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Once again, on the New York Times and the Nader campaign
By Kate Randall
11 October 2000
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The New York Times has chosen not to make any editorial
comment on the exclusion of US Green Party candidate Ralph Nader
from the venue of the presidential debate held October 3 in Boston.
The Times ran only a three-paragraph news brief on the
incident.
Nader, who along with other third-party candidates was excluded
from participating in the televised debate between Democrat Al
Gore and Republican George W. Bush, was turned away at the door
of the debate venue by an official of the Commission on Presidential
Debates, a corporate-financed body staffed by Democratic and Republican
officials. The debate commission representative was accompanied
by three state troopers.
Nader was forced to leave the premises even though he had an
admission ticket, which had been given to him by a local college
student. The debate official told the Green Party candidate, who
is on the ballot in almost all 50 states: It's already been
decided that whether or not you have a ticket you are not welcome
in the debate. Nader was not even trying to enter the main
debate hall, but rather an adjoining room where the proceedings
were being broadcast on video.
The Times' silence on the debate commission's decision
to bar Nader from the event is by no means unique. With only a
few exceptions, including the Denver Post and Providence
Journal, none of the major daily newspapers published editorials
protesting the action taken against the Green Party candidate.
The Times' silence is particularly noteworthy, however,
given that newspaper's record in relationship to the 2000 election
campaign, the TV debates and the status of third-party candidates.
On August 22 the Times published an editorial calling for
the exclusion of Nader and Reform Party candidate Patrick Buchanan
from the debates. Its justification was that neither has
yet reached the status of a candidate with demonstrated national
support.
An earlier Times editorial, published June 30 under
the headline Mr. Nader's Misguided Crusade, condemned
Nader's campaign altogether, describing it as a self-indulgent
exercise that will distract voters from the clear-cut choice represented
by the major party candidates. The newspaper complained
that Nader's presence on the ballot was a nuisance that spoiled
what would otherwise be an uncluttered playing field
in the presidential race.
The Times cannot be faulted for inconsistency. Its position
is clear: Nader should be excluded from participating in the debates
and the debate commission's police action blocking him from even
participating as a spectator is no cause for concern or protest.
As the World Socialist Web Site stated in an earlier commentary,
New
York Times calls for exclusion of Green candidate Ralph Nader
from presidential debates, the logical implication of the
Times' position is that candidates outside the Democratic
and Republican parties should be banned from the elections altogether.
By making no comment on Nader's exclusion from the October
3 debate, the Times has gone a step further, giving tacit
support to an assault on Nader's rights not only as a candidate,
but as a voter. The Times' attitude towards Nader and other
third-party candidates reveals its contempt for basic democratic
principles. The newspaper has no regard for the right of organizations
or individuals outside the two corporate-backed official parties
to intervene in the elections, or for voters to hear their views.
Aside from a general indifference to democratic rights, the
Times' hostility to Nader reflects more immediate political
considerations. While the newspaper chose not to comment on Nader's
exclusion from the debate hall, it did publish a commentary by
David E. Rosenbaum on October 5 entitled Defining Themselves,
Gore and Bush Drew Traditional Portraits.
In this news analysis, readers were told the October
3 debate presented a clear choice between a traditional
Democrat and a traditional Republican, and that Gore and
Bush are standing fast on the principles and policies that
have divided their parties for generations.... The author
went on to take the following gratuitous swipe at Nader: So
much for Ralph Nader's view that they [Gore and Bush] are Tweedledum
and Tweedledee.
This article was a continuation of a line of argument the Times
has pursued for months in relation to the elections. The newspaper
has been at pains to insist that the contest between Gore and
Bush represents a dramatic conflict between starkly opposed policies,
so much so that alternative candidates are superfluous. The Times
was making this claim, not only in editorials, but in news
articles as well, long before Gore's speech at the Democratic
National Convention, when the Democratic candidate adopted a populist
stance and declared himself the champion of working families.
In presenting this distorted picture of the presidential campaign,
the Times is promoting a definite political line: namely,
that democracy is alive and well in the US, notwithstanding the
fact two corporate-controlled parties exercise a monopoly of power.
The Times' spin on the October 3 debate was belied by
the response of tens of millions of voters. While the media built
up the initial debate as the most dramatic squaring off of candidates
since John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon, with many pundits predicting
a national television audience as high as 90 million, the reaction
among American voters was lack-luster at best. One of the smallest
audiences in recent historyestimated at 46 million viewerstuned
in to the event. Post-debate opinion polls indicated that the
contest had a minimal impact on the candidates' standings.
In stark contrast to the Times, the mood among broad
sections of voters is one of alienation from the two-party system
and distrust of both candidates. On important issues affecting
the majority of Americanssuch as education, health care,
economic securitybroad sections of the population sense
little difference between Bush and Gore. What predominates is
disaffection from an electoral process in which the expenditure
of vast sums by corporate donors stands in inverse relation to
the actual involvement of the masses. There is no indication that
this election will, in a significant way, reverse the steady decline
over the past two decades in voter turnout.
The Times' heavy-handed attempt to inflate the differences
between the two candidates, and its hostility to the Nader campaign,
must both be understood as a politically motivated response to
the obvious decline in mass support for the two-party system.
The newspaper's editors seem intent on applying the dictum that
a lie, if big enough and repeated often enough, will be accepted
by the public.
It is not difficult to puncture the basic pretense of the Times'
reportage and editorial commentary. One need only ask the question:
If the differences between the two parties are so clear and so
profound, and the American people can be secure in the certainty
that their interests are bound to be represented by one or the
other candidate, why the fuss and bother over the inclusion of
Nader or other third-party candidates in the debates? If the two-party
system is as healthy as the Times suggests, why do its
defenders react with semi-hysteria to a challenge from outsiders?
The Times knows full well that the two-party system
is in deep crisis, and its efforts to paint a rosy picture are
prompted by the fear that a political structure that has served
the ruling elite in America so well for so long could very well
break up. That is why the newspaper wants to exclude any alternative
viewpoint that might expose, even in a limited way, the degree
to which both parties serve the interests of the most privileged
social layers, and how far to the right they both have moved.
In fact, Nader and the Green Party do not in any fundamental
sense pose a challenge to the status quo. Combining certain reformist
demands with economic nationalism, Nader's campaign exists largely
for the purpose of pushing the Democratic Party to the left. But
in the present crisis-ridden state of American politics, the Times
would prefer to bar him and other critics of the two-party
system from access to a mass audience. After all, if third party
liberals are given a chance to speak to the people today, what's
to prevent socialists from presenting a genuine alternative to
the working class tomorrow?
See Also:
The Bush-Gore debate: snapshot of a political
system in decay
[6 October 2000]
US Green Party candidate Ralph Nader barred
from site of presidential debate
[5 October 2000]
New York Times calls
for exclusion of Green candidate Ralph Nader from presidential
debates
[4 September 2000]
Why the New York Times
wants Green Party candidate Ralph Nader out of the presidential
campaign
[3 July 2000]
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