By Norman Solomon
Ralph Nader won’t receive more than 1 percent of the vote nationwide on Election Day, but he’s already the winner in a spectacular game of "chicken." After the vast majority of former allies jumped off his electoral vehicle, Nader kept flooring the accelerator -- while scorning them as “scared liberals” who “lost their nerve.”
For decades Nader’s signature issue has been corporate power. But David Korten, author of the seminal book "When Corporations Rule the World," is one of the many high-profile Nader 2000 endorsers who’ve opposed his 2004 venture. “Your campaign is the wrong war against the wrong enemy for the wrong reason,” Korten wrote in an Oct. 21 open letter to Nader. “Tragically, it has come increasingly to appear that its primary intention is to throw the election to Bush to extract your personal vengeance against the Democratic Party.”
As a former Nader supporter, I’ve come to similar conclusions. His has been a pointless project -- unless the point is to again prove that he can hurt the Democratic Party in a big way. With most polls showing a dead heat, Nader insisted on the need to keep running all-out, even -- and perhaps especially -- in the closest states. Nader’s travel schedule for late October, putting him in Florida and several other battleground states, must have been appreciated at the White House.
More than any other American reformer of the last half-century, Nader kept showing that the emperor had no clothes. Now, at a crucial moment in history, Nader has become a de facto ally of the current emperor.