Has Paul Berman, who calls for the Green Party to be "crushed," been taking night classes with Karl Rove and John Ashcroft? That would explain how he assigns the Greens a stereotype of being impractical, "middle- and upper-middle-class" political dilettantes. Democrats, he advises, should warn the Greens, "You cannot sacrifice the interests of poor and working people."
What's the Clinton legacy? NAFTA and other anti-labor, anti-eco trade cabals; Plan Colombia; national health insurance discarded from the Democratic platform; Reagan's space-based missile scam revived; Reagan's welfare-reform dream signed; the war on drugs escalated; small nations bombed; the Kyoto protocols obstructed; prison populations doubled, etc. Let's not forget the zeal of mainstream Democrats currently in Congress to endorse the USA PATRIOT Act, surrender constitutional war powers to Bush, pass the 2001 Bankruptcy Bill, and retreat on prescription drug assistance for seniors (the Grassley-Baucus bill). Poor and working people, indeed.
What's left for the Greens to spoil? The real spoilers of 2000 were not Nader and the Greens, but the Florida GOP and a biased U.S. Supreme Court, armed with ballot-access rules targeted at African-Americans that the Democrats have still not attempted to dismantle and accommodated by Senate Dems who refused to back the Black Caucus' challenge to the engineered Bush victory. Nader's spoilage is a useful myth that Dems at the top don't quite believe; read DLC chief Al From's "Building a New Progressive Majority: How Democrats Can Learn From the Failed 2000 Campaign."
The Democratic mainstream's retreat from poor and working people has given Republicans the license to move to even greater extremes. The Dems will not reverse this direction. The likely nominee for 2004 will be a Kerry or a Gephardt -- who will maintain Clinton's DLC agenda -- certainly not a Kucinich. The argument against Green participation is essentially an argument to restrict the November 2004 ballot to two pro-war, pro-corporate candidates.
The Green Party is here to stay because the U.S. needs an opposition party.
-- Scott McLarty,
Green Party media coordinator
Paul Berman needs to understand that his visceral hatred of the Greens will get him nowhere. His caricature of Green Party members as middle-class political dilettantes with no stake in the outcome of decisions handed down in Washington, and little interest in the repercussions of actual policy on the poor, might excite the passions of yellow-dog Democrats, but it's hardly going to "crush" a political movement of disaffected idealists who are upset with the way the Democratic Party, under the guidance of the DLC, has in recent decades turned its back on the poor, the uninsured, minorities and the world.
The Democratic Party has been in a tailspin ever since Michael Dukakis responded to Ronald Reagan's charge that he was a "liberal" by insisting that he wasn't, rather than by claiming the mantle proudly. Democrats have been cowering ever since, reacting to Republican policy proposals by offering slightly less regressive "me too" alternatives, rather than fighting them head-on. If Democrats really want to "crush" the Greens, then they should stop blaming Greens for their woes and instead focus on serious reform.
-- David Flores
Thank you for the series on beating Bush in '04. As a registered Democrat who occasionally votes Green, I found Paul Berman's and Sherman Alexie's remarks emblematic of what's wrong with the Democratic Party today, in comparison to the refreshing comments of Tom Hayden, and Ross Mirkarimi's outlook for progressive change.
Beating Bush will be tough. Based on the Dems' terrible voting record during this Congress and their nosedive in the 2002 elections, I wonder if they've become unglued. It's really too bad that the Green Party is still a new party.
-- Patricia Clark
The needed discussion between Greens and Democrats mentioned by Medea Benjamin has already begun.
There are many folks in the Democratic Party that believe the Green movement has great ideas and courageous grassroots organizers who should be role models, not enemies of Democrats. If Democrats could organize as well on the streets this would restore the progressive movement in America. That's why a collection of activists has established a new Web site to begin this discussion.
We hope to bring the activism of the peace movement, the Seattle generation, the Fair Trade movement, the Schools Not Jails movement, and many others into efforts to build a progressive wing of the Democratic Party that will get out in the streets and work for progressive Democrats in 2004.
Republican-lite doesn't work. How many more elections will the DLC be allowed to lose in our name?
-- GreenDemocrats.net (an editorial collective)
[Read "Vigilante Injustice," by Max Blumenthal.]
When I read Max Blumenthal's Salon article "Vigilante Injustice," I was once again reminded of how masterfully the practitioners of creative writing can ply their trade. A conversation I had with Mr. Blumenthal was cut and pasted to produce a depiction of my observations which I hardly recognized.
Although it always annoys those like Mr. Blumenthal, who would rather interpret and characterize the position of others than report them, I wish to restate how I feel about the immigration reform movement.
If there are people motivated by racism who consider themselves supporters of immigration reform and my efforts in the Congress, I do not want nor do I need their involvement. Immigration reform is a legitimate topic of debate for a host of reasons -- national security, the economy, the environment, the decline of the civic institutions of democracy, etc. Indeed, it is a growing topic of debate by millions of citizens across our country because of these reasons. The issue has nothing to do with ethnicity or race.
I did indeed decide to take all links off the Congressional Immigration Reform Caucus Web site. I realized that, unfortunately, because of "guilt by association" tactics like Mr. Blumenthal's, we would have to spend too much time responding to alleged comments of any member of any organization to which any link existed. That is obviously not a productive use of my time or the time of my staff. There was no specific organization, of those that had been listed, from which we were going to remove the connection.
Finally, when I was asked about the genesis of the name "Vdare," I replied truthfully that I did not know. Mr. Blumenthal characterized this response as culpable "befuddlement" on my part. Nonetheless, I can say that I was aware of editor Peter Brimelow's solid credentials as a professional journalist, and I had no reason to believe that this online magazine is anything but a legitimate contributor to the vast library of resources on this vital issue. After looking over Vdare's recent work, I have not changed this opinion.
-- Tom Tancredo
[Republican Tom Tancredo represents Colorado's 6th District in the U.S. House of Representatives.]
Get Salon in your mailbox!