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Time to Commit

By Sen. Bernie Sanders

As the only elected Independent in the U.S. House of Representatives and the longest-serving congressional Independent in American history, I want to take this opportunity to share some thoughts with progressives struggling over which candidate to support for president on Election Day.

First, let me state as clearly as I can that George W. Bush’s reelection would be a disaster. I write this as someone who is not a Democrat and who, as a member of Congress, has differed with John Kerry on a number of important issues. In terms of economic policy, among many other issues, however, the choice is clear. It is absolutely essential that Kerry win November 2.

If Bush is reelected the United States increasingly will resemble an impoverished Third World country in which a few families have incredible wealth while the vast majority struggle to survive.

The middle class is shrinking, the gap between the rich and poor is growing and poverty is increasing: This is the Bush legacy.

He will be the first president since Herbert Hoover and the Great Depression to oversee a decline in employment in a single term. Despite huge tax breaks to the rich and large corporations, our country has lost jobs under his reign. Equally important, the jobs being created pay substantially less than those lost. Incredibly, because of outsourcing and disastrous trade policies with China and other countries, in the last three years alone we have lost 2.7 million good-paying manufacturing jobs—16 percent of that sector. We are now on the verge of losing millions of high-tech jobs to India and elsewhere. In the midst of all of this, Bush and Co. support outsourcing and the anti-American actions of their corporate allies.

While corporate America throws American workers out on the street and move their jobs abroad, wages are no longer keeping up with inflation. They fell 1.1 percent in June—the steepest decline in real hourly wages since 1991. In fact, real hourly wages declined in five of the six previous months. Because the middle class is shrinking, the average American employee is working the longest hours in the industrialized world—and 62 percent say their workload has increased over the last six months, a situation about to worsen because of new Bush rules that cut overtime pay for 6 million employees. Poverty also increased by 1.3 million in the last year alone; hunger and homelessness are on the rise.

Yet, the wealthiest people have never had it so good. The gap between the rich and the poor is now wider than at any time since the 1920s, with the richest 1 percent owning more wealth than the bottom 90 percent. Corporate profits are soaring, and compensation of CEOs of our largest corporations is 500 times greater than their workers.

The United States also remains the only major country that does not guarantee healthcare for all its citizens, and this situation only worsened in the last four years. Five million more Americans lost their health insurance since Bush took office, and today we have a record 45 million without any coverage. As health insurance premiums soar, workers are being asked to contribute more in premiums, deductibles and co-payments. Meanwhile, the administration attempts to privatize Medicare and, just last week, announced the largest premium increase in the Medicare program’s history, raising the monthly expense by $11.60 to $78.20. While the cost of prescription drugs soars Bush has defended the pharmaceutical industry, which heavily funded his campaign, by trying to stop all efforts to end the national disgrace of Americans paying, by far, the highest prices in the world for their medicine.

President Bush and the Republican leadership have provided hundreds of billions in tax breaks to the richest 1 percent, people with an average income of more than $1 million a year. And in the process have created record-breaking deficits and a $7 trillion national debt—spurring Alan Greenspan and other financial leaders to advocate cuts in Social Security benefits. In fact, all programs that benefit the middle class are now at risk.

Bush has thrown 160,000 veterans off VA healthcare, and his new Veterans budget will substantially raise fees for the men and women who have put their lives on the line defending our nation. In the midst of a major crisis in affordable housing, the president also wants to decimate the Section 8 program.

This campaign isn’t about George Bush and John Kerry. (And it certainly isn’t about Ralph Nader; a progressive vote for Nader is in effect a vote for Bush.) It’s about a corporate class that has gained unprecedented ground in the last four years and, by extension, the territory ceded by the rest of America.

Bernie Sanders is the junior United States Senator from Vermont. He has served in Congress - formerly in the House of Representatives - for over 16 years. Read more at his Web site.

More information about Sen. Bernie Sanders
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  • Reader Comments

    I think it says a lot that a true Progressive independent like Mr. Sanders is speaking the plain truth about why voting for Nader is a mistake. I just wish Nader would listen. This is not a Democrat talking, this is a pragmatic progressive member of Congress! Maybe we should have a new political party, the Pragmatic-Progressives (PC) just as they have Progressive-Conservatives (PC) in good ole’ Canada. How many disaffected Democrats (like myself) might join if we could offer a viable alternative or even a coalition within the Democratic party?

