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On eve of Milwaukee convention: Green Party divided over Nader
campaign
By Patrick Martin
26 June 2004
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The World Socialist Web Site has sent a reporting
team to Milwaukee to cover the Green Partys presidential
nominating convention, which opened June 23. Further reports will
appear on the WSWS.
As delegates to the Green Party convention assembled in Milwaukee
on Friday, they were split over what course of action to take
in the 2004 presidential election. The convention is to decide
Saturday whether to nominate its own candidate for president,
endorse the independent candidacy of Ralph Nader, or sit out the
election entirely.
The latter position seemed to have little support among the
delegates, who individually expressed sharp hostility to Kerry,
describing him as a candidate of corporate America and supporter
of the war in Iraq, virtually identical to Bush. A small minority
of Greens for Kerry was active on the fringes of the convention,
distributing a leaflet urging the Green Party not run any candidate
of its own, in order to leave the field clear for the Democratic
candidate. They were not even allowed to set up a table at the
convention.
The convention delegates appear split into two main camps.
One group favors the nomination of California attorney David Cobb,
a longtime Green Party activist and a former party candidate in
Texas. The other seeks to support the Ralph Nader campaign by
endorsing both Cobb and Nader and allowing each state Green party
to decide which of the two to support in the 23 states where the
Greens already have ballot status, and in other states where the
Greens are petitioning to get on the ballot.
Nader already has the support of the Reform Party, the rump
of the organization founded by billionaire H. Ross Perot, which
backed the far-right candidacy of Patrick Buchanan in the 2000
election. The Reform Party line will give Nader ballot status
in as many as eight states, assuming that each state party accedes
to the decision of the national Reform Party leadership.
Nader made a bid for Green Party support a week before the
convention by announcing that California Green Party leader Peter
Miguel Camejo would be his vice presidential running mate. Camejo,
a former leader of the Socialist Workers Party and the SWP candidate
for president in 1976, was the Green Partys candidate for
governor of California in both 2002 and 2003. He received more
than 300,000 votes for governor in 2002, about five percent of
the vote, the Green Partys best showing in a major US campaign.
Neither faction adopts a principled position towards the Democratic
Party and the Kerry campaign. Cobb argues that the Green Party
will suffer politically if Bush is narrowly reelected and progressive
voters believe that Green votes in key states cost Kerry the election.
He has proposed a state-by-state approach to the presidential
campaign, promising to campaign in the so-called battleground
states like Florida and Ohio only if the state parties agree to
it, while focusing his main efforts in states like California,
New York and Texas where the Green vote is not likely to tip the
balance.
Nader and Camejo adapt to the Democratic Party as well, but
propose a different tactic. Giving ground to the localism of the
Cobb campaign, they also propose a state-by-state approach, one
in which the convention would endorse both candidates, and each
state party would choose which one to place on its ballot line.
As Camejo explained this maneuver at a meeting with Michigan delegates
Friday afternoon, in states like Michigan, where Nader will appear
on the Reform Party line, the state Green Party can put Cobb on
the ballot. In other states, where only the Green Party has a
line, Nader should be the candidate.
While Nader and Camejo criticize the Cobb approach as a concession
to the Democrats, and pledge to campaign in the battleground
states regardless of the possible impact on the Bush-Kerry contest,
their own attitude to the Democrats is not fundamentally different.
Nader continuously presents himself as a left adviser to the Kerry
campaign, suggesting how the Democrat can best appeal to his (Naders)
own supporters and win their votes away from his own candidacy.
His goal is not to build a political movement completely independent
of and opposed to the corporate-controlled two-party system, but
to pressure one of the two parties to the left.
Early this week Nader issued a statement calling on Kerry to
name Senator John Edwards of North Carolina as his running mate,
saying that Edwards would be the most effective in appealing to
potential Nader voters. Edwards has the same position as Kerry
on the war in Iraq, having voted for the October 2002 resolution
authorizing Bush to wage war, then voting in September 2003 against
the appropriations to finance the continued occupation, at a time
when both he and Kerry were contending with the surging campaign
of Howard Dean, which made a strong appeal to antiwar sentiment.
Naders backing for Edwards amounts to a declaration that
the key issue in the 2004 elections, so far as Nader is concerned,
is trade policy, not the war in Iraq, because Edwards distinguished
himself in the Democratic presidential primaries mainly through
his criticism of the impact of free trade policies
on US manufacturing jobs.
