Nature and Politics
by Jeffrey St. Clair and Alexander Cockburn
Democrats Fanatic about Nader
You can tell the Democrats are getting truly worried about Ralph Nader, the
Green Party presidential candidate. It's only July and already the attacks
are getting shriller and sillier. But, with Nader within sight of double
digits in the polls in California, Oregon, and Washington, and making an
increasingly strong showing in the rust belt, Gore's supporters see
desperate peril.
Asked about the threat that Nader would erode his own base and let Bush
into the White House, Vice President Gore was dismissive last weekend,
simply telling reporters that he does not regard Nader as a threat. But
behind this mien of strained nonchalance Gore and his strategists are
casting about for surrogates to intimidate potential defectors to Nader and
to bully them back into the fold.
Some of these attacks on Nader have been surfacing in small journals of
liberal opinion, like the biweekly In These Times, which sedately
caters to progressive Democrats and labor activists. A recent edition
featured an attack on Nader, written by Guy Saperstein (identified as a
trustee of the Sierra Club Foundation) offering a defense of Al Gore's
environmental record almost surreal in its distance from the painful facts.
Saperstein has the effrontery to laud Gore's record in preventing oil
exploration and drilling in Alaska. Alas, Gore has helped pry open the
largest expanse of undeveloped terrain on the Arctic plain, the Alaska
National Petroleum Reserve. Saperstein also asks rhetorically, "What has
Ralph Nader done for the environment?" Well, for a start, Nader and his
associate David Zwick essentially wrote the Clean Water Act back in the
1970s when Al Gore was supporting every dam project of the TVA, including
the Tellico Dam, where he first helped steam-roll the Endangered Species
Act.
Saperstein also acclaims Gore's record as a defender of the national
forests. His own group, the Sierra Club, has called for an end to
commercial logging of these federal lands, and the only candidate to
endorse that call has been Ralph Nader. In an era of oil industry
consolidation unprecedented since the age of the first Rockefellers and
Mellons, Nader has been an unrelenting critic of Big Oil, while Gore and
the Democratic National Committee have pocketed millions in oil industry
cash.
Slightly up the food chain from In These Times is the venerable
Nation. A recent issue featured a swinging attack on Nader by Katha
Pollitt, a feminist who reduces this year's presidential election to one
issue: abortion. Gore, she says, will be a robust defender of the Roe v.
Wade decision, whereas Nader's record on feminist issues is, she implies,
dubious.
Even a cursory cruise through Gore's congressional career would surely have
brought Pollitt up short. As a congressman Gore endorsed the most
reactionary of Reagan-era erosions of choice, and then repeatedly voted
against federal funding for abortions for poor women.
Of all the laws in the Clinton-Gore years effecting women, none was more
devastating and punitive than the Welfare Reform Bill, passed in the summer
of 1996. In the cabinet Gore was the one who pushed Clinton into signing
the bill over the opposition of virtually the whole cabinet. In
consequence, 2.6 million people were thrown into direst poverty, of whom
1.1 million were children. The federal entitlement for welfare, one of the
cornerstones of the New Deal, was ended and 14 million people on welfare
were put on a three-year limit.
Even as Nader made a strong showing at the National Press Club this week,
Rep. Barney Frank took a swipe at him, saying that Gore would be a more
vigilant defender of civil rights. It's odd to hear the openly gay rep from
Massachusetts defend Gore on these grounds. After all, the vice president's
biographer Bill Turque discloses in his book that Gore, a born-again
Christian, has referred to homosexuals as being "abnormal."
Gore is also the man who tried to gut Affirmative Action at the federal
level, with his Reinventing Government initiatives in 1993. The vice
president's position on the death penalty is indistinguishable from George
Bush's, and Gore's campaign is now attacking the Texas governor for being
soft on crime.
In the New York Times, columnist Anthony Lewis, a Gore supporter,
lashed out at Nader for his opposition to the WTO and for permitting one of
his groups to accept money from the textile magnate Roger Milliken.
At this point one has to start laughing. Over the past 23 years Gore has
solicited and accepted campaign cash from arms companies, the nuclear
industry, bond traders, runaway firms to Mexico (like Mattel), and
exploiters of child labor (like Disney). Occidental, in which the Gore
family has a stake now worth over half a million, is trying to drill in the
Colombian rainforest on land belonging to the U'wa Indians, who are being
murdered by Colombian soldiers now about to receive another billion
courtesy of the Clinton/Gore administration.
In the end, Gore's crowd has one basic argument: a vote for Nader is a vote
for Bush. No, it's not. A vote for Nader is a vote for revitalizing the
system and breaking the iron ceiling of the current
one-party-with-two-heads.
Get Nader into the debates (under the current arbitrary rule imposed by the
Democratic and Republican party machines he needs to show 15 percent
national support) and he could trounce both Gore and Bush and roll into
November with support kindred to Perot's 30-plus ratings in the summer of
1992. It was a three-way race then, and it could be a three-way race this
fall. Nader isn't going to self-destruct the way Perot did.
A vote for Nader is not a wasted vote. It's a vote for optimism, a vote
that says that if Nader even gets over 5 percent next November, then
funding will kick in that will help thousands upon thousands of young
reformers get their start across the country. It could be the first truly
exciting event of the new millennium.
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