Pubdate: Fri, 12 May 2000
Source: Orlando Sentinel (FL)
Copyright: 2000 Orlando Sentinel
Contact:  633 N.Orange Ave., Orlando, FL 32801
Website: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/
Forum: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/interact/messageboards/
Author: Barry Flynn, The Sentinel Staff
Note: Hemp mentioned in the middle of this story

IF I WIN PRESIDENT'S RACE, CORPORATIONS LOSE

The passage of 35 years has changed little in Ralph Nader -- style or 
substance. Still intensely focused on grass-roots reform, he is ever the 
policy wonk, defying hideous odds to challenge, in his eyes, insidious 
powers thwarting the average American.

Long as the odds have been, he has a record of success. This time, he's 
running for president, taking on the entire national political 
establishment, Democrats and Republicans, and what he reckons are their 
corporate masters.

"They are basically one corporate party with two heads, wearing different 
makeup," Nader said Thursday while visiting Orlando.

Corporations, bent on molding government to their own benefit, have come to 
so dominate the U.S. political process as to put it almost beyond the reach 
of the average citizen, Nader says.

As a 31-year-old lawyer, Nader burst onto the American scene in 1965 with a 
book, Unsafe at Any Speed, that took on General Motors over safety. The 
popular, little rear-engine Corvair was the No. 1 target of the book. GM 
halted production four years later.

More books and a career of reforms ranging from consumer product safety to 
fighting discrimination against women followed.

There are many things in America that he says, "a strong democracy wouldn't 
tolerate." Among them: "This massive poverty in a time of prosperity." 
Strip mining that blows the tops off mountains. Out-of-control pollution. 
And "restrictive labor laws" that result in historically low union membership.

As for the booming economy, it's very good for the top 10 percent, he said. 
With the growing disparity in wealth, "the top 1 percent of the population 
have wealth equal to the bottom 95 percent."

"The corporate government is taking over the political government and 
turning it against the people," he said.

He was in town to address a meeting of the National Agricultural 
Biotechnology Council.

In his speech, Nader preached the virtues of industrial hemp, as everything 
from a potential source of energy to a substitute for synthetic textiles. 
The crop is banned in the United States because, Nader said, the government 
confuses it with marijuana.

Nader also talked to reporters about his campaign for president as nominee 
of the Green Party. He was the party's nominee in 1996, too, but this time 
he means it.

"In '96, all I did was put my name in. I said then, 'I'm not going to 
campaign. I'm not going to raise money.' "

This year will be different. "This is the first time I've campaigned," he 
said. And he has a full-time staff geared up.

Nader's primary goal is not to win, though he doesn't rule that out. With 
four candidates, including Pat Buchanan on the right, and access to the 
nationally televised debates -- if he gets high enough poll ratings, 
"things change very, very fast."

He mainly wants to make the tiny Green Party a player in national politics. 
The Greens have a few elected officials across the country, but not much of 
a unified national organization.

"The first thing is to build a progressive political party that gets bigger 
every two years," he said. With 5 percent of the vote in a national 
election, the party would win federal funding for many of its activities.

Also, he wants to persuade the Democratic Party to "shape up or ship out."

The problem with the Democrats is that they define themselves by the 
Republicans, he said. When they win elections, Democrats say they've seized 
Republican issues. And when they lose, they say they weren't enough like 
the Republicans, he added.

"That's the wrong direction."

Does Nader fear that by taking just enough votes from Vice President Al 
Gore in a few key states he may end up helping elect Republican George W. Bush?

"No," he answers without a flinch. "There's no difference."
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MAP posted-by: Jo-D