The Nader Concession

The Nader Concession

According to TheNaderFactor.com, "Republicans have launched concerted, coordinated and well-crafted efforts to boost [independent presidential candidate Ralph] Nader’s ability to get on the ballot in Arizona, Oregon, Nevada, Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Florida."

These Republican efforts, in fact, turn out to be better organized and more determined than the Nader campaign, as Sharon Emery reports from Michigan on MLive.com:

The Nader campaign submitted fewer than 5,400 signatures seeking ballot access for the consumer activist and 2000 Green Party nominee as an independent candidate.

The Michigan Republican Party collected and filed the rest, nearly 45,000. A minimum of 30,000 were required.

This has gotten a lot of attention from Democrats who are begging Ralph to quit playing third-party pooper and get out of the race. Folks like Eric Alterman have noted — at length — what all this suggests about Nader's principles and his motives for running in this way.

What has gotten less attention is what all this says about Republicans and, particularly, what they really think of their own candidate.

If some hypothetical conservative fringe candidate — Roy Moore, say, or James Dobson — were to decide to jump into the race, I think most Democrats would be pleased. Such a candidate would take away support from George W. Bush and we would welcome that. But we wouldn't contribute our time or money to the Dobson or Moore campaign because we're already busy supporting a candidate we actually believe in.

I just signed up to volunteer with MoveOn's "Leave No Voter Behind" campaign. I'm going to be working hard to get my neighbors out to the polls to vote for John Kerry and John Edwards. This will involve introducing myself to strangers. That's not my strong suit, but it's worth it and it's not hard to do when you have a candidate you genuinely support and whose election would result in a better future for the neighbors you're trying to persuade.

If the Republican canvassers in Michigan genuinely believed in their candidate, they would've spent their time telling people about him — bragging about his accomplishments and laying out his vision for a better, stronger America for all.

But, alas for them, they can't brag about their candidates accomplishments because he hasn't actually accomplished anything. Except for twiddling his thumbs while 1.5 million jobs evaporated. And turning trillions of dollars of projected surpluses into trillions of dollars of unending debt. And ignoring the threat of terrorism after 9/11. And, oh yes, misleading the country into a costly and unnecessary quagmire that has cost the lives of nearly 1,000 Americans and made Osama bin Laden a more successful recruiter. But those aren't the kind of accomplishments you can really brag about.

(To his credit, he did get Afghanistan right. For about three months. Then he screwed that up too.)

And as for laying out Bush's vision — let's just say trying to sell swing voters on four more years like the last four isn't easy.

So what are they to do? They can't expect or hope that swing voters will vote for their candidate based on the last four years, but maybe they could get some people to vote for somebody else who wasn't John Kerry. Maybe they can get Ralph Nader on the ballot and get 2 or 3 percent of the electorate to vote for him.

By supporting the Ralph Nader campaign, Republicans in Michigan — and in Arizona, Oregon, Nevada, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania and Florida — have conceded that it is easier to convince people that Ralph Nader deserves their vote than to convince them that George W. Bush does.

They may not admit they know it — they may not even realize they know it — but that proves that at some level they know that their party's candidate is not qualified for the job.


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