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NYT's Gail Collins and the '2nd Tier' Presidential Candidates
Gail Collins, the columnist for the New York Times, has a problem. While regularly writing in a satirical or sometimes trivial way about the foibles of the two major Parties' front-running presidential candidates, she can scarcely hide her disdain for the small starters, the underdogs.
In a recent column about what she saw as the repetitiveness and small-mindedness of Hillary Clinton (and her spokesman), Barack Obama and John Edwards, she took this unexplained swipe at former Senator Mike Gravel's presence in a debate sponsored by National Public Radio:
"What the heck is Mike Gravel doing back on stage? Didn't we get rid of him 10 or 20 debates ago?"
This dismissal may be seen by some readers as a laugh or as an impulsive throwaway line. Not so with Ms. Collins. She has little tolerance for filling media debate chairs with candidates; pundits like her believe candidates who are not front runners do not have a chance to overcome their super-low polls.
Nor does she lose any sleep over NBC (a subsidiary of General Electric) keeping the anti-nuclear Mr. Gravel out of its hosted debate in Philadelphia last month because he had not yet raised a million dollars.
Ms. Collins' treatment of the "second tier" candidates in the Democratic Party, such as Mike Gravel and Dennis Kucinich, is remarkable for at least three reasons.
First, although she is a more sand-papered progressive than in her more radical, younger days as a small starter reporting for the Connecticut State News Bureau, I'll bet she agrees with much of the two-time Senator Gravel's record in Congress and his present positions on the war in Iraq, Presidential accountability, corporate power and crime and the mistreatment of workers, consumers and uninsured patients.
Second, for several years ending a few months ago, she presided over the New York Times editorial page, producing some of the finest editorials in the paper's history. Many well considered subjects were included such as: standing up for whistle-blowers, dissenters, the rights of small business and workers and especially, the civil liberties and rights of minority voters afflicted with myriad electoral abuses and obstructions.
Thirdly, she has written a book about the history of women's rights in America-titled America's Women (William Morrow, 2003), which must have touched in a sensitive way those lonely self-starters, known as suffragettes, along with those very small parties and even smaller candidates pressing for the female voting franchise. She knows there are many ways to win short of winning an election.
In recent weeks, her paper's editorial page has delivered brilliant excoriations of the similarities in the converging the Republican and Democratic Parties, taking the latter severely to task on important national issues.
I doubt very much that Gail Collins disagrees with these editorials. In fact, privately she is known to be even more critical of the political status quo in this country. One might surmise that she should therefore welcome more voices and choices to come before the citizenry during election times, including more third party and independent candidates as well.
After all, aren't we all glad that ballot access was so easy in the nineteenth century, compared to today, that small parties like the anti-slavery, women's rights, labor and farmer-populist parties got onto the ballots and pioneered hugely important agendas, ignored by the Democratic, Whig and Republican Parties? These small starters never came close to winning the Presidency, except for the populist parties, winning many Congressional elections.
Put Gail Collins back into the 19th century and she would be whooping it up for those valiant few voters and little candidates who voted and ran against the grain of the business-indentured, often bigoted major Parties. Here in the twenty-first century, Gail Collins writes the predicates of progressive values and then sprawls to the dead-end conclusions-stay with the least-worst major Party candidates.
Just as small seeds need a chance to sprout to regenerate nature and sustain humankind, just as the tiniest of businesses need to have a chance to innovate in the business world, so too, small candidates need to have the chance. For they can often enrich the political dialogue, move the big boys to overdue recognitions, even if they do not have a chance to win on election day in a rigged, monetized, winner-take all system, bereft of both instant run-off voting and proportional representation procedures.
Columnists such as Gail Collins and her humane colleague, Bob Herbert, abhor going into these fields of political fertility. Instead, their rendition of political and corporate abuses flows into the repetitive, narrow ruts of political servility-not just the two party duopoly ruts but its major candidate groovers.
So progressive columnists, such as there are, wring their hands over why the Democratic Party, its incumbents and its major candidates do not heed their findings, their pleas, their hopes for the American people. They keep on wringing their hands until they encase their minds in a cul-de-sac that categorically disallows even a contemplation that political alternatives in person and party should be given visibility.
