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Thursday, April 01, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M. Nader believes his campaign can help Kerry By David Postman
Four years ago, Ralph Nader's Green Party presidential campaign had a simple message for Democratic voters unhappy with their party's nominee: "Don't go for the lesser of two evils because at the end of the day you end up with evil." This year Nader makes a much more complicated some say far-fetched argument, reflecting the tougher sell he faces with liberal voters convinced President Bush was elected because Nader drained votes from Democrat Al Gore. Yesterday, America's best-known consumer activist released a nearly 2,000-word open letter to "Anybody-But-Bush Liberal Democrats."
Nader sees a dual-pronged approach where his candidacy helps Democrats, particularly the liberal wing of the party. On issues that he and Kerry agree on, Nader says they will work collaboratively to weaken Bush. But Nader will also continue to beat up on Kerry to try to push the Democratic nominee farther to the left, which Nader says will attract progressive voters to Kerry in November.
"It sounds like a manifesto to rid himself of the spoiler image that the Democratic Party has pinned on him pretty successfully," said Linda Fowler, a political scientist and director of the Nelson A. Rockefeller Center for Government at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire. And clearly Nader wants to get away from that label. "To wallow in the squabble of 'spoiler' is to plunge into second-class-citizenship scapegoating, which will get the Democrats nowhere," he wrote. Nader also is readying a pitch for Republicans. As early as today, he will release an open letter to Republicans making the case for why conservative and libertarians unhappy with Bush should back him, said Kevin Zeese, a Nader spokesman. It may be hard to imagine too many conservatives voting for Nader, who holds many positions to the left of Kerry. But in his letter yesterday, Nader says his attacks on Bush will convince some conservatives to stay home on election day. Nader's letter makes clear he no longer views the two major parties as equal evils. Now he sells his campaign as a boon to Democrats. "So, in summary, our approach can help defeat Bush, strengthen the progressive forces inside the Democratic Party by successfully amplifying ways to end this regime, while simultaneously furthering the longer range expansion of the forces of peace, justice and democracy," Nader wrote. Nader says issues like solar energy, public transit and union organizing will be given prominence in the Democratic campaign if his candidacy is taken seriously by liberal Democrats. "You can agree with all this and still say that this candidacy will take away votes from the Democratic candidate," Nader wrote, hitting the central argument Democrats use against him. Zeese said yesterday's letter reflects not a change in Nader's "lesser of two evil" theory, but instead a change in America's political environment. While Nader railed four years ago about the "massive similarities" between the two parties, Zeese said, "Bush has made the Republicans even worse, more extreme." A strong pitch was needed to liberal Democrats, he said, because "they are so afraid of Bush that they need some convincing." Fowler, though, doubts it will work. She says 90 percent of the electorate already has chosen to vote either Democratic or Republican. "If it's addressed to Anybody-But-Bush Democrats, this kind of letter isn't really designed to attract support from swing voters who conceivably might be up for grabs," she said. Even if Democrats lose the presidential campaign again this year, Nader sees his candidacy as a good thing for liberal Democrats. He said important issues will get attention, the party can be tilted to the left and he can help bring out liberal voters. He said his candidacy creates a "spillover," bringing out voters who then vote for Democratic U.S. House and Senate candidates. He contended "spillover" votes played a role in Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell's 2000 win. It's help state Democratic Party Chairman Paul Berendt says he can do without. "Nader's arguments are kind of Orwellian," Berendt said. "If you lose, you win. If we have four more years of Bush and he takes us into another war, by Nader's argument we win. It's a bizarre argument to me." David Postman: 360-943-9882 or dpostman@seattletimes.com
Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company
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