Nader announces new run for president

belizean

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Nader announces new run for president


WASHINGTON - Ralph Nader said Sunday he will run for president as a third-party candidate, criticizing the top White House contenders as too close to big business and pledging to repeat a bid that will "shift the power from the few to the many."




Nader, 73, said most people are disenchanted with the Democratic and Republican parties due to a prolonged Iraq war and a shaky economy. The consumer advocate also blamed tax and other corporate-friendly policies under the Bush administration that he said have left many lower- and middle-class people in debt.

"You take that framework of people feeling locked out, shut out, marginalized and disrespected," he said. "You go from Iraq, to Palestine to Israel, from Enron to Wall Street, from Katrina to the bumbling of the Bush administration, to the complicity of the Democrats in not stopping him on the war, stopping him on the tax cuts."

"In that context, I have decided to run for president," Nader told NBC's "Meet the Press."

Nader also criticized Republican candidate John McCain and Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton for failing to support full Medicare for all or cracking down on Pentagon waste and a "bloated military budget. He blamed that on corporate lobbyists and special interests, which he said dominate Washington, D.C., and pledged in his third-party campaign to accept donations only from individuals.

"The issue is do they have the moral courage, do they have the fortitude to stand up to corporate powers and get things done for the American people," Nader said. "We have to shift the power from the few to the many."

Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee, speaking shortly before Nader's announcement, said Nader's past runs have shown that he usually pulls votes from the Democratic nominee. "So naturally, Republicans would welcome his entry into the race," the former Arkansas governor said on CNN.

Nader also ran as a third-party candidate in the 2000 and 2004 presidential elections. He is still loathed by many Democrats who call him a spoiler and claim his candidacy in 2000 cost the party the election by siphoning votes away from Al Gore in a razor-thin contest in Florida. Nader vociferously disputes the spoiler claim, saying only Democrats are to blame for losing the race to George W. Bush.

Though he won 2.7 percent of the national vote as the Green Party candidate in 2000, his percentage dropped to just 0.3 percent as an independent in 2004, when he appeared on the ballot in only 34 states.

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On the Net:

Ralph Nader presidential campaign: http://www.votenader.org
 
Nader da lone rass! He knows he can't win. This will help McCain, and we'll have another republican in office. :rolleyes:
 
belizean said:
Nader da lone rass! He knows he can't win. This will help McCain, and we'll have another republican in office. :rolleyes:

Highly doubt it. As the last paragraph reads:

Though he won 2.7 percent of the national vote as the Green Party candidate in 2000, his percentage dropped to just 0.3 percent as an independent in 2004, when he appeared on the ballot in only 34 states.

Those are Ron Paul numbers. If folks are still feeling disenfranchised, I'm sure Mr. Nader will pull from Mr. Paul's voters since his campaign is in mothball status.

I am not a Nader fan, but I tend to agree with him; the Democrats lost the 2000 race on their own. They didn't present a viable option to Independents, and I believe they have found that happy medium in Mr. Obama. Mr. Obama so far has harnessed the voting power of Democrats, Independents, and
Republicans.

For that, I highly doubt Mr. Nader's candidacy will cause even a ripple in the process. I think the Republicans realize they will most likely lose to Mr. Obama in November barring some freakish meltdown, and are attempting to plant the seeds of doubt/controversy/division to give Mr. Nader's candidacy more credibility than it can generate on its own--which is none. He's proven himself an extreme left-wing, raving, self-serving, neo-environmentalist that would have the same effect on the US Presidency that Jimmy Carter did.

But that's just my opinion.
 
Not this A- hole again. This is the same bastard that took 10,000 votes from Al Gore and help retarded Bush become president by little more than 500 votes.
 
What a loser !

I agree with David 13, Nader is a A-Hole, he has no real reason except to stir up the pot. Most young Americans problably never heard of him. Remember Ross Perot ? He was another pain in the culo. ms:D :smoke :D
 
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