Independent Electoral
Movement Sprouts with Former Democrats and Republicans Challenging Their
Former Party on Iraq
By Kevin Zeese
ccun.org, April 11, 2008
Three Campaigns Will Pull the Duopoly to Really End the Iraq
Occupation
The seeds of the independent electoral movement are beginning to sprout
and the Iraq occupation is likely to be its fertilizer.
In 2004 there was only one significant challenger to the corporate
political duopoly both of whom put forward candidates that campaigned in
favor of continuing the Iraq occupation. This year there will be
three legitimate campaigns challenging the duopoly. And, since
none of the Democratic or Republican Party candidates is calling for a
real end to the occupation, Iraq may provide the energy for these
efforts.
Ralph Nader is fond of saying that every oak tree
begins with a seed and a sprout. Since 2000 he had to whether a
barrage of attacks from the Democratic Party, their allied 527
organizations, non-profits allied with the Democratic Party and the
concentrated corporate media especially the liberal elites who ally with
the Democrats. But, he is still standing and still fighting to
open up the political process in the United States. Nader ran an
anti-war campaign in 2004 before there was majority support for ending
the war and he has worked every day since then to end the war. In
2008 the Nader-Gonzalez Campaign looks stronger than 2004.
The combination of the path he has cut, the candidates of the two
parties and the mood of the electorate has pulled former Democrats and
Republicans into the independent electoral movement.
The first to take the leap was former Representative Cynthia
McKinney. McKinney served 12 years in the U.S. House of
Representatives where she urged an end to the Iraq occupation, advocated
for the impeachment of President Bush and Vice President Cheney, sought
release of 9/11 Commission’s underlying data, advocated on behalf of
Katrina victims and sought to cut the bloated military budget.
Twice she was defeated in the primary by a Democratic Party leadership
approved candidate who worked with Republican cross-over voters for her
defeat. She registered Green in September and became a candidate
in a “Power to the People” campaign in October. She is the
putative nominee of the Green Party and will be on the ballot in almost
all states.
Second to make the transition was former Alaska Senator Mike
Gravel. Gravel ran in the Democratic Primary for
president where he was very critical of the leading candidates for their
militaristic foreign policies and their weak Iraq withdrawal plans.
Gravel says he ran until the defense contractor, General Electric, which
owns NBC allied with the Democratic Party leadership to keep him out of
the debates. He has been an aggressive anti-war advocate since the
Vietnam era where he gained recognition for ending the Vietnam draft
with a filibuster and also read the Pentagon Papers into the
Congressional Record when the courts threatened the N.Y. Times with
prosecution if they published the documents. Gravel became a
Libertarian in March and immediately filed to run for president.
The most recent candidate is Bob Barr. Barr, also
a former congressman from Georgia, served in the House for eight years.
He abandoned the Republican Party in 2004 and supported the Libertarian
candidate for president. Last week he announced he was putting in
place an exploratory committee as a step to running for the Libertarian
nomination. Barr gained national recognition during the
impeachment of President Clinton. Since leaving office he has been
very critical of increased wiretapping, the Patriot Act, the drug war
and the war in Iraq. He favors a non-interventionist foreign
policy and has described the destruction and occupation of Iraq as “the
height of arrogance.” He urges a new political realignment of right and
left to end the war in Iraq and protect the Bill of Rights. Barr
is the natural heir to the Ron Paul libertarian movement within the
Republican Party.
This election cycle has shown excitement about two candidates so far –
Ron Paul and Barak Obama. Both generated that support by saying
they were against the war and seeking paradigm shifting change from the
corrupt ways of Washington, DC. They were promising not to be “more of
the same.”
Unfortunately, Senator Obama has reversed course and can no longer be
described as a peace candidate. He recently said he will leave the
private mercenaries in Iraq which at a minimum are 140,000 troops and
may be twice that number. His campaign has said that Obama will
leave up to 80,000 troops in Iraq. And, Obama has said he will
withdraw combat troops to a surrounding country like Kuwait so they
could serve as a strike force in Iraq. Obama continues to promise
to end the “war” but the details do not describe an end to the war.
Further, he has kept a military attack against Iran on the table and
plans to expand the already too large and too expensive military by
92,000 troops. He describes his foreign policy as a return to the
policy of George H.W. Bush, Ronald Reagan and JFK – all of whom
aggressively used U.S. military force.
Obama may think he has the Democratic nomination wrapped up and is
positioning himself for the General Election, but now with three serious
independent political challenges who all oppose the war his Republican-lite
positions risk losing many peace voters and the election.
The desire for more choices in elections has been growing in recent
years. The president has very low approval ratings as does the Congress
– the latter for their failure to fulfill their 2006 mandate to end the
war. One-third the electorate now considers themselves
independent, not Democratic or Republican. More and more Americans
are feeling like Jesse Ventura who recently wrote:
“This excerpt from Don't Start the Revolution Without Me! reveals some
of my feelings about the Bush administration, but readers should not
think that my criticisms of today's political world are aimed only at
their spectacular failures. Democrats are no better than the
Republicans. And corporate America, the religious right, and the media
have all contributed to the quagmires we find ourselves in overseas and
at home. That's why we need a political revolution, to take power from
the political parties and their big money supporters and return power to
the people.”
The corruption of the Congress, and the two parties, became even more
evident when the Center for the Study of Responsive Politics released a
report showing that Members of Congress have made $196 million in their
military-investments since the war in Iraq began. That’s right –
we have war profiteers voting on whether to end the war – a decision
that would be against their own personal financial interests. And,
according to the Center the Democrats had more invested in Iraq
contractors than the Republicans with the number one war-investor being
their 2004 presidential candidate, Sen. John Kerry.
Of course, the odds are against all of these independent electoral
candidates. The two parties and the concentrated media have
constructed an election system that creates immense hurdles.
The phony National Commission on Presidential Debates was designed in
large part to keep third party and independents out of the debates after
the League of Women Voters let Ross Perot participate. And, the media
sings the two parties song – don’t waste your vote on someone who can’t
win. Right – I oppose the Iraq war and militarism so I should
waste my vote on someone who will not end the Iraq occupation and will
keep expanding the military.
In fact, throughout history candidates who did not win have had a
tremendous impact on changing the paradigm in the United States.
Almost every major shift has been spurred by third party candidates who
did not win, e.g. ending slavery, women voting, ending child labor,
health care for the poor and elderly, retirement funds for all.
So, it is not a wasted vote to vote for what you want. In fact as
Eugene Debs said – “voting for what you want and not getting it is
better than voting for what you don’t want and getting it.”
The Democrats in particular who are counting on the anti-war vote in
2008 better re-think their center-right strategy on Iraq. Peace
voters will have three campaigns pulling them away from the two parties.
If the Democrats run away from peace voters they risk losing the
election. Nader-Gonzalez, Barr-Gravel and Cynthia McKinney have tripled
the pull for the peace vote.
Kevin Zeese is executive director of Voters for Peace (
www.VotersForPeace.US ).