Nader May Decide In 'Next Few Days'


 

WINSTED - After announcing two weeks ago that he is forming an exploratory committee to examine the possibility of running for president this year, Winsted Native Ralph Nader is expected to "decide soon" if he'll launch a campaign, according to his Web site, naderexplore08.org.

In an e-mail sent Wednesday morning, the Nader team lamented what it called a lack of choices in this year's presidential race, following primary wins Tuesday by Democratic candidate Sen. Barack Obama and Republican candidate Sen. John McCain.

"We were watching the political fireworks last night," Nader's message said, "and kept asking ourselves: Who is going to stand against the corporate takeover of our democracy? Who is going to stand against nuclear power? Who is going to stand for the impeachment of Bush and Cheney? Who is going to stand for cutting the bloated, wasteful, ever-expanding military budget? Who is going to stand for a Palestine free from U.S./Israeli military domination?"

The message said Nader's decision to run could come as early as this week. "Within the coming days, Ralph Nader will decide whether or not to throw his hat into the ring. We're still exploring, but time is running short."

As of Thursday afternoon, Democratic candidates were neck-and-neck for their party's nomination, with Obama taking a slight lead over Sen. Hillary Clinton in the party's delegate count. According to The Associated Press, Obama had 1,275 delegates, compared with Clinton's 1,220.

On the Republican side, McCain remained the clear favorite, with 827 delegates, followed by former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, with 242.

Nader's team is calling for a candidate to be tougher on corporate crime, and stand up to the health-insurance industry, among other things. "We watched closely last night and didn't notice anyone standing for any of this," the message said.

In 2004, Nader ran for president as an independent candidate, getting 465,650 votes nationally, or 0.38 percent of the vote. Incumbent Republican president George W. Bush won the election 50.73 percent to 48.27 percent over Democratic challenger John Kerry.

In 2000, Nader ran on the Green Party ticket against Bush and Democratic former vice president Al Gore. Nader received 2,882,955 votes in the election, or 2.74 percent of the national vote. Though he received criticism for being a spoiler for the Democratic party, he has maintained that more voices and choices are needed in presidential races.

In an interview with The Winsted Journal two weeks ago, Nader said he was "testing the water" with his exploratory committee and that he would need a vast network of volunteers, pro bono lawyers and private donors to launch a run for the White House. The biggest hurdle, he said, would be obtaining ballot access in individual states across the nation.

"Voter rights aren't meaningful without candidates' rights and candidates' rights aren't meaningful without voter rights," Nader said.

 

 

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