Nader in Detroit: watered-down reformism and an appeal to the
Democrats
By Tom Eley
10 September 2008

Use this version to print | Send this link by email | Email the author

Ralph Nader brought his independent presidential campaign to Detroit
Sunday night, taking questions at a press conference and then
addressing an audience of about 150 at a Unitarian Church near the
campus of Wayne State University.

The consumer advocate, who has run for president three times
previously, outlined a program of limited social reforms and a shift
in US foreign policy, while making it clear that the real aim of his
campaign is to pressure the Democratic Party to embrace a more liberal
agenda.

Nader, who was joined by his vice-presidential running mate, former
San Francisco supervisor and Green Party activist Matt Gonzalez, said
the two would gain ballot status in 45 states and called for greater
access for third parties to the electoral process. For eight years,
Nader has been scapegoated by the Democratic Party and elements of the
left-liberal milieu for Al Gore’s defeat in the 2000 election of 2000,
by virtue of his very presence on the ballot.

Nader, like all other presidential candidates besides Obama and
McCain, is being shut out of the national debates and the mainstream
media’s coverage of the election. In spite of this, Nader said that he
is polling above 5 percent in a number of states. In an obvious
attempt to curry favor with the Democrats, he assured his audience
that the polls indicate he is drawing more support away from McCain
than Obama.

Nader outlined a four-point electoral platform. First, he called for
universal health care. This would be a single-payer set-up based upon
“private delivery” of medical goods and services. He pointed to the
irrationality of the US health care industry, which he said costs
twice as much per capita compared to Canada and Switzerland.

Second, Nader called for what he termed a “living wage.” He was not
specific about just what this would be, but he seemed to suggest that
the current minimum wage should be based upon an incremental increase
of the 1968 minimum wage adjusted to subsequent inflation. This would
put the figure at nearly $11 per hour, he said.

Third, Nader called for a “massive expansion of law enforcement
against corporate crime.” He pointed to the gutting of the regulatory
agencies of the federal government as a basic cause of a number of
problems, including workplace accidents and environmental degradation.

Fourth, he proposed a shift in US foreign policy in the Middle East.
Nader called for the withdrawal of US forces from Iraq within six
months, and derided Obama’s proposed “withdrawal” that would leave
50,000 US military personnel and permanent bases in Iraq. Nader spent
more time, however, discussing the Israeli-Palestinian question. He
called for a two-state solution, and criticized Obama’s fervently pro-
Israeli position as a betrayal that he sees arising from the power of
the pro-Israeli lobbying group AIPAC (American Israeli Public Action
Committee) over US politics.

Nader’s agenda is that of a reformist who hopes to save US capitalism
from its own excesses. He does not advocate, and in fact bitterly
opposes, revolutionary change that would reorganize society, placing
industry under the democratic control of the working class.

Nonetheless, even from the standpoint of reformism, the severe
limitations of Nader’s platform are striking. Indeed, he portrays it
as such himself, although not in so many words, presenting his demands
as eminently reasonable and sensible from the perspective of the
preservation of US capitalism, and really not all that costly.

The call for universal health care has been advanced by bourgeois
politicians since the days of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and is
increasingly championed on the grounds that it would make US-based
corporations more competitive against their foreign rivals.

But when one speaks of “universal health care,” the devil, as the
saying goes, is in the details. In fact, Nader does not call for a
nationalization of the health care industry. He is proposing a system
of insurance modeled on that of Canada, but in both his press
conference and speech he hastened to add that this would be coupled
with “private delivery” of services. In other words, the profit system
in the greater part of the health care system would be left untouched.

While, the US undoubtedly boasts the least developed social safety net
of any of the Western industrialized nations, Nader’s idolization of
conditions in Canada and Europe depends upon and promotes the
ignorance of his audience. For in all the “Western countries,” as
Nader calls them, social welfare systems—the hard-won gains of
generations of working class struggle—are under attack and being
dismantled.

Likewise, Nader’s demand for an increase in the minimum wage to a
“living wage” sounds radical only when measured against Washington’s
recent historical record. If the minimum wage would have been adjusted
in line with inflation since the 1960s, Nader said, it would now be
$10.91 per hour. Yet under Nader’s proposal, a full-time minimum wage
worker would earn just over $24,000 per year—prior to withholdings. He
is proposing, in other words, that this portion of the working class
be given a modest raise that would remain inadequate for the
necessities of modern life.

Nader’s running mate, Gonzalez, criticized the US war in Iraq and
Washington’s policy toward the Israel-Palestinian crisis from the
standpoint that both have been detrimental to the “national interest.”
They do not view the war as a product of US imperialism; a
manifestation of the crisis of capitalism, but rather as a terrible
mistake. Nader’s position on these foreign policy questions, in other
words, is different in degree, but neither in kind nor principle, from
those sections of the ruling elite who have criticized the Bush
administration over precisely the same questions.