    Posted by Jeremy Nathan Marks on Sep 21, 2004 at 7:36 AM

    If I vote for Nader I can feel good about my vote. Nader stands for most of the things I believe in and think are right. Kerry does not. The only thing I can not understand is, why all the other people that want real change don’t have the brains or the fortitude to vote for Nader also. It seems like a no brainer to me but then I think, I don’t just follow and repeat what other people say. Get a brain folks.

    Posted by Sherrod Smith on Sep 21, 2004 at 7:52 AM

    The HR director of our small company just let it slip that benefits may be eliminated at the end of the year. Last year’s raise in both employee cost for the plan and co-payment for prescriptions wiped out that gracious .25 raise I received after a year.
    Without health insurance my epilepsy medicine will cost me around $400 a month (It’s $44 now). I’ve already stopped taking one because I can’t afford it even with the co-pay.

    That’s a crime, especially when I only
    gross $975 and am asked to keep the overtime down, not because they don’t want to pay us but because we’re losing money like the majority of small businesses in this country.

    How in the world do people believe this is a Godly man? Or that he’s doing a good job? According to the Bureau of Labor, his unemployment figures are worse than Sr.’s. and second only to Hoover.

    In the mid-1750’s, people would get so outraged at such injustices they would storm the governor’s mansion, tar and feather him, loot his estate and then burn his house down. It was such mob mentality that lead to change. But, also, the dangers of such mob reactions helped shape the Bill of Rights.
    I’m not advocating that, though it would be hilarious. Rather, my wish is that flunkie in the White House and his father suffer the same fate as those of us struggling today.

    Posted by Windex on Sep 21, 2004 at 8:11 AM

    Ernie Sanders is one of my heroes
    in this precarious time of our young republic. I hear him every Friday on Thom Hartmann show for Brunch with Bernie and have grow to admire him for his forthrightness and candor.
    I am at a loss for words when I hear the doofus president stand up and outright lie to the people. I try to have more confidence in the people as a whole then, when I hear indirectly, the poll numbers
    in dodo’s favor I am confused. How
    can this be??? Are most Americans
    stupid? Yes, because most of them get their news from the tv media
    (heavily Fox) however, the others are not much better, even CBS, who is now being pillaged by the neo-
    con fascists. Yes, I will say it since most of the media is scared to death...the bush power!!! The scary power people who will put you in prison if you dare speak against them. i.e. Mrs. Niederer
    (mom who lost her son in Iraq) and who dared to ask the stepford wife about her daughters not going to war. Instead of asking god to bless this nation we better be asking for help to defeat these
    ugly,selfish,greedy and uncaring
    men.
    Our GREAT MIDDLE CLASS wll be completely gone and I fear for my
    and everyone’s grandchildren.
    PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE VOTE FOR KERRY/EDWARDS AND SAVE OUR NATION.

    Posted by Florence Murphy on Sep 21, 2004 at 8:23 AM

    I like Ralph Nader.
    He’s performed a tremendous service to this nation and we owe him a huge debt of gratitude.

    But, there’s no way I’d vote for him. Big business sees him as an enemy and if they don’t they must be pretty forgiving. And as much as I loathe such companies right now, we still need them--we just need to re-direct their interests back to America and its people.

    We had our shot with Dean. The propaganda machine of the GOP turned his campaign into a disaster--they were deathly afraid of him.
    This should have been a warning to candidates. Bush has played the lowest, slimiest, vilest campaign tricks against Kerry. It’s successfully distracted people away from Iraq, as Iraq distracted people away from bin Laden.
    And while the house that is the nation burns, Bush is arguing with his opponent over what color to paint the servant’s quarters.

    Nader will distract people away from Kerry and then fascism will really wipe out all the work FDR accomplished--just as those low IQ, mouth-breathing, inbread, drug swilling, self-righteous, hillbilly fuck Bush boys want.

    Posted by Neil on Sep 21, 2004 at 8:27 AM
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Appeared in the October 11, 2004 Issue
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