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“This Is a Collapse of the Democratic Party”: Ralph Nader on Roots of Trump’s Win Over Harris

www.democracynow.org “This Is a Collapse of the Democratic Party”: Ralph Nader on Roots of Trump’s Win Over Harris

“This is a collapse of the Democratic Party.” Consumer advocate, corporate critic and former presidential candidate Ralph Nader comments on the reelection of Donald Trump and the failures of the Democratic challenge against him. Despite attempts by left-wing segments of the Democratic base to shift ...

“This Is a Collapse of the Democratic Party”: Ralph Nader on Roots of Trump’s Win Over Harris

“This is a collapse of the Democratic Party.” Consumer advocate, corporate critic and former presidential candidate Ralph Nader comments on the reelection of Donald Trump and the failures of the Democratic challenge against him.

Despite attempts by left-wing segments of the Democratic base to shift the party’s messaging toward populist, anti-corporate and progressive policies, says Nader, Democrats “didn’t listen.” Under Trump, continues Nader, “We’re in for huge turmoil.”

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  • Fuck you, Nader. We wouldn't even be in this mess if it wasn't for you.

    • Looking purely at vote counts, he isn't wrong. Trump lost about 3 million votes compared to 2020, whereas the Dems lost 15 million. There's certainly a lot of blame to lay at the feet of "both sides bad" people who didn't vote, but either way that's catastrophically bad turnout for the Dems.

      • There’s certainly a lot of blame to lay at the feet of “both sides bad” people who didn’t vote

        No. Absolutely not.

        The Democrats and Republicans have spent 40 years, but more importantly, the last six months making it very clear that losing a badly-needed day's pay for a worker isn't worth the time it takes to vote. (Unless you were in Missouri with the $15 minimum wage on the ballot.)

        Democrats are the reason that Democrats lose.

      • It's not about right or wrong, it's about the person weighing in.

        I don't want to hear what Jill Stein has to say about it either. Fuck both of them.

        And you people downvoting: would you want to hear Newt Gingrich's take? Even if this is what he said?

        • You should be saying: "Fuck Kamala Harris"

          The Dems knew from day one that the economy was the most important issue to voters, because the vast majority of them are working 2-3 jobs just to barely make ends meet.

          So what did they do? They ran a clearly brain-damaged candidate, and when he imploded on live national TV, they subbed in Harris, who spent two months just telling people suffering to be joyful, as if it weren't only condescending, but terribly bad policy and campaign strategy. Here in Missouri the $15 minimum wage passed overwhelmingly, but Harris decided to cosplay as a moderate Republican and talk about tax cuts that no one actually thought she'd follow through with anyway, because they've spent the last four years being ignored by Joe Biden.

          And they kept harping on Trump's weirdness, as if they haven't already observed that voters do not care how weird he is.

          Jill Stein and Ralph Nader didn't make these crappy political decisions.

          The Dems did.

        • That's a logical fallacy called an Ad Hominem. Where you don't argue against an idea, instead attack the person voicing it.

          You're opinion of a person, doesn't mean anything to their argument. It actually works against finding truth and solutions.

          • So then yes, you would like to know what Newt Gingrich's take is as long as it is a valid argument?

            You don't think that maybe some people don't deserve attention in the first place?

            • Good ideas deserve attention. It doesn't matter where they come from.
              Your idea here isn't a good one, and no longer has mine.

              • No one has a right to media attention just because they have a good idea. I assume if a serial killer had a good idea, you wouldn't want it on all the front pages. Maybe let them tell someone else and have that person bring it up if it's such a good idea.

                • Who said the person deserves attention? Even a right to it?
                  I didn't.

                  • Okay, well then I stand by my point. Ralph Nader doesn't deserve attention on election issues no matter what good ideas he has. If they're good enough ideas, he has plenty of media connections he can tell them to.

                    • Then engage in the discussion at hand, rather than trying to derail it.

                      • You do not get to dictate how or why I post until you become a mod. If you don't like what I have to say, you can either block me or not respond. Ordering me to do what you want isn't going to work.

109 comments