Hell Hath No Fury: Ralph Nader vs. the Fundamentalist Liberals
Wednesday, February 27th, 2008Click here for “Hell Hath No Fury: Ralph Nader vs. the Fundamentalist Liberals”

Click here for “Hell Hath No Fury: Ralph Nader vs. the Fundamentalist Liberals”
Ralph Nader amplified my voice yesterday when he declared his candidacy for chief exec. Up till now, Obama and Clinton were answerable only to John McCain and the tiny minority he represents. Today they are answerable to me and the minority I belong to, people who reject war and insist on social justice, and who vote on that basis.
Neither Clinton nor McCain could ever get my vote, but Obama can claim it from Nader with just a few commitments. He has to commit to end the wars. All of them. He has to commit to undo the curtailment of civil liberties. He has to commit to national health insurance comparable to what citizens of other countries have. He has to commit to hold Bush and company accountable for the crimes they have committed and for the injury they have done to the country.
Nader gives me all of these commitments and much more. He doesn’t promise to win the election, but he enhances the value of my vote, which has never come cheap. If the accountability crowd unites behind him, he can challenge Obama to reject the anachonistic chauvinism that continues to dominate the right wing of his party, especially as embodied in bought-and-paid-for members of Congress. That probably won’t happen, but it might happen.
Ralph Nader invited the Democrats in the last two elections to make him irrelevant by embracing the goals of the movement for peace and justice. Both candidates declined even to discuss national health insurance, and the last one pretended there was something worthwhile to be salvaged from our military adventures. The two now vying for the support of serious voters have so far come up short on peace and justice, and some of us will demand more.
We should consider the election a mere formality at this point. Obama’s popularity is not going to abate. Nothing ugly is going to come out about him because there isn’t anything ugly to come out. Nader remarked when he announced his candidacy that if the Democrats can’t landslide this election they should close up shop.
Let’s concede that the time between now and the inauguration will be spent preparing to govern and not campaigning for office. Obama will become a magnet for every opportunist in America and every patriot, and that’s where Nader’s candidacy comes in. As an independent candidate, Ralph has a seat at the table, whether Barack wants him there or not.
Obama’s new and he’s clean, and he has an opportunity in Ralph Nader’s candidacy to win over the skeptical wing of the liberated majority. Nader knows that most of his supporters will probably vote for Obama even if he doesn’t come around on the issues, but voting’s not the big event here. The big event is unfolding now, and Nader’s candidacy ensures that our movement will play a part in it.
If ever there was a Democrat who should quit his party, it’s my congressman, John Larson, of Connecticut. He made an appearance in West Hartford yesterday before an audience of about 35, in which he invoked the wisdom of 20th Century statesman George Kennan to lament his subordination to the moral ambiguities of leadership. Questions of accountability dominated the discussion. Accountability for the breakdown of the economy. Accountability for the state of foreign relations. Accountability for war. Accountability for crime.
Larson began with a ten-minute speech. First came a discussion of the economic “stimulus” that the leaders are currently prescribing. Conceding that it will probably be ineffective, he said it was a starting point. He seems to realize (but didn’t say) that a cash infusion from a government that’s already deeply in debt can bring only temporary relief and will probably be injurious over the long term. The “stimulus” won’t reach the neediest of the needy and won’t cover more than a single payment on a delinquent mortgage. Larson tried to hide his feeling of powerlessness over the situation, but he was unsuccessful, at least from where I sat.
There was some discussion in the speech of the war and Larson’s opposition to it, but no detailed discussion of the plight of the soldiers and their families. He expressed the popular view that resources being spent on war could more profitably be applied to the public infrastructure–roads, bridges, schools–now in a state of abject disrepair. He spoke briefly about accountability and how many hearings were being held in the various committees, but he couldn’t bring himself to utter the word “impeachment.”
I looked at the clock and glanced around the room when the microphone got passed to the audience, and there was more than an hour and half, with only a fourth of the chairs occupied. I’d definitely get to ask a question and maybe two. Yeah, right.
Either by force of habit or as a means of limiting discussion of controversial topics, Larson never gives an answer less than five minutes long, and most are much longer. He never answers directly, but, schoolteacher that he is, brings in quotes and anecdotes, along with digressions and personal observations, sometimes leaving the interlocuter wondering whether he actually heard the question.
The first question from the audience, on why Larson should support impeachment as a means of ending the war, elicited a ten-minute reply. To make a long story short, the member is waiting for guidance from on high. Committees are engaged, including John Conyers’ judiciary committee, which is where impeachment must start, and Conyers, Larson, Pelosi, and the rest don’t want to get tripped up. Larson admits that he and Conyers are fearful of the political consequences if they confront Bush and lose, and so they’re proceeding slowly.
The subject turned repeatedly from impeachment, when audience members spoke about public access TV, the death of Suharto, the strain on the armed forces, and Bush’s notorious signing statements, but it kept coming back to the crimes of Bush and Cheney. One persistent questioner used the word “spineless” to describe Nancy Pelosi, House speaker, and Larson hollered at her. He apologized later, but he brooks no criticism of his long-time ally.
He had to take some flak for his endorsement of Barack Obama, including barbs from a constituent who doesn’t believe Obama can win. Larson polled the audience, and 80 percent said they were voting for Obama. He mentioned, as a reason for his endorsement, Obama’s willingness to use the armed forces as tool of diplomacy, giving the audience something to think about, but in almost the same breath, he expressed approval of the British approach to military affairs, in which the broad international consequences of various strategies are taken into account.
Larson strikes me as a man with an assigned place in a heirarchy, and he’s limited by it, rather than empowered. He’s limited in what he can advocate and in what he can say. He knows but can’t say aloud that the president and vice president are thugs. He’s plagued by moral ambiguities, but he can’t discuss them in detail. When asked whether he believes it was a crime to send soldiers into combat on a pretext, he couldn’t say. His audience didn’t see any moral ambiguity here–war based on lies is murder–but John Larson is reserving judgment until the heirarchy moves. He’s willing to call Iraq the greatest foreign policy blunder in our history, but he won’t say it’s criminal. Like a cop in a corrupt town, he’s not going to accuse well-placed wrongdoers unless he’s sure he can make something stick. It’s not a bold or principled approach to law enforcement, but there’s ample precedent for it. There was a time when Democrats could point to principle as a unifying force, but that time is long past, and the person who lives inside Congressman John Larson is paying a high price for the transformation.