Open your mind a little, Gail Collins, and you might learn something about the need for frameworks that enable the sovereignty of the people to be expressed in a variety of practical ways, including national initiatives. You may laugh at Mike Gravel having difficulty explaining his studious proposal for a national initiative during sound-bite debates. Instead, try writing a column on why some noted constitutional law professors believe there is a sound constitutional basis for such a proposal.
This would be a good way to spark a serious debate about the myth of government of the people, by the people and for the people. Such an excursus would help deepen a very shallow Presidential campaign and be more becoming to you than wanting to rid Mike Gravel from the so-called debates. And you and the members of your profession, who regularly confess boredom with the major candidates, might actually find some excitement in your daily work.
Ralph Nader is a consumer advocate, lawyer, and author. His most recent book is The Seventeen Traditions.
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106 Comments so far
Show AllYou'd win that bet, because you have the facts on your side but right now you aren't showing much character.
I won two bets.
1. My facts would not be refuted.
2. I would be denigrated as a person in the face of this. "you aren't showing much character"
Thank You. I'm not a Catholic Priest, Elected Official or Law Enforcement Officer, but I do the best I can.
Actually, you're doing better than many priests, politicians and police officers. But you may want to issue your challange at Nader's latest column (http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/12/18/5882/) where your audience isn't one lone loser (and that's not a reference to you). This thread is almost dead--you might as well be talking to yourself, and that won't be much of a victory.
Good morning Barely Human, wanted to note that although we see RN very differently, I believe all who've been part of this thread, to a one, have quite similar political perspectives: disgust w/ the system, a knowledge that the entire political machine, both parties, serves the filthy interests of the corporate elite/military industrial/wall street few.
I am so far left of center I think I might fall off the planet, I want to sometimes.
So, this issue aside, I think we all probably see many things alike.
Best Wished. Merry Wednesday and a Happy New Thursday!
Polsci,
While you are INDOCTRINATING your class to be good followers of the corporate way, why don't you, at the very least, be a little tiny bit, objective. Your hypocrisy is just what I'd expect from a true Demopublican. You go on and on about people attacking your character, and in the very next sentence you attack someone else's. In my post adressing your attack on me, (that my VULGARITY is an insult to CD), you never addressed a single one of my FACTS!!! e.g. The crimes of Bush-Cheney that the dems are complicit in, thereby making them just as guilty as the perpertrators. Pelosi taking impeachment off the table before she's even sworn in as speaker!!! Talk about a BLANK CHECK!!!! This is a green light to the criminals to "go right ahead and do whatever you want, break all the laws you care to because we won't be coming after you". This in itself is a crime, forfeiting our constitutional right to impeach criminal acts of the executive branch. The Iraq slaughter.
This Stalinistic fantasy that anyone who doesn't vote republicrat, must vote for the corporate demopublican candidate. Whatever happened to being able to vote for whom WE choose??
Just yesterday the SAVIORS of the demopublican party passed a bill with another $$$$70 billion for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan just days after the Senate approved another $$$189 billion in war funding. Boy, things sure changed when the Dems took over the house and Senate.
As for Ralph's investments, sure there are some that should be divested, but the Demopublicans are DIRECTLY INVOLVED in the slaughter of hundreds of thousands of Iraqi's and Afghani's, torture of prisoners, wiretapping of our phones and internet postings, etc. etc. and the list grows daily, and all you can talk about is Ralph's investments!!!!!!!
DISGUSTING!!!!!
Now, go ahead and make some snide remark about my "luminous" postings, or my VULGARITY!!!
I try to focus on what someone is saying, not how they're saying it. I work around a lot of people who may not have large vocabularies, but they still have lots of wisdom. I won't deny them that just because they may be a little vulgar at times. You should try it some time, Prof.
Woody, Hello. Wanted to say that your passionate and well directed anger against the machine is great.
If everyone saw it like that, and felt as strongly, the dogs of war and greed would be on the run, tails between their legs, today.
Most Sincerely, best to all who have posted.