The frauds and deceptions of the Bush administration are legion
and, sadly, to be expected, based on the Bush family's past (from
sweetheart business deals going back to WWII, to smearing John
McCain in South Carolina in 2000, to lying to the American people
just before the election of 2002 about the threats Iraq posed).
But few people expected Ralph Nader - one of America's finest
defenders of the public interest and the commons - to employ
deception in an election.
Specifically, Nader has gone to great lengths to exploit the lack
of knowledge most Americans have about how other democracies around
the world work, and thus deceive people about both the history and
present reality of our electoral system and the role of third
parties in it.
When the Founders and the Framers of the Constitution put
together American democracy in 1787, it had never been tried before
in the way they visualized. In ancient Athens, it took 6001 citizens
to turn out and agree to pass a law; Rome was a republic, but not
of, by, or for "the people"; and the Iroquois Confederacy
had no "executive branch" to elect, a remnant from the
days of kings that the Framers were unwilling to give up. Thus, the
Framers of the Constitution had no "truly democratic"
model to work from.
So they created a flawed constitution.
The major flaw was that national elections are held on a
first-past-the-post, winner-takes-all basis. Which means that if
three or more candidates compete in a race, it's virtually
guaranteed that somebody with less than a majority of the vote will
end up winning political power. The result of this flaw is
non-democratic minority rule, instead of the democratic ideal of
majority rule.
A good example of this happened in the 2002 election in my state
of Vermont, where the Republican candidates became Governor and
Lieutenant Governor with 45 percent and 41 percent of the vote
respectively because each had more votes than his Democratic or
Progressive opponents alone. (Example: Republican Brian Dubie - 41%;
Democrat Peter Shumlin - 32%; Progressive Anthony Pollina - 25%. The
Republican "won.") The majority of Vermont voters selected
liberal or progressive candidates, but conservatives are in charge
of the state - the exact anti-democratic result that gave some of
the Framers nightmares.
James Madison was the most outspokenly worried about this. In the
1787 Federalist #10, he goes into a lengthy discussion of the danger
of "factions" - one aspect of what we today call political
parties - emerging. First he puts a good face on the problem,
suggesting that the new Constitution will solve the
"violence" done to democracy by factions. But in the next
sentence, he admits his fear that he and the other Framers had not
truly solved the problem of what would happen if
"factions" were to emerge.
"Among the numerous advantages promised by a well
constructed Union [based on the Constitution], none deserves to be
more accurately developed than its tendency to break and control the
violence of faction," wrote Madison. "The friend of
popular governments never finds himself so much alarmed for their
character and fate, as when he contemplates their propensity to this
dangerous vice. ... The instability, injustice, and confusion
introduced into the public councils, have, in truth, been the mortal
diseases under which popular governments have everywhere
perished..."
The problem was that if factions were to emerge as political
parties, it would mean there could only be two of them, for if more
than two parties emerged then the majority of people would almost
always remain unrepresented, while the most well-organized minority
would end up ruling.
Madison concluded by saying he felt the Constitution he and
Hamilton were promoting with the Federalist Papers was the best
solution they could come up with to solve the problem of factions.
But, as he noted, the constitution wasn't perfect: "The
valuable improvements made by the American constitutions on the
popular models, both ancient and modern, cannot certainly be too
much admired; but it would be an unwarrantable partiality, to
contend that they have as effectually obviated the danger [of
factions] on this side, as was wished and expected." His only
solution was to beg Americans not to form factions.
Although George Washington was soon thereafter elected
unanimously and by acclimation, America's second presidential
election (won by John Adams) almost immediately led to the creation
of Madison's feared "factions" in the form of
Vice-President Thomas Jefferson's "Democratic-Republican"
party (today called the "Democratic Party"). Ever since
then, we've largely been a two-party nation - because our
Constitution is written in a way that causes anything else to result
in the least democratic outcome to an election.
Most of the rest of the world, however, has learned from our
mistake and taken a different path.
Of the 86 other "fully democratic" nations in the world
(according to the UN), only a few like Greece and Australia had
repeated our mistake, although Australia solved the problem with a
national variation on what in America is called Instant Runoff
Voting (IRV), where you select your first, second, third, etc.,
preference among candidates, and if there's no majority winner, the
"instant runoff" is instantly recalculated.
