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“The Green Party emerged from a national meeting ... increasingly
certain that it will run a presidential candidate in next year’s
election, all but settling a debate within the group over how it should
approach the 2004 contest,” the Washington Post reported on July 21.
The Green Party promptly put out a news release declaring that Greens
“affirmed the party’s intention to run candidates for president and
vice president of the United States in 2004.”
That release quoted a national party co-chair. “This meeting
produced a clear mandate for a strong Green Party presidential ticket
in 2004,” he said, adding that “we chose the path of growth and
establishing ourselves as the true opposition party.” But other voices,
less public, are more equivocal.
Days later, national party co-chair Anita Rios told me that she’s
“ambivalent” about the prospect of a Green presidential race next year.
Another co-chair, Jo Chamberlain, mentioned “mixed feelings about it.”
Theoretically, delegates to the national convention next June could
pull the party out of the ’04 presidential race. But the chances of
that happening are very slim. The momentum is clear.
Few present-day Green Party leaders seem willing to urge that
Greens forego the blandishments of a presidential campaign. The
increased attention -- including media coverage -- for the party is too
compelling to pass up.
In recent years, the Greens have overcome one of the first big
hurdles of a fledgling political party: News outlets no longer ignore
them. In 2000, the Green presidential ticket, headed by Ralph Nader,
had a significant impact on the campaign. Although excluded from the
debates and many news forums, candidate Nader did gain some appreciable
media exposure nationwide.
Green leaders are apt to offer rationales along the lines that
“political parties run candidates” and Greens must continue to gain
momentum at the ballot box. But by failing to make strategic decisions
about which electoral battles to fight -- and which not to -- the
Greens are set to damage the party’s long-term prospects.
The Green Party is now hampered by rigidity that prevents it from
acknowledging a grim reality: The presidency of George W. Bush has
turned out to be so terrible in so many ways that even a typically
craven corporate Democrat would be a significant improvement in some
important respects.
Fueled by idealistic fervor for its social-change program (which I
basically share), the Green Party has become an odd sort of
counterpoint to the liberals who have allowed pro-corporate centrists
to dominate the Democratic Party for a dozen years now. Those liberal
Democrats routinely sacrifice principles and idealism in the name of
electoral strategy. The Greens are now largely doing the reverse --
proceeding toward the 2004 presidential race without any semblance of a
viable electoral strategy, all in the name of principled idealism.
Local Green Party activism has bettered many communities. While
able to win some municipal or county races in enclaves around the
country -- and sometimes implementing valuable reforms -- the Greens
stumble when they field candidates for statewide offices or Congress.
When putting up candidates in those higher-level campaigns, the
Greens usually accomplish little other than on occasion making it
easier for the Republican candidate to win. That’s because the U.S.
electoral system, unfortunately, unlike in Europe, is a
non-parliamentary winner-take-all setup. To their credit, Green
activists are working for reforms like “instant runoff voting” that
would make the system more democratic and representative.
In discussions about races for the highest offices, sobering
reality checks can be distasteful to many Greens, who correctly point
out that a democratic process requires a wide range of voices and
choices during election campaigns. But that truth does not change
another one: A smart movement selects its battles and cares about its
impacts.
A small party that is unwilling to pick and choose its battles --
and unable to consider the effects of its campaigns on the country as a
whole -- will find itself glued to the periphery of American politics.
In contrast, more effective progressives seeking fundamental
change are inclined to keep exploring -- and learning from -- the
differences between principle and self-marginalization. They bypass
insular rhetoric and tactics that drive gratuitous wedges between
potential allies -- especially when a united front is needed to topple
an extreme far-right regime in Washington.
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Norman Solomon is co-author of “Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn’t
Tell You.” For an excerpt and other information, go to:
www.contextbooks.com/new.html#target