PEN-L
mailing list archive
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]
Date:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Thread:
[ Previous
| Next
]
Index:
[ Author
| Date
| Thread
]
Let The Voter Beware
- To: PEN-L@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: Let The Voter Beware
- From: Dan Scanlan <dscanlan@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 6 Aug 2004 16:11:28 -0700
- Comments: RFC822 error: <W> Incorrect or incomplete address field found and ignored.
Title: Let The Voter Beware
Los Angeles
Times
August 6, 2004
COMMENTARY
Democratic Party Should Live Up to Its Name
Nader deplores political skulduggery aimed at keeping him off the
ballot.
By Ralph Nader
Though the Democrats have the right to robustly oppose my independent
presidential campaign, they don't have the right to engage in dirty
tricks designed to deny millions of voters the opportunity to choose
who should be the next president.
But that's what is happening. Across the country, the Democratic
Party, state Democratic partisans, corporate lobbyists and law firms
are making an unprecedented effort to keep the Nader-Camejo ticket
off the ballot. It's a sordid, undemocratic tactic, an affront to
voters and a threat to electoral choice.
We are the only serious candidates calling for a rapid withdrawal
from Iraq. We're the only ones highlighting how corporate control
of the federal government has prevented healthcare for all Americans
and how it has stymied passage of a wage that full-time workers can
live on, as well as focusing on a host of other crucial but ignored
issues. The so-called pro-choice Democrats do not want voters to have
a political choice; they want them stuck with only two candidates.
Democrats and corporate lobbyists conducted training sessions during
the Democratic convention to plan a national campaign to keep
Nader-Camejo off the ballot in as many states as possible.
Participants were told that the most effective way to discourage
people from signing our ballot-access petitions was to spread the
rumor that the GOP supports our campaign in hopes of diverting
Democratic voters.
That's untrue. We estimate that less than 10% of the individuals
contributing $1,000 or more are Republicans, while exit polls from
2000 show that nearly 25% of Nader voters were registered
Republicans.
The real meddling in our campaign has come not from Republicans but
from Democrats, with, as a Democratic National Committee official
told me, the DNC's approval. This includes:
* Spoiling our ballot access convention in Oregon by filling the
auditorium with Democrats to undermine the convention by swelling the
numbers and then not signing the petitions.
* Hiring corporate law firms to block our ballot efforts with
litigation on frivolous technical grounds. In Arizona, 1,400
signatures were challenged because the signatories, although giving
their complete address, did not include the name of their county. We
could not afford to pay defense counsel and incur delays.
* Trying to exclude thousands of signatures in Illinois because the
signatories had moved since registering to vote - even though they
still lived in Illinois and even though they were still registered
voters.
* Inappropriately using state employees, contractors and interns
who work for Illinois' Democratic speaker of the state House to
review and challenge signatures on our ballot access petitions.
Not only are these efforts an attempt to deprive voters of choices in
2004 but, unless repulsed, they will set a precedent for undermining
future third-party and independent candidates.
Historically, non-major party campaigns have brought major paradigm
shifts in the United States. For example, it was the Abolitionist
Party that challenged the pro-slavery Whig and Democratic parties in
the 1840s. Abraham Lincoln was the most successful third-party
candidate, winning election when he criticized slavery.
Other third-party candidates brought the issues of women's right to
vote, trade unions, ending child labor, the 40-hour workweek, Social
Security, Medicaid and Progressive-era reforms into the electoral
arena.
Since the 19th century, barriers to getting on the ballot have
actually increased, with candidates given less time to collect the
tens of thousands of verified signatures required in state after
state.
And apparently, even these statutory barriers are not enough for the
Democratic Party operatives.
It is incumbent on Democratic nominee John Kerry to put a stop to it.
He should realize that obstructing ballot access in this manner is a
violation of civil liberties.
--
---------------------------
Don't Kerry Bush for the corporate
facists!
VOTE NADER!
--------------------------------------------------
END OF THE TRAIL SALOON
Alternate Sundays
6-8am GMT (10pm-midnight PDT)
http://www.kvmr.org
--------------------------------
"I uke, therefore I am." -- Cool Hand
Uke
"I log on, therefore I seem to be." -- Rodd
Gnawkin
"I claim, therefore you believe." -- Dan
Ratherthan
Visit Cool Hand Uke's Lava Tube:
http://www.coolhanduke.com
- Thread context:
- Tariq Ali on the US election, (continued)
- Let The Voter Beware,
Dan Scanlan Fri 06 Aug 2004, 23:21 GMT
- questions for Leno to ask,
Dan Scanlan Fri 06 Aug 2004, 22:56 GMT
- Remembering the Korean Atom Bomb Victims,
Yoshie Furuhashi Fri 06 Aug 2004, 21:51 GMT
- Re: China's migrant refuseniks,
Perelman, Michael Fri 06 Aug 2004, 21:20 GMT
- New way to escape the draft,
Perelman, Michael Fri 06 Aug 2004, 19:21 GMT
[ Other Periods
| Other mailing lists
| Search
]