencies in party primaries
have done much better than third-party
candidates over the past 70 years. The most famous example is
socialist Upton Sinclair’s switch to the Democrats in 1934 so
he could run for governor in the California party’s primary,
where he won 51 percent of the vote in a field of seven candidates,
and went on to take 37 percent of the vote in the regular election
against the incumbent Republican. The success of the New Right
in transforming the Republican Party was not overlooked by Nader
either. So the combination of structure and history came down
in favor of a Democratic insurgency. Third-party advocates were
displeased, but not the great majority of Nader admirers and
those leftists who suffered through the lean times of the last
30-plus years.

Not that there was a groundswell of voters for Nader at first,
or even later. It looked for months like he was
going nowhere; established political operatives and the media
focused on Gore and Bradley. But when Bradley dropped out and
Nader refused to quit, things began to get interesting. Suddenly
there was more media attention because it was a David and Goliath
story at a time when there was not much other news. Moreover,
Nader’s principled decision to avoid personal attacks on Gore,
along with his laser focus on the tremendous failures of big
corporations, and his equal focus on the possibilities of using
government to tame them, gained him increasing respect. Nader’s
slogan was also ideal for showing that there are more egalitarian
Democrats than the centrists like to think: “Send Gore a Message
about social equality and the importance of the environment.”

It was the huge rallies at arena after arena across the country
that really ignited the campaign, though.
Thousands of people turned out in small cities up and down the
Left Coast, along with nearly 10,000 in Chicago and Washington,
and 15,000 at Madison Square Garden. Student audiences in Boston
and other college towns went wild for Nader. It was just like
what the old days of grassroots politics were imagined to be,
and even the skeptical and disaffected began to enjoy the campaign.
They also admired the dogged way in which Nader insisted on visiting
every state and speaking in every venue, even ones unlikely to
give him any votes. Clever ads in the spirit of Sen. Paul Wellstone
and Gov. Jesse Ventura before him also added to the excitement
and fun as Gore soldiered on in his usual stolid way.

Still, Nader never won more than 20 to 25 percent of the votes
in any primary, even in California and
Oregon. But he never got less than 5 to 10 percent either, whereas
he would have been lucky to take 3 percent as a third party candidate
in the regular elections. Overall, his vote totals were far more
than the Gore campaign expected, forcing Gore to respect the
egalitarian wing of the party, but less than Nader hoped for,
a sobering reminder to insurgents that they have their work cut
out for them if they expect to attract the many people they think
of as their “natural” allies.

But Nader’s overall showing was enough to make it necessary for
Gore to allow him to speak at the
convention. The negotiations were intense, with Gore’s handlers
trying to keep Nader’s appearance short and far from prime time,
but 10 minutes in the early evening wasn’t bad, and the speech
was a bell ringer that is available on video to rally new activists
for years to come. Rehearsing once again the many failures and
injustices of raw neoliberal/neoconservative capitalism, and
explaining the remedies available by government planning through
the market system, Nader then cemented his future role by praising
Gore and calling for his election. Saying those positive words
wasn’t easy for him, because he felt that Gore had treated him
and other egalitarian activists shabbily over the previous eight
years, but there was just enough politician in him to get the
words out.

Gore, of course, did not return the favor, saying little or nothing
about Nader during the regular campaign,
and limiting his official role to a few fringe appearances. Not
that Nader was a wilting lily; as a supporter of the party’s
candidate, he took advantage of the campaign fervor to visit
liberals and egalitarians on his own hook everywhere he could,
working to convince the few remaining holdouts for futile third
parties that they could have more influence inside the Democratic
Party than outside it. He also used these visits to start Egalitarian
Democratic Clubs in 43 states, laying the basis for the future
takeover of the party in the same way liberals had taken over
the California state party with their California Democratic Clubs
in the 1950s and 1960s. He also used these occasions to make
plans for the national post-election EDC convention that was
held in March 2001, where club members were given the task of
developing a more detailed set of programs for future elections,
and urged to find candidates to carry the egalitarian message
in state and congressional races.

Although Gore continued to ignore Nader after his narrow victory,
which was decided late in the evening by
the electoral votes in New Hampshire and Florida, he quietly
paid off the left with several of his second- and third-level
appointments. Former Naderites gained some influence at the Environmental
Protection Agency and OSHA, where they implemented several rulings
and regulations that the Clinton-Gore team had been sitting on
because they did not want to stir up the corporate pressure groups.

Nader’s decision to help send a moderate Democrat to the White
House also made good sense in terms of the
leverage it gave liberal Democrats in the Senate, such as the
new senator from New Jersey, Jon Corzine. Chastised by purists
for spending tens of his own millions to win the seat, the former
Wall Street investment banker is nonetheless the most progressive
Democratic Senator with real leadership potential and a grasp
of the inner workings of capitalism to appear in two decades.
Moreover, Nader earned credit for helping the Democrats come
very close to a House majority, thanks to last-minute victories
in districts in Michigan, New Jersey and New Mexico, where his
visits helped to reduce the vote for Green Party candidates just
enough for the Democrats to squeak by.

In the aftermath of his campaign, Nader’s longstanding connections
with non-electoral egalitarian
organizations means that the Egalitarian Democrat Clubs will
be able to generate the pressure on elected officials that has
to be exerted on every issue that comes up for a vote, either
to be sure these officials don’t collapse to the center, or to
give them cover for what they want to do anyhow. By being inside
and outside of electoral politics, the wider egalitarian movement
he is championing can have the best of both worlds. Most of the
time its members can continue to work in specific environmental,
social justice, or workplace organizations that have no electoral
focus, but they also can involve themselves periodically in electoral
politics through the EDCs.

No matter what the future may bring in the face of a formidable
corporate power structure and a great many
citizens satisfied with the status quo, Nader’s decision to take
egalitarian activism into the Democratic Party was a brilliant
expenditure of moral capital, providing egalitarians with new
hope and a new direction.
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Read part 2 of this essay >>>>>>>>>>>>>



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