Nader calls for the complete withdrawal of all US troops within six
months—not immediately. Significantly, he calls for the “limited
autonomy” of Iraq’s Kurds, Sunnis, and Shiites from Baghdad. This
position represents an adaptation to the utterly false US propaganda
that has foisted the blame for the sociocide that has ravaged Iraq
from the US invasion and military savagery onto the supposed “ancient
rivalries” among Iraq’s religious and ethnic communities—in other
words, onto the Iraqis themselves.

Additionally, Nader calls for UN-supervised elections. But the UN has
been complicit in the occupation of Iraq. It retroactively gave its
stamp of approval to the US invasion. Nader condemned the destruction
of Iraq, placing the blame at the feet of the Bush administration, and
called for continuing “US humanitarian aide.” But he did not call for
the prosecution as war criminals of the Bush administration officials
who planned and carried out the illegal war.

Nader’s world view reflects the position of a petty-bourgeois layer
that feels threatened by a political process dominated ever more
openly and ruthlessly by a tiny financial elite. Standing in the
ideological tradition of liberalism and economic nationalism, he
portrays all the problems the confronting US capitalism as a matter of
mistakes and bad ideas that have compromised Washington’s standing in
the world.

For example, for Nader, the auto industry is on the verge of
bankruptcy because of “bad management.” In large measure, he presents
this as a matter of the auto executives not listening to proposals
that he, as a consumer advocate, began making in the 1970s. All that
is needed, he claims, is “top-flight management to compete with the
Japanese and Europeans.” Nader opposes the proposed bailout of the Big
Three unless guarantees are made to taxpayers and management is
replaced. And Nader’s explanation for the financial crisis engulfing
Wall Street is even more facile: “They gambled too much,” he said.
This is no different than Bush’s own position, that “Wall Street got
drunk.”

Of course, because there are so many mistakes and bad ideas, Nader is
forced to search for a cause. This he doesn’t find in an objective
crisis of American and world capitalism, but in the disproportionate
“power of corporations” which have “no allegiance to this country” yet
control the government. “Corporate greed” and “bad management,” terms
he used several times, are presented as the main culprits. It follows
that better and more far-sighted managers—i.e., people like Nader—
could limit the power of big business and rectify some of the
mistakes.

How will the reformers gain power? Certainly not by overturning the
two-party system. Nader hopes to enlist “citizens”—he carefully avoids
any reference to social classes—in order to put pressure on the
Democratic Party so that he can cut a deal. “We want to push the two
parties, give them a pin prick, so that maybe before November 4” they
will start to consider parts of Nader’s platform.

During the press conference, World Socialist Web Site reporter Larry
Porter noted that in the 2004 elections, when Nader ran for the
reactionary Reform Party, he demanded a meeting with Democratic
presidential nominee John Kerry. However, the Democratic Party
continued to lurch to the right. What had Nader concluded from this
experience?

Nader’s response reveals the hollowness of his political perspective.
He agreed that his position then and now is to put pressure upon the
Democrats, but that in reality it hadn’t worked—“the tug is stronger”
from corporations, he admitted. He said, however, that his pressure
has “changed their [the Democrats’] rhetoric” and that “lip service is
the first step” toward more substantive change.

“We want to support some of the real Democrats,” Nader said, naming
Kucinich, Feingold, Wexler, and Kennedy (as opposed to all of those
phony Democrats who happen to control the party!) On the question of
impeachment, he referred to his “old friend John Conyers,” the
Democratic congressman from Detroit and chairman of the House
Judiciary Committee. Nader said that Conyers, “in his heart” wants to
start impeachment proceedings against President Bush, but he is
“unable to shake the power of Nancy Pelosi.” Another mistake, no
doubt.

Nader would like to turn the clock back, declaring that if “the
Democratic Party was as good as it was in the 60s, we would have
national health care” and a higher minimum wage. But Nader
conveniently ignores the fact that the Democratic Party of the 1960s
was also the party of Vietnam, of liberal anti-communism, and Jim Crow
segregation in the South. Neither these elements of Democratic Party
politics, nor the collapse of liberal reformism in the 1960s and
1970s, were mistakes. Rather, they were early manifestations of the
contradictions and crisis of US capitalism, a process that has now
advance for 40 more years. There will be no revival of reformism
because there is no objective basis for it.

In defending his candidacy, Nader twice referred to Eugene V. Debs.
Gonzalez also invoked Debs’ legacy. But neither Nader nor Gonzales
mentioned that Debs was a socialist, or that Debs - who ran four times
as the Socialist Party candidate for president, the last one from
prison — advocated revolutionary change, a position that Nader
bitterly opposes.

The World Socialist Web Site and the Socialist Equality Party support
Nader’s right to be on the ballot. However, his candidacy does not
offer a genuine alternative to the two-party system and its defense of
capitalism. On the contrary, Nader and such “third party” pro-
capitalist formations represent political traps, aimed at diverting
radicalizing workers and students from the critical task of forging an
independent class movement of working people, based on a socialist and
internationalist program.
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to