Set aside any Obama euphoria you feel. The other important
news is that third-party presidential candidates had a miserable showing this
year, totaling just over one percent of the grand total with 1.5 million votes
nationwide, compared to some 123 million votes for Barack Obama and John
McCain.
It couldn�t be clearer that Americans are not willing to
voice their political discontent by voting for third-party presidential
candidates. The two-party duopoly and plutocracy is completely dominant. The US
lacks the political competition that exists in other Western democracies. Without
real political competition, there is insufficient political choice.
A key problem is that for many years, third parties have not
offered presidential candidates that capture the attention and commitment of
even a modest fraction of Americans, unlike Ross Perot (8.4 percent in 1996 and
18.9 percent in 1992), and John Anderson (6.6 percent in 1980).
This year, among the four most significant third-party
presidential candidates, Ralph Nader without a national party did the best with
685,426 votes or 0.54 percent of the grand total (a little better than in 2004
with 0.4 percent but much worse than in 2000 running as a Green Party candidate
with 2.7 percent). He was followed by Bob Barr the Libertarian Party candidate
with 503,981 votes or 0.4 percent of the total (typical of all Libertarian
candidates in recent elections, including Ron Paul in 1988), followed by Chuck
Baldwin of the Constitution Party with just 181,266 votes or 0.1 percent, and
then Cynthia McKinney of the Green Party with only 148,546 votes or 0.1
percent.
Showing the problem of ballot access, engineered by the two
major parties, is that there were only 15 states where all four were on the
ballot. In all but one, Nader received more votes than the other three
third-party candidates. In four states only one of the four candidates was on
the ballot; in one state none of them were (Oklahoma).
Nader�s best state was California with 81,434 votes, as it
was for McKinney�s with 28,624 votes. Baldwin was not on the ballot there. Alan
Keyes received 30,787 votes in California. Barr�s best state was Texas with
56,398 votes. None of the other three were on the ballot there. In his home
state of Georgia where he had been a Representative Barr received 28,420 votes
(and none of the other three were on the ballot). Baldwin�s best state was
Michigan with 14, 973 votes. Nader was not on the ballot there.
In round numbers, Barack Obama raised $639 million or about
$10 per vote, and John McCain raised $360 million or $6 per vote, compared to
Ralph Nader with $4 million and $6 per vote, Bob Barr with about $1 million or
$2 per vote, and Cynthia McKinney with only about $118,000 or less than $1 per
vote. Money matters, but the ability of the two-party duopoly to keep
third-party presidential candidates out of nationally televised debates matters
more for media attention, money and votes.
It must also be noted that there were countless
congressional races with third-party and independent candidates, but none were
able to win office, with only a very few reaching the 20 percent level. That
third-party candidates can win local government offices means little because
political party affiliation at that level is overshadowed by personal
qualifications.
I say that current third-party activists should admit
defeat, shut down their unsuccessful parties, and move on. Unlike so much of
American history, current third-parties no longer play a significant role in
American politics or even in affecting public policies. They have shown their
inability to matter.
We need a new, vibrant political party that could bring many
millions of American dissidents, progressives and conservatives, and especially
chronic non-voters, together behind a relatively simple party platform focused
on structural, government system reforms (not merely political change). Examples
include: replacing the Electoral College with the popular vote for president,
restoring the balance between Congress and the presidency, eliminating the
corrupting influence of special interest money from politics, preventing the
president from using signing statements to nullify laws passed by Congress.
What would unite people is a shared priority for
revitalizing American democracy. It should position itself as a populist
alternative and opponent to the two-party plutocracy. It should define itself
as against the corporate and other special interests on the left and right that
use money to corrupt our political system. Possible names: Patriotic Party,
United Party or National Party. With Thomas Jefferson as its spiritual founder
it should seek the political revolution he said was needed periodically.
Here is what helps. Despite considerable enthusiasm for
Barack Obama, there is widespread unhappiness with both the Democratic and
Republican parties. One indication is that so many voters register as
independents. Plus there has always been a chorus of negative views about the
two-party system. In one pragmatic sense this is the ideal time to create a new
party. Why? Because of the incredible loss of stature of the Republican Party. Why
not envision a new party that could replace the Republican Party on the
national stage and provide a sharp alternative to the Democratic Party? In
other words, we don�t need a new third party as much as we need a new major
party.
Joel S. Hirschhorn can be contacted through www.delusionaldemocracy.com.