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Nader speaks in Detroit: Green Party presidential candidate
keeps silent on Bush
By Jerry White
21 April 2001
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One of the most remarkable phenomena of recent months has been
the political amnesty granted President George W. Bush by former
Green Party presidential candidate Ralph Nader. Since Bush's inauguration,
Nader, who campaigned as an opponent of corporate domination of
the two major US parties, has remained mute about one of the most
right-wing and openly pro-business governments in US history.
Judging from recent articles in the press and public appearances
around the country, Nader is going out of his way to provide political
cover for Bush and the Republicans. Last month, he co-authored
an op-ed column in the Wall Street Journal that gave a
positive appraisal of the new administration. The March 7 article,
entitled, Ending Corporate Welfare as We Know It,
praised Bush for proposing a reduction in funding for three federal
programs that provide government subsidies to corporations. (See
Ralph Nader's political
olive branch to Bush, http://www.wsws.org/articles/2001/mar2001/nad-m30.shtml)
On April 2, following speaking engagements in Los Angeles and
other cities, Nader spoke at Detroit's Wayne State University.
The most notable fact about his appearance, billed as a discussion
on Breaking the Two-Party Duopoly, was the absence,
in the course of a one-hour speech, of any mention of Bush or
the right-wing policies of the new administration.
Instead, Nader made a series of general statements about the
dominant influence of corporations over the American political
system. He said nothing about the manner in which the 2000 election
was resolved and the Bush administration installed, i.e., through
a Republican-led campaign to suppress the counting of votes in
Florida, culminating in a partisan and deeply anti-democratic
ruling by the US Supreme Court.
Nader mentioned Bush only in reply to questions from the audience.
At one point he acknowledged that Bush was overturning standards
to protect workers from on-the-job injuries and restrict arsenic
levels in drinking water. But he chose his words in such a way
as to deflect the blame from Bush and shift the onus onto former
President Clinton: All those things that Bush is eliminatingergonomics
and environmental protectionsClinton set a trap for him
and he fell right into it.
In another reply Nader downplayed Bush's threat to the environment.
The Republican president, Nader said, might damage the national
forests with logging, but he would not be able to open up the
Alaska wildlife areas to oil drilling, or lower arsenic standards.
This was so because there was a consensus in this country
for clean air, clean water that included conservatives,
he said.
Nader's complacent remarks betray his rather chronic lack of
political judgment and foresight. Why should anyone think an administration
that assumed power by running roughshod over the will of the majority
of voters would bow before public opinion and abandon its right-wing
agenda?
But Nader's remarks raise another, even more fundamental, issue.
They show the lack of seriousness that he and the Greens have
about building a genuine alternative to the two capitalist parties.
The real perspective of the Green Party is to become an effective
pressure group on the existing parties. If popular consensus in
the end determines the policies of the governmentit remains
a mystery how exactly this happens in a political system monopolized
by two parties which, by Nader's own admission, are controlled
by big businessthen the appropriate strategy is to shape
the popular consensus, including that of the conservatives,
by applying mass pressure, making speeches, etc.
The Green Party is seen by Nader and company as a lever for
influencing the policies of the ruling elite and its existing
parties or, as he says, to push and challenge
them. It is not seen as an independent instrument of the masses
of people for taking control of the government and of society
as a whole. Nader underscored the banal reformist notions that
underlie his politics when he asked the audience in Detroit, What
will it take for people to be the dominant power over government?
He then answered, If people paid what they spent on soft
drinks and set up congressional watch committees to monitor legislators
and follow their voting records, just one office and one full-time
staff for each congressman. Is that one of history's great exertions?
Addressing another question from the audience Nader said, Clinton
and Gore did nothing to protect the environment, and proceeded
to ask the audience, How much are you losing? with
Bush in the White House. Here Nader was repeating his line during
the election that since both parties are controlled by corporate
interests, there are no significant differences between them.
This radical-sounding position is, in fact, a form of adaptation
to the most right-wing sections of the political establishment,
represented by the Republicans. It ignores the fact that the Clinton
years witnessed a level of political warfare in Washington unprecedented
since the period leading up to the Civil War, culminating in 1998
in the first-ever impeachment of an elected president. The Republican
impeachment coup, which ultimately failed in the Senate acquittal
of Clinton, was continued in a different form in the successful
Republican drive to hijack the 2000 election.
