Tactics and Substance in the 2004 Elections GoogleNews: Howard Dean

February 24, 2004

by V

Dean on Nader

One of the things that impressed me about the Dean campaign early on was their rapid reaction to a day's events, often posting a short statement 'from the Governor' which would usually be concise, sensible and persuasive.

It's nice to see them still posting statements even after campaign's end, especially on an issue every reporter would probably ask Dean about if they had the chance:

Blog for America : Governor Dean's statement on Ralph Nader | February 23, 2004
When I announced last week that I am no longer actively pursuing the presidency, I urged my supporters not to be tempted by any independent or third party candidate. I said I would support the nominee of the Democratic Party, because the bottom line is that we must defeat George W. Bush in November, whatever it takes.

...I will do everything I can to ensure that the 2004 Democratic nominee runs as a true progressive, as a champion of working Americans and their hopes for a better future. I urge my supporters, and all other Americans committed to progressive values and honest government, to stick with us, and stick with the Democratic Party, so our cause can prevail in 2004.

Ralph Nader has made many great contributions to America over 40 years. But if George W. Bush is re-elected, the health, safety, consumer, environmental, and open government provisions Ralph Nader has fought for will be undermined. George Bush's right-wing appointees will still be serving as judges fifty years from now, and our Constitution will be shredded. It will be government by, of, and for, the corporations - exactly what Ralph Nader has struggled against.

Those who truly want America's leaders to stand up to the corporate special interests and build a better country for working people should recognize that, in 2004, a vote for Ralph Nader is, plain and simple, a vote to re-elect George W. Bush. I hope that Ralph Nader will withdraw his candidacy in the best interests of the country we hope to become.

Many of my supporters urged me to run as an independent, but I judged it the wrong thing to do. There is still time for Ralph Nader to stand with those in the Democratic Party who are building a progressive coalition to defeat George W. Bush. But time is running out. We can win only if we are united.
I could quibble with the sense of Democratic entitlement (a vote for Nader is actually orthogonal to a vote for Bush unless you presume that it would default to being a vote for the Democrat...), but on the whole I think this is spot on.
Posted by V at February 24, 2004 11:08 AM
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