Had this been in place in the US in 2000, for example, and had
most of Nader's voters chosen Gore as their second choice (as most
polls indicate was the case), then when neither Gore nor Bush
received more than 50 percent of the vote, Nader's first-choice
votes (he being the lowest of the vote-drawers) would have reverted
to their second-choice and Gore would have been elected by the
majority of the people (as he was anyway, but that's a different
rant).
Few other democracies are locked into a two-party system like
ours because most emerged in their current forms after 1861, when
John Stuart Mill proposed the idea of proportional representation in
his book "Considerations on Representational Government."
It solved, once and for all, the problem of Madison's factions
making a nation less democratic.
Under proportional representation - in use in virtually all the
other democracies of the world - the percent of the vote a party
gets determines the percent of seats they have in Congress or
Parliament. It's far more democratic than our system, and if Madison
were alive today he'd be wishing he'd thought of it in 1787 when he
helped write and sell the Constitution.
While many local governments in America are becoming more
democratic by instituting IRV (mostly at the urging of the Green
Party), we still have a federal system that is purely
winner-take-all, and thus "most democratic" when only two
parties compete. (And even then only partially as
"democratic" as IRV or proportional representation
nations.)
Which brings us back to Ralph Nader.
In a February 2004 appearance on Meet The Press, Nader said to
Tim Russert, "You'd never find that type of thing [resistance
to a third party] in Canada or Western democracies in Europe. It is
an offense to deny millions of people who might want to vote for our
candidacy an opportunity to vote for our candidacy. Instead, they
[the Republicans and Democrats] want to say, 'No, we're not going to
let you have an opportunity to vote,' for our candidacy."
Nader added, "There's a tremendous bias in state laws
against third parties and independent candidates bred by the two
major parties, who passed these laws. They don't like
competition."
Amazingly, many people are taken in by this argument, as they
don't understand the difference between our system and those of most
European nations, and don't realize that our election system was
developed before there were any political parties whatsoever.
Tragically, Nader's argument is most readily believed on college
campuses, where study of American history and political science in
both high school and college is at an all-time low.
Why would Ralph Nader try so hard to mislead his audiences? He is
no fool, and as an attorney he certainly knows the history and
content of the US Constitution. Many progressives are baffled as to
why he would work so hard to perpetuate ignorance - particularly
among young voters - about the crucial issue of how democracies work
and how our republic can be made more democratic.
Unfortunately, at the moment, third parties mean less, not more
democracy when it comes to voting in most elections in the US
(because they cause minority-supported candidates to be elected and
majorities of voters are thus unrepresented). Yet third (and fourth
and fifth, etc.) parties are also critical to bringing out issues
that the two big parties don't or won't address.
The simple solution is to institute IRV in the United States, a
step that many communities across the country have already taken.
But to do this at the national level will require the agreement and
participation of at least one of the two major parties - which is
why many Progressives are supporting the Greens and, at the same
time, infiltrating and becoming active in the Democratic Party.
It's similar to the strategy conservatives successfully used in
the 1970s after the 1964 defeat of Barry Goldwater, when they
proceeded to infiltrate and ultimately take control of the
Republican Party and then bring Reagan to power. As progressives do
the same with the Democratic Party - while still helping keep the
Green Party and other progressive movements strong - we can then use
the Democratic Party to push for IRV, re-enforcement of the Sherman
Anti-Trust Act, an end to "corporate personhood," and
other progressive and truly democratic reforms.
As Franklin D. Roosevelt proved, only by influencing (both from
without and from within) the power of one of the two national
parties can progressives truly make the United States of America a
more democratic and egalitarian nation. As more and more
progressives join the Democratic Party, participate in meetings and
caucuses, and present themselves as delegates, we will gain enough
power to bring about changes (such as IRV) that will result in a
renewal and reinvigoration of this great democracy, and pave the way
for third, fourth, and fifth parties to participate in a truly
democratic fashion in America.
But first we must correct the misperception Nader is pushing that
the problem third parties face is purely the fault of the existing
two parties. While it's true they resist third parties as a
challenge to their power, the real problem is a flawed electoral
system left over from 1787.
And, as Australia demonstrated, a two-party system can be changed
to a multiparty system - but only when the nation's citizens realize
the true source of the problem.
Thom Hartmann (thom at thomhartmann.com) is a Project Censored
Award-winning best-selling author and host of a nationally
syndicated daily progressive talk show. www.thomhartmann
.com His most recent books are "The
Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight," "Unequal
Protection: The Rise of Corporate Dominance and the Theft of Human
Rights," "We
The People: A Call To Take Back America," and "What
Would Jefferson Do?: A Return To Democracy."