At a certain level, I’m terribly uncomfortable with the very idea of Nader having been right about any of the political choices he’s made over the last seven years, but Matthew Yglesias raises a provocative point on the subject.
[O]ne of the memes floating about in the Nadersphere has, I think, been vindicated: Namely the basically Leninist idea that a Democratic loss and a period of Republican governance would pull the Democrats in a more progressive direction in terms of, for example, questioning “Washington Consensus” globalization. At the time, that argument didn’t make sense to me. And in some important ways I still don’t think it makes a ton of sense logically. But it does seem to be what’s happened. Now, was that a price worth paying for the dead in Iraq, the torture, etc.? I don’t really think so.
TNR’s Isaac Chotiner adds:
It’s certainly true that this era of Republican governance has moved the Democrats to the left. The reaction to Bush, after all, has been pretty strong. But what if McCain had been elected in 2000, or Bush had decided to govern from the center? In short, Nader may have been right this time around, but as a general rule I’m skeptical he’s correct.
As am I, but it’s a topic worthy of some discussion. It seems a little self-serving — not to mention a little callous — for Nader and his supporters to say, “Bush has ruined the country and our standing in the world, the country has recoiled and moved to the left, so our actions are justified.” That said, the crux of the 2000 strategy, which was to help the right in order to fix the left, seems to have at least a kernel of merit in retrospect. Maybe.
So, what do you think? Did Nader’s burn-the-forest-in-order-to-save-it approach succeed? Was it worth the incredibly high costs?