|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : US
Elections
New York Times calls for exclusion of Green candidate
Ralph Nader from presidential debates
By Kate Randall
4 September 2000
Use
this version to print
An August 22 editorial in the New York Times calls for
excluding the candidates of the Green and Reform parties from
the presidential debates. The rationale, according to the Times,
is that neither Ralph Nader nor Patrick Buchanan has yet
reached the status of a candidate with demonstrated national support.
The editorial spells out explicitly what was implied in an
earlier editorial published June 30 under the headline Mr.
Nader's Misguided Crusade. In that statement the Times
denounced Nader's candidacy as 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 Times went on to complain that
Nader's presence on the ballot would spoil what would otherwise
be an uncluttered playing field. ( See: Why the New York Times
wants Green Party candidate Ralph Nader out of the presidential
campaign http://www.wsws.org/articles/2000/jul2000/nyt-j03.shtml).
The Times' agitation against third party and independent
candidates is remarkable for its brazen disregard of the most
elementary democratic principles. So contemptuous is the newspaper
of such considerations as the right of the public to hear differing
viewpoints and the right of those outside of the two official
parties to present their policies, it does not even bother to
address such principled issues.
Instead it crudely argues from the standpoint of political
expediency. It wants an electoral process that is not cluttered
by the intrusion of people, parties and political ideas not sanctioned
by the parties funded and dominated by big business. This is cynicism
of the purest water.
Only those candidates who have demonstrated national
support should be allowed to participate in the televised
debates, says the Times. This, of course, begs the question:
precisely how is this national support to be demonstrated?
Is this not the purpose of holding elections?
We can determine whether or not a candidate has demonstrated
national support by the pre-election opinion polls, the
Times would presumably reply. But aside from the thorny
question of what level of support qualifies as demonstrated
and nationala largely subjective yardstickthere
is another problem. In order to win a substantial public following,
a candidate has to be able to present his or her views to wide
sections of the electorate. In present-day America that requires
access to the mass media, and a fair degree of coverage by the
media. Nationally televised debates are among the most important
venues for candidates to reach a mass audience. By excluding third
party and independent candidates from such debates, the political
and media establishment, with the full-throated support of the
Times, throws up immense obstacles to prevent them from
gaining demonstrated national support.
Call it sophistry, a vicious circle, or Catch-22it is
a mockery of a democratic process. Institutions like the Times
set themselves up as the arbiters of who is to be heard before
a single vote has been cast in the general election.
It is obvious that the Times views presidential elections
as little more than an organizational exercisethe means
by which the powers-that-be select the personnel to defend their
interests for the next four years. It does not apparently occur
to the newspaper's editors that elections, if they are to serve
a genuinely democratic purpose, must be more than a means of shuffling
office-holders. The notion that elections should be the occasion
for the widest possible discussion and debate of social and political
issues seems entirely foreign to them. But if elections are to
be more than a glorified horse race, then candidates who have
met the basic qualifications for ballot status must be included
in national debates, regardless of whether or not they stand a
chance of getting elected.
The Times does not even consider the implications of
its position on the debates. If candidates who have attained ballot
status should be barred from debates, why not go one step further
and ban them from the elections altogether? A political campaign
streamlined along such lines would eliminate the messiness
of having to contend with candidates who might advocate views
seriously at odds with the status quo.
The newspaper expresses not only indifference to democratic
rights, but also contempt for the intelligence of the people.
The Times suggests that voters would simply be incapable
of making sense of a debate comprised of more than two candidates.
The electoral process in the US has long been stunted and distorted
to conform to the interests of the most privileged social layers
and effectively exclude left-wing and socialist opponents of the
capitalist system. But in recent years, the legal and practical
hurdles thrown up against parties and candidates not backed by
corporate interests or billionaire sponsors like H. Ross Perot
have grown even more flagrant. Absurd and arbitrary petitioning
requirements have been imposed to deter independent candidates
from obtaining ballot status. Police routinely harass petitioners
at shopping malls and on public streets, and the media blacks
out the campaigns of left-wing and socialist candidates.
What is behind the Times' opposition to the appearance
of Nader and Buchanan in the presidential debates? Neither of
these candidates opposes the profit system. Buchanan is an extreme
reactionary who espouses views of an essentially fascistic character.
As for Nader, his campaign represents a combination of liberal
reforms and a reactionary strain of economic nationalism, and
the Green Party exists largely for the purpose of pushing the
Democratic Party to the left.
Nevertheless, the Times is well aware of the erosion
of popular support for the two-party system, a political structure
which has served American capitalism well and which the Times
wants to maintain. The so-called newspaper of record
sees in the weakening grip of the Democrats and Republicans the
danger of the emergence of a mass political movement of an anti-capitalist
character. It senses that were a socialist candidate, for example,
given the opportunity to speak on national televisionaddressing
the issues of social inequality, the decay of democratic rights,
the corruption of the political systemhe or she would win
support from broad layers of the population.
See Also:
Why the New York Times
wants Green Party candidate Ralph Nader out of the presidential
campaign
[3 July 2000]
Gore's newfound populism:
an ossified establishment confronts the class chasm in America
[22 August 2000]
US elections: Gore ticket
rushes to reassure big business
[24 August 2000]
The US elections: Lieberman's holy war
against the Bill of Rights
[1 September 2000]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |