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Why the New York Times wants Green Party candidate
Ralph Nader out of the presidential campaign
By Patrick Martin
3 July 2000
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this version to print
An editorial published in the June 30 issue of the New York
Times is a crude expression of contempt for democracy on the
part of this supposed guardian of liberalism and political freedom.
The commentary, entitled Mr. Nader's Misguided Crusade,
denounces the presidential candidacy of Ralph Nader, who received
the Green Party nomination last week, calling it a self-indulgent
exercise that will distract voters from the clear-cut choice represented
by the major party candidates, Vice President Al Gore and Gov.
George W. Bush.
The editorial continues: We are equally reluctant to
see the main election choices clouded by the spoiler candidacy
of Patrick Buchanan on the Reform Party ticket... There
follows a pro forma qualification: Of course, both Mr. Buchanan
and Mr. Nader have the right to run (the of course
only underscoring the newspaper's hypocrisy). Having made this
nod to democracy, the Times returns to the business at
hand: But given the major differences between the prospective
Democratic and Republican nominees, there is no driving logic
for a third-party candidacy this year, and the public deserves
to see the major party candidates compete on an uncluttered playing
field.
The editorial is at once ludicrous and sinister. To speak of
major differences between Gore and Bush is a travesty.
It is notable that the Times makes no attempt to say what
these differences are. In reality, less separates these two candidates
than any pair of Democratic and Republican presidential nominees
in the twentieth century. For the past 20 years the Democratic
Party has raced to match the rightward lurch of the Republicans,
abandoning its previous liberal reform polices. The Clinton years
have marked the extinguishing of any significant differences on
social policy between the two parties.
As for the candidates, both are political scions of the ruling
eliteGore the son of a senator, Bush the son of a president.
They personify the domination of American society by an aristocracy
of wealth and privilege that is separated from the masses of working
people by an unbridgeable social gulf.
Even more fundamental than the Times' fantastical characterization
of the Bush-Gore race is its attack on the very existence of the
Nader candidacyno sooner was he nominated by the Green Party
than the Times condemned his campaign. This is an expression
of hostility to the most fundamental requirement of democracy:
free and open discussion. The editors reject any notion that the
purpose of an election campaign is to have the broadest possible
discussion of political issues, in which the clash of opposing
points of view can educate public opinion.
It apparently does not occur to the Times' editors that
political organizations outside the two traditional parties of
American capitalism should, as a matter of democratic principle,
have the fullest opportunity to present their views to the public,
or that the people should have the right to hear them. As it is,
US election laws make it all but impossible for parties promoting
minority viewsand especially left-wing and socialist partiesfrom
gaining ballot access, and the media conglomerates make no bones
about blacking out coverage of their programs, candidates and
activities.
Of particular note, as an expression of the Times' contempt
for democratic rights, is its preference for an uncluttered
playing field. What, one wonders, does the Times make
of the electoral systems in much of Europe, where parties are
guaranteed representation in parliament once they win 5 percent
of the vote, and their leading representatives in some cases are
given cabinet positions?
Although the editorial does not state this explicitly, the
Times clearly opposes including either Nader or Buchanan
in this fall's nationally televised election debates. As far as
the Times is concerned, democracy consists entirely in
the competition of the two majori.e., big business-supportedcandidates
against one another, but no competition should be allowed which
is directed against the two-party system as a whole, or which
raises political issues which those parties exclude from American
public life. Nader arouses the wrath of the Times because
his campaign raises, in however limited a way, criticism of corporate
America.
The Times hails the value of an uncluttered playing
field at a time when public disaffection with the two big
business parties is growing, and there are portents of an impending
breakup of the traditional political setup in the US. As the Times
is well aware, only eight years ago the Texas multimillionaire
H. Ross Perot won some 20 percent of the vote in the presidential
election, the highest third party vote since Theodore
Roosevelt's Bull Moose candidacy in 1912.
The Times editorial is motivated in large measure by
the newspaper's concern over the weakening of the two-party system,
as millions of working people conclude that neither of the two
big business parties represent their interests. From this standpoint,
it is ironic that immediately underneath the editorial denouncing
Nader and defending the two-party monopoly in the United States,
the Times publishes an editorial wagging a finger at Mexico
and warning the Mexican government against seeking to maintain
the one-party monopoly of the ruling PRI.
The Times notes: The policy differences separating
the two leading contenders are relatively minor, particularly
on issues concerning the United States. Both Mr. Labastida and
Mr. Fox are broadly pro-trade and pro-business and would work
comfortably with Washington on border and drug issues. This
is true, but if the differences between the two Mexican frontrunners
are relatively minor, the differences between Bush
and Gore are infinitesimal.
The Bush-Gore contest has not and cannot raise any serious
social issue. Every speech is poll-tested and packaged by advertising
consultants, who position the candidates based not
on principled concerns, but on immediate electoral advantage.
This in turn derives, not from the opinions of ordinary voters,
but from decisions made by multimillionaire campaign contributors
and the opinion makers in the corporate-controlled mass media.
The result is an electoral process in which more and more resources
are expendedthe 2000 campaign will cost over $3 billionto
influence fewer and fewer actual voters.
This is not the first time in recent years that the Times
has voiced anti-democratic sentiments. Throughout the Monica Lewinsky
affair, the newspaper provided a crucial liberal cover for the
attempt by extreme-right elements, working with Independent Counsel
Kenneth Starr, to unseat an elected president through a trumped-up
sex scandal. The Times gave editorial support, not only
to the legitimacy of the charges against Clinton, but to grossly
anti-democratic methods employed by Starr, including browbeating
witnesses and illegally leaking stories to the media.
Such views are not the mere whim of the newspaper's editors,
or its multimillionaire owners in the Sulzberger-Ochs family.
They are the product of definite social and political shifts in
the privileged elite atop New York society, whose fortunes have
ballooned over the past decade of virtually nonstop stock market
boom. The bonanza on Wall Street has, of course, not trickled
down to the masses of New York workers, many of them minority
and immigrant. It has, however, enriched a sizable upper-middle-class
layer which once espoused a liberal standpoint on social and political
issues, but has moved sharply to the right and become largely
indifferent to the defense of democratic rights.
Given the ham-fisted character of the Times editorial,
it could only have been written, not simply by people who have
grown more conservative, but by those so besotted with wealth
and privilege that they are unaware of how outrageous their views
are to the vast majority of ordinary people.
Readers of the World Socialist Web Site will know that
we do not endorse the politics of Nader or the Green Party, let
alone the extreme-right-wing chauvinism of Buchanan. But the support
which both of these third party candidates have received is at
least in part a reflection of rising popular hostility to the
political monopoly of the two big business parties. These candidates,
and all others who have obtained ballot status to compete in the
elections, should have equal access to the media, to the televised
debates and to all other political forums during the election
campaign.
See Also:
Why is the
New York Times supporting Kenneth Starr?
[16 October 1998]
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