For socialists, opposition to the Republicans and the reactionary
forces behind them in no way implies political support for the
Democratic Party. As the events of the recent years have demonstrated,
working people cannot rely on the Democrats and the liberals to
defend their democratic rightsincluding the right to votefrom
the attacks of the most right-wing sections of the ruling class.
Democratic rights can be defended only through the building of
a socialist political movement of the working class.
Our opposition to the Democrats and Republicans is basednot
on a failure to recognize their obvious differencesbut on
fundamental questions of political principle and class interests.
Socialists uphold the interests of the working class and explain
that these interests are irreconcilably in conflict with the existing
capitalist order, which both big business parties defend. We fight
for the construction of an independent political party of the
working class based on a socialist program that strives for the
abolition of all forms of class exploitation.
Nader's indifference to the attack on democratic rights is
bound up with his unwillingness or inability to make any distinction
between the policies of the two bourgeois parties. In fact, Nader
supported the impeachment campaign, saying that if he had been
a Senator at the time he would have voted to impeach the president.
Throughout the election crisis, the Green presidential candidate
was silent on the trampling of voting rights in Florida and the
Supreme Court's intervention to halt the counting of votes. In
response to a question from this reporter, Nader reiterated his
position that the election dispute was nothing more than a partisan
squabble, which had no intrinsic significance for the democratic
rights of the American people. Both parties steal elections,
he said. Who stole the election from Nixon in 1960? The
Democrats do it when they can get away with it and the Republicans
do the same. I say pox on both their houses.
Nader's conciliatory attitude to the Republican right betrays
his own rightward political trajectory. Significantly, in the
course of his comments on the election dispute, he referred to
the Florida Supreme Court, whose order to continue the vote recount
was reversed by the US Supreme Court, as Democratic-friendly,
echoing the line of the Bush camp and the media and implying that
no issue of voting rights or popular sovereignty was involved
in these court rulings, but only the small change of partisan
politics.
Precisely because socialists fight for the independent interests
of the working class, we are the most uncompromising opponents
of all attacks on democratic rights, and expose all attempts by
any section of the ruling elite, or either of its parties, to
erode those rights.
Nader and the Greens, on the other hand, oppose the struggle
for the political independence of the working class, and obscure
the basic class divisions within society. They oppose a revolutionary
struggle against the capitalist system, and instead promote the
notion that the system can be reformed through various forms of
pressure on the ruling elite. For this reason Nader and the Greens
have no real independence from the ruling class and its political
parties. Their denunciations of the two parties are hollow and
hypocritical. In the end, they adapt themselves to one or another
faction of the ruling elite, and to one or another of its political
parties.
Because Nader's opposition to the two parties is not based
on political principle, he is obliged to deny the existence of
even relative differences between the parties. For if he admits
that differences exist, that the Republicans are generally even
further to the right than the Democrats, then the rationale for
his independent campaign is undermined. Since he is not an opponent
of capitalism, and not in favor of an independent socialist party
of the working class, he lacks any solid basis for opposing the
politics of lesser evilism and refusing to support
the Democrats. A slight, even cosmetic shift of the Democrats
to the lefta bow to their former policies of social reformwould
lead to a mass desertion from the Greens back into the Democratic
fold. In fact, the Greens hope for nothing other than a return
by the Democratic Party to the (very limited) liberal reform policies
of the New Deal and the Great Society.
Thus while Nader downplays any criticism of Bush in hopes of
currying influence with the Republican administration, he is also
engaged in political maneuvers with the Democrats. According to
a recent article in the Nation magazine, Democratic House
minority leader Richard Gephardt met with Nader in February to
discuss the Green Party's electoral plans. Nader said he reminded
Gephardt that The Greens actually have a more legitimate
platform for the old Democratic Party than the Democratic Party
does. Nader told the magazine that he hoped the Greens would
be an electoral leverage from the left on the Democrats,
and if Green electoral candidates cost Democrats a few seats it
would be worth it, because Sometimes you've got to prune
a tree to make it grow healthy.
See Also:
Ralph Nader's political olive
branch to Bush
[30 March 2001]
The US election crisis:
why is Ralph Nader silent?
[24 November 2000]
Green Party presidential
candidate at the University of Michigan
For what social forces does Ralph Nader speak?
[2 November 2000]
Once again, on the
New York Times and the Nader campaign
[11 October 2000]
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