On the eve of the vote on a presidential nominee, Naders
supporters distributed an open letter to the delegates in which
Nader urged support for a unity resolution proposed
by Camejo (for dual Cobb and Nader-Camejo endorsements). He argued
that his own campaign would do more to build the Green Party organization
than Cobbs, and reiterated his criticism of the plan to
lie low this election and not receive many national votes
in the close states. Nader continued: This is a peculiar
way to expand your Party and establishes a poor precedent that
the Democrats will seek to exploit.
On Thursday night, June 24, several hundred Greens attended
a pre-convention meeting to hear the candidates for the partys
presidential nomination. Camejo, who initially sought the Green
nomination but now has agreed to be Naders running mate,
addressed the group, along with Cobb and three other candidates
who had less support. The meeting featured loud hooting, hissing
and booing from the supporters of the various positions.
Cobb portrayed the Nader campaign as an obstacle to the long-term
building of the Green Party as an organization, saying that the
purpose of his own campaign was to grow the Greens,
and that nominating a Green Party candidate, rather than endorsing
a non-Green, would be an act of institutional self-respect.
He offered to withdraw in favor of Camejo, if Camejo would agree
to be the partys presidential candidate.
At the same time, he made a clear appeal to the anybody-but-Bush
sentiment that will lead many of the Green Party supporters to
cast their votes in the end for Kerry and the Democrats. George
W. Bush is a problem, Cobb said. George Bush must
go.
A spokesman for Cobb later spelled out the logic of this position,
telling a WSWS reporter, Its important to get Bush
out of office. [Cobb] will describe Kerry as a corporate militarist,
but he understands there is considerable fear of a second Bush
administration, and the only way to get Bush out is for Kerry
to win.
Camejo sought to take advantage of the crass opportunism of
this line of argument, telling the Thursday night meeting that
Greens should never, ever vote for a Democrat. Kerry will
do what Bush wants to do, better, he said. But he did not
explain why, if that is the case, Nader himself was offering helpful
advice to the presumptive Democratic Party nominee.
It is clear that both factions are sensitive to the campaign
waged by the media and the Democratic Party, criticizing Naders
2000 Green Party race for playing the role of spoiler
and placing Bush in the White House. Such propaganda serves two
purposes: to discredit any third-party campaign that challenges
the Democrats and Republicans, and to cover up the capitulation
of Gore & Co. in 2000 to the anti-democratic methods of the
Republican Party and the unconstitutional intervention of the
US Supreme Court to shut down the vote counting in Florida.
Camejo also suggested that Cobb was less opposed to the US
occupation of Iraq than Nader, citing statements in which Cobb
said that the United States could not cut and run
from Iraq, and offering support for continued US troop presence
if requested by the interim Iraqi government that was rubber-stamped
in this months resolution by the UN Security Council.
Camejos specific role is to provide the Nader campaign
with a left face, while Nader himself conducts sordid
maneuvers with the right-wing leaders of the Reform Party and
with Buchanan himself. The latter gave Nader friendly treatment
in an interview for the American Conservative magazine
published last week.
Particularly cynical is Camejos claim to represent the
interests of Hispanic voters in California, while Nader tells
Buchanan that he would support restrictions on immigration long
desired by the xenophobic right.
Many of the rank-and-file convention delegates who spoke to
the WSWS voiced confusion about the nature of the differences
between the two camps. Some of those supporting Cobb cited Naders
own statements favoring the continued presence of US troops through
the end of this year, while Cobb called last month for an immediate
withdrawal.
As with the question of the Kerry campaign, neither faction
has a principled position on the war in Iraq. They both favor
replacing US military control with a UN-run caretaker regime,
essentially substituting control of Iraq by a consortium of the
major imperialist powers for the exclusively US-run operation
that has proved such a political, economic and military disaster.
The confused and politically murky character of the conflict
at the Green convention is, in the final analysis, a reflection
of the contradictory and unstable character of the Green Party
itself. This is a party for which confusion and political unclarity
are a way of life. It is based on extremely heterogeneous and
unstable layers of the middle classincluding many people
who are self-employed or only marginally related to economic life,
ranging from former participants in the 1960s radicalization,
now entered into middle age, to a sprinkling of college students.
See Also:
Support the Socialist Equality
Party in the 2004 US elections: Bill Van Auken for president Jim
Lawrence for vice president
[28 April 2004]
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