In his speech conceding the presidential race to George W. Bush, Al Gore spoke of the need to put aside "partisan rancor." Saying, "While I strongly disagree with the Court's decision, I accept it," Gore urged the country to "unite behind our next President." But such an outcome to the Florida debacle is neither likely nor desirable. Bush takes office with the taint of an election wrested from the popular will and bereft of honest accounting. The Supreme Court administered the coup de grâce by shutting down the Florida recount, but that only confirmed what has been evident for weeks: Between the intertwined interests of the Brothers Bush, the Florida legislature, the GOP Congressional majority and the Rehnquist Court faction, never has electoral power shifted so far, so fast, from the hands of the people.
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Noted.
Kudos to Minnesota's recount process; and kudos to Van Jones, 2008 recipient of the $100,000 Puffin/Nation Prize for green economy activism.
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Stimulus Now
On Day One, Congress must present Obama with a bold stimulus plan focused on putting people to work, rebuilding infrastructure and expanding the productive capacity of the economy.
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Noted.
Kristina Rizga on harnessing young voters' energy, Stephen Duncombe on a spoof edition of the New York Times
The Bush postelection campaign was rife with such conflicts of interest up to and including the Supreme Court itself, in which two Justices, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, maintain close family ties to the Bush operation. These conflicts reveal how incestuous the emerging Bushocracy's base is. The postelection also exploded the myth of Bush's moderation. Bush lawyer Ted Olson's judiciary-bashing argument to the Supreme Court and James Baker's furious rhetoric reveal how Bush may well emerge indebted to the most conservative and divisive elements of his party.
There will be much talk of reforming the country's voting technology. But mechanics are secondary. We need deep prodemocracy reforms that stop the spiraling concentration of power into an ever-smaller number of hands. These reforms include getting money out of politics as well as passing voting reforms such as instant runoff and proportional representation, and, in the longer term, abolishing the Electoral College (see the box on page 5). Are these effective politics? Gore himself roused far greater public loyalty post-campaign defending the right to vote than defending his own record in the campaign proper.
Bush called on the country "to put politics behind us." But in the absence of war or other grave threats, why should we ignore the deep political differences in this country--differences that grow out of the economic and power inequities highlighted in this postelection period? It would be a mistake if the Democrats were to continue the centrist politics of the Clinton years, thus betraying an electorate already shorn of its most basic right: the right to choose its own leader. The incoming Bush administration is gearing up to pursue its agenda; Democrats must do the same. This is no time for a honeymoon.
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