The question, yet again, is whether or not to hold your nose and vote for the “lesser of two evils” (or, if you will, against the Republican Party) OR vote your conscience in support of a true progressive. Casting such a ballot in 2008 for a candidate with almost no chance of winning after the 2000 election fiasco is a tall order, especially when recognizing the substantial differences between McCain and Obama/Clinton on many, though certainly not all, important issues.
Ralph Nader’s 2000 Green Party presidential run is well documented. Charges of “spoiling” aside, his 2.7% – despite appearing on only 44 states’ ballots and not being included in presidential debates – represented a significant and promising development for progressives. Unfortunately, as many journalists have documented, Bush won
What may have been, however, is now a moot point.
In 2004, while Dean’s presidential candidacy prospects rose rapidly only to crash with equal speed, Nader decided not seek the Greens’ nomination, instead declaring an independent candidacy. Acrimony over both the result of the 2000 election and Nader’s distant relationship to the Greens (more on that later) led to divisions within the Green Party that eventually resulted in a something of a split. Unknown Green Party member David Cobb campaigned nationally for the nomination and articulated what became known as a “safe state strategy” that involved largely staying away from contested swing states that were likely to determine the next president. (Of course, now some controversy exists as to whether this was, in fact, Cobb’s campaign plan but I personally attended a meeting in
Nader, for his part, never joined the Green Party and refused to share donor/volunteer lists from his 2000 campaign with the Greens – this despite his oft-repeated campaign goal of building the party infrastructure and triggering federal matching funds with at least 5% of the national vote. Nonetheless, he did ask select a prominent California Green politician, Peter Camejo, as his vice-presidential running mate and asked the Greens for an “endorsement” of their ticket. At a contentious 2004 national convention, Nader’s appeal was rejected and Cobb became the party’s nominee.
Although Nader was on 44 ballots in 2000, both he and Cobb managed only a fraction of that total for the 2004 general election. Unsurprisingly, several states reacted to Nader’s previous candidacy by raising already unreasonable ballot access standards even higher. The Democrats, fearing a repeat of 2000, contested the Nader campaign through a series of lawsuits designed to drain precious time, resources, and, ultimately, deny him ballot access.
Many Greens, especially those in the relative stronghold of
In this 2008 election cycle Nader has offered praise for some of the positions of John Edwards – Kerry’s vice-presidential running mate turned populist progressive 2008 presidential candidate – as well as those of Dennis Kucinich and Mike Gravel, all of whom ran unsuccessfully for the 2008 Democratic nomination. He also has had kind words for Cynthia McKinney, former Democratic Congresswoman from Georgia who recently joined the Green Party and declared her candidacy for the Greens’ presidential nomination. But, for better or worse, Nader has decided on another independent candidacy opting not to support
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Progressives, by definition, must be concerned with the future. Many thoughtful progressives, with this in mind, have long understood the absolute necessity of building social movements as the basis of transformative social change. The German Green Party evolved as an extension of environmental, peace, and other activist currents in recognition of the need for an electoral arm to social movements. The American Green movement began similarly as a coalition of anti-nuclear activists, feminists, and both those connected to ecology and social justice movements.
The development of the American Green movement was also helped, in part, by Jesse Jackson’s 1984 and 1988 Democratic presidential candidacies. Many of the elements of the “Rainbow Coalition” brought together in support of
But the unique realities of the US “winner take all” system combined with the entrenchment of the two-party system – both institutionally and in the hearts and minds of the American public – require an especially nuanced approach to progressive electoral activity. The struggle over “party” vs. “movement” has already caused a major split as the current electoral-focused Green Party US diverged from the original – and much more movement-oriented – Greens/Green Party USA.
Ralph Nader’s unwillingness to work within the Green Party coupled with his inability, thus far, to build any sort of movement since 2000, raises serious questions about the value of his 2008 candidacy. While Nader’s tireless, lifelong efforts will doubtless serve to ensure his very positive legacy to history, his independent candidacy can aspire to little more than raising issues in the short term. Furthermore, his choice of another high profile California Green, Matt Gonzalez, as his vice-presidential running mate is particularly troubling for the Green Party.
Gonzalez, running as a Green, was nearly elected mayor of
What this means for the Green Party remains to be seen. Nader handily won the California Green Party presidential primary vote over
But there is a real possibility that a
Green Party US’s almost singular focus on ballot access as well as electoral politics, generally, and presidential candidacies, specifically – as part of a “trickle down” strategy of party growth – is terribly misguided. Building a broad-based social movement, one that includes themes of economic justice, ecology, and social justice as well as a recognition of the importance of so-called “identity politics” to a comprehensive critique of the dominant order, around the idea of citizenship is an idea that was part of the beginnings of the American Green movement.
Though they were ultimately futile in their attempts to maintain a decidedly “bottom-up” movement focus within the Green Party, social ecologists and other forward thinking elements advocated just this position. They stressed the importance of education and historical perspective as part of engaging in movements oriented at everyday concerns and far-reaching, reconstructive visions of a liberatory, ecological human society.
Is it possible that progressives may have learned enough from the experiences of the recent election cycles to reconsider the hazards of an electoral, party-based focus? With economic recession and both global warming and an enduring “War on Terror” looming as momentous challenges for both near and short term, here’s hoping.
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