Destructionator XIII wrote:...I'm talking about simple cause and effect.
You're saying voting for Nader caused "the worse possible outcome from their point of view". This is wrong on two counts: 1) many of those people had George Bush as their second choice, so their point of view isn't that simple, and 2) the causal connection is weak.
Taking Nader out would not have necessarily made a difference at all. That exit poll from Wikipedia indicates that it might have shifted, though we don't know the margin of error on that, and there's still so many other factors that we just can't be sure about it. There's other sources that say it would not have made a difference.
I'll agree that a third party vote can split things and give it to the others. I think the Bull Moose Party of a century ago (1912 IIRC) is better than the 2000 election to illustrate this, but even then, it's arguable that Woodrow Wilson would have won anyway.
Okay.
The reason I view Bush as worse than Gore from the point of view of a Nader supporter may be one of my own. You see, I find it very hard to understand anyone who would want Nader to win, and who would be at all pleased with the man Bush turned out to be. Nader's spent his entire life fighting the corrupt establishment that Bush was a willing member and ally of. The Green Party's platform stands in opposition to the avowed and
de facto positions of the Republican Party on almost every issue.
I assume that if someone votes for Nader, their first and foremost desire is to put Nader into office. Presumably, that's because of some quality Nader has, or something he would do in office. Whatever the quality is that Nader has, Bush probably doesn't have it; whatever Nader would do, Bush would probably not do.
So when you point to someone who said their second choice in 2000 would have been Bush, I have to wonder whether that person was in possession of all the facts. It makes me wonder how many of those same people felt the same way in 2004: would their preferences have run Nader-Bush-Kerry or Nader-Kerry-Bush?
Granted, if someone said in 2000 that they'd rather see Bush than Gore in the White House, I'll take them at their word. But if that same person then turned around and voted for a pro-consumer, antiwar, environmentalist crusader, I have to imagine they'd feel less than pleased to get a pro-corporate, prowar, anti-environmentalist crony in the White House. Maybe they didn't realize that Bush would be such a problem. Maybe they didn't anticipate the Iraq War. Maybe they thought Gore would be identical to Bush in office (possible, though very, very far from provable).
But again, I have to doubt that many Green voters really wanted the Bush they got, instead of the Bush they thought they'd get. If they did, why did they vote for a man like Nader in the first place? That would be like, I don't know- wanting lemon juice and ordering a chocolate milkshake, to pick something mundane.
Also, when we look at the effects of third parties on elections, 1860 offers even better examples- the pro-slavery vote split three ways, opening the field for the anti-slavery Republicans. I chose 2000 because it was recent: it is still on the minds of many Americans, and if you're over thirty in America today you were of age to participate in it. 1860 or 1912 is something from the history books; 2000 is remembered.
This line of conversation started with me saying:
Formless, do you remember Ralph Nader and the 2000 election?
A lot of Americans do. It's depressed their willingness to vote for third parties, on both sides of the aisle. Because if even a fraction of the people who voted Green had been willing to vote for Al Gore (whose credentials on environmental issues have since turned out pretty well, for instance), there would never have been a President Bush. There might not have been an Iraq War. There might never have been waterboarding at Guantanamo, or unary-executive sycophantic freaks writing torture memos in the Department of Justice. We might have trillions of dollars less national debt.
To be fair, all these things might still have gone wrong anyway. But at least we would have had a chance to avoid the many shameful disasters and follies America has bumbled or charged into in this past decade.
It is very possible that we would be living in a better country today if people eleven years ago had listened to your advice and done the exact opposite.
A lot of Americans are reluctant to take their chances on third parties, because the last time a third party gained any real traction in America, we got a president who was almost as bad as could be imagined from the viewpoint of the people who voted for that third party.
Ask around- this is supported. People really do think this, because it happened. It affects the way Americans view third parties.
A viable third party has to overcome that barrier by being organized and efficient, and by acting locally
before it jumps into the presidential pool and risks spoiling an election and making matters even worse. The Greens have learned their lesson, I think, and are trying to rebuild from the bad PR of the 2000 election- as Akhlut says, they're working locally, which is more effective for an organization of their size.
But in this election cycle, there is simply no one on offer who has done the job, and most people on the left don't want to see President Gingrich badly enough to hope that a third party wins, say, 5-10% of the vote.
So "Obama sucks, vote third party" is simply not enough for a lot of American voters, even ones who are displeased with Obama. It may be enough for you, or Akhlut, or Formless, or even for me. But the decision isn't clear-cut when you factor in the possible consequences, and self-righteous condemnation of people who
don't vote third party doesn't go over well.
Akhlut wrote:Simon_Jester wrote:That's an example of what a third party can do if it has resources, motivation, and competent management. I don't see anything like that in the 2012 election cycle, and I don't like to be yelled at by people like Formless for not trying to shut my eyes and pretend it exists when it doesn't.
The thing is, though, how are the Democrats going to change if they consistently win by shifting to the right? How is "hold your nose and vote for the lesser evil" a
good personal policy for people to take? Why should I throw my lot in with Obama and company if I simply disagree with them less than I do with whichever crazy and/or soulless son of a bitch gets nominated by the Republicans? How many votes should people throw at the Party of Compromise Everything before it gets to be too much? At this rate, a third party will never be able to take even a single state representative seat with this sort of logic, because every election can be looked at through this perspective.
So, given that, how am I supposed to actually vote my conscience if my options are, speaking with extreme hyperbole , between Franco and Hitler?
This is the argument for being politically active. Donate to better politicians, join protests, support organizations that try to lobby the major parties back toward your views.
And if by some historical accident, the Democratic Party splits into the corporatist Centrists and a serious, left-wing party that wants to reverse the post-1994 Republican Revolution, and has real traction with the electorate...
go for it. Fine I'm all for it. Major, viable third party challenges have happened in my lifetime, and I hope to see them again.
As to the 2012 election- well, the result will be what it will be. I won't tell you what to do. The only thing that bothers me is having pompous nitwits tell me that
I'm evil for looking at the names actually on the ballot, working out who has a whelk's chance in a supernova of winning, and voting accordingly.