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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Nader gets on ballot in California, vows more

By Maria Recio McClatchy

WASHINGTON – Independent presidential candidate Ralph Nader is quietly making headway in his third bid for president.

He clinched a major victory last Saturday by getting on the California ballot as the nominee of the Peace and Freedom Party. In 2004, Nader wasn’t on California’s ballot – a state receptive to his anti-war, anti-corporate message – and was on the ballot in only 34 states. He said Wednesday that he’s confident of getting on the ballot in 45 states this year.

With the major-party candidates in a close race, Nader could have an impact, perhaps as dramatic as in 2000, when the then-Green Party nominee received more than 97,000 votes in Florida, which Democratic nominee Al Gore lost by 537 votes to George W. Bush. That gave Bush an Electoral College majority and the White House.

Nader is at 3 percent in one recent poll and 6 percent in another.

True to form, however, he’s complaining about being excluded from the presidential debates, paid for, he noted, by a “corporate duopoly” of the Democratic and Republican parties.

“Why do we ration debates in this country?” he asked. “You can only reach 2 percent of the public without debates.”

The Commission on Presidential Debates stipulates that participants must have 15 percent support in national polls to be eligible.

Nader accuses the news media of being in a “cultural rut” by ignoring him. He said he’d been on national television only 10 seconds this election cycle.

Nader, who’s called Bush a “raging pit bull,” hates the spoiler label that’s been hung on him since that election, saying it’s “a contemptuous word of political bigotry.”

As for Obama, Nader said he “lost all respect for him” when the Illinois senator spoke out against impeaching Bush. Nader supports impeachment because of how Bush handled the lead-up to the war in Iraq.

While Nader doesn’t seem to face a concerted Democratic campaign to block him from state ballots, as he did in 2004, so far he’s on only 12 state ballots, according to the newsletter Ballot Access News. Nader campaign spokesman Chris Driscoll said signatures had been submitted in 26 states and that the campaign was on track to win access in 45 states.