Nader Rules Out Running for President as a Green
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Dec. 23, 2003
WASHINGTON Ralph Nader, the third-party candidate viewed
by many Democrats as the spoiler of the 2000 election for taking
votes away from Al Gore, has decided not to run on the Green Party's
ticket next year, a party spokesman said Tuesday.
Nader, who garnered nearly 3 percent of the national vote in the
last presidential election, has not ruled out running for president
as an independent and plans to make a decision by January.
"I think we're all a little bit disappointed," said Scott
McLarty, a spokesman for the Green Party. "I suspect Mr. Nader would have gotten the nomination."
Several people have already declared their intentions to be the
party's nominee, including Green Party general counsel David Cobb.
Peter Camejo, the party's candidate in the California recall
election, might also declare, McLarty said, adding that a
front-runner would likely emerge before the party's convention in
Milwaukee in June.
Nader stumped for Camejo in California and has mentioned
him as a possible Green candidate.
Al Gore's Worst Nightmare
An activist who became a household name decades ago for
his efforts to push the auto industry to improve safety standards,
Nader appeared on many Democrats' hate list after the 2000
election. Gore lost decisive Florida by fewer than 600 votes, while
Nader got nearly 100,000 there. Many Democrats are convinced enough
of those voters would have swung the election to Gore if Nader had
not been on the ballot.
Nader and the Green Party rebuff such criticism and blame the Supreme Court, the Florida Republican Party and Gore himself for running a weak campaign.
In an effort to gauge support, Nader has a new Web site and an
exploratory committee, attends small fund-raisers and has mailed
letters to supporters. He said he has raised more than $100,000,
mostly to pay expenses for the exploratory network, but is
noncommittal on whether the resources are sufficient yet to
persuade him to run.
"We're awaiting the feedback on resources and volunteers," he
said in an interview Monday.
Nader said running as an independent would not hurt his
campaign. "As an independent, you can do more innovative things
because you don't have to check with all the bases," he said.
But McLarty said Tuesday it would be hard for Nader to get his
name on the ballot in all states.
"He doesn't have the infrastructure to do that," he said.
Just Another Tool of the Democrat Establishment
The Green Party is debating whether to take a nominee on a full
state-by-state campaign or to adopt a "safe state" strategy.
Under that method, the party would mostly avoid states up for
grabs, in order not to jeopardize the Democrat nominee's
chances against President Bush.
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