I am ideologically aligned with Ralph Nader, not John Kerry. I
agree with Nader on virtually every issue, while agreeing with only
about half of Kerry's positions (or what can be deciphered as
Kerry's positions). Like other peace and justice activists, I am
distressed that Kerry -- who spoke so eloquently decades ago against
a war based on racism and lies -- has given support to the current
war that is based on racism and lies.
But I'm also distressed by the deception coming from the Nader
campaign. We keep being told that Nader will draw votes away from
the Evildoer-in-Chief, George W. Bush; yet poll after poll shows the
Nader vote depleting Kerry and helping Bush, and tipping swing
states and their electoral votes to Bush.
In my view, Kerry vs. Bush is not Coke vs. Pepsi. It's more like
Coke vs. Arsenic (quite literally, in the environmental sense). The
Bush/Rumsfeld/Ashcroft regime is far more dangerous than the regimes
of Nixon/Kissinger/Mitchell or Reagan/Weinberger/Meese.
There can be no greater imperative for progressives this year
than to Vote Bush Out. In the 17 or so competitive states, that
means building the Kerry vote to defeat Bush.
But our work doesn't end on Nov. 2. After we mobilize to oust
Bush in '04, progressives must stay mobilized in '05 to ensure that
our agenda is heard by the Kerry White House. If the Iraq war drags
on under the Kerry administration, I'll be in the frontlines of
peace protests.
Progressives seemed to demobilize in 1993 after Bill Clinton
ended 12 years of Republican rule. In the absence of powerful and
independent networks of activists, we saw that a Democratic White
House was capable of enacting pro-corporate Republican-oriented
policies. We won't be fooled again. Thanks to the Internet and the
youth-infused antiwar and global justice movements of recent years,
it will be easier to sustain progressive activism in '05 and after
to hold a Democratic White House accountable.
Progressives need to understand that Franklin Roosevelt was
elected president in 1932 on a wishy-washy platform no bolder than
the Kerry platform. But powerful social movements, especially
militant unions, propelled the New Deal agenda and pushed FDR to
being the most progressive president of the last century.
2004 is a crucial juncture in our nation's history, with millions
of people in our evenly divided country -- especially people of
color, labor, feminists, enviros -- yearning for a path to end the
national nightmare of George Bush. Progressives need to be a bridge
forward, not an obstruction. Noam Chomsky has described the choice
we face: "Help elect Bush, or do something to try to prevent
it."
Ralph Nader has long set a standard for public integrity:
speaking truth to power no matter what the consequences. But in
recent months, he's sounding more like a politician, making promises
that he must know he can't deliver on -- like his claim that he will
help defeat Bush by pulling "more votes away from Bush than the
Democrats." And Nader is being ridiculed as just another
politician: "Conservatives for Nader," scoffed Comedy
Central's Jon Stewart. "Not a large group. About the same size
as 'Retarded Death Row Texans for Bush.'"
This election is not about Kerry. Nor Nader. It's about putting
Bush out to pasture before he does any more damage.
Jeff Cohen (jeffco@ulster.net)
founded the media watch group FAIR and was communications director
of Kucinich for President. The views expressed here are his own.
Originally published in commondreams.org