2016 Postmortem
In reply to the discussion: The Green Party deserves every last bit of the "bashing" that they are getting here. [View all]pnwmom
(109,651 posts)than from conservatives.
And the state count was decided by less than 600 voters.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/eric-zuesse/ralph-nader-was-indispens_b_4235065.html
Nader-voters who spurned Democrat Al Gore to vote for Nader ended up swinging both Florida and New Hampshire to Bush in 2000. Charlie Cook, the editor of the Cook Political Report and political analyst for National Journal, called Florida and New Hampshire simply the two states that Mr. Nader handed to the Bush-Cheney ticket, when Cook was writing about The Next Nader Effect, in The New York Times on 9 March 2004. Cook said, Mr. Nader, running as the Green Party nominee, cost Al Gore two states, Florida and New Hampshire, either of which would have given the vice president [Gore] a victory in 2000. In Florida, which George W. Bush carried by 537 votes, Mr. Nader received nearly 100,000 votes [nearly 200 times the size of Bushs Florida win]. In New Hampshire, which Mr. Bush won by 7,211 votes, Mr. Nader pulled in more than 22,000 [three times the size of Bushs win in that state]. If either of those two states had gone instead to Gore, then Bush would have lost the 2000 election; we would never have had a U.S. President George W. Bush, and so Nader managed to turn not just one but two key toss-up states for candidate Bush, and to become the indispensable person making G.W. Bush the President of the United States even more indispensable, and more important to Bushs electoral success, than were such huge Bush financial contributors as Enron Corporations chief Ken Lay.
All polling studies that were done, for both the 2000 and the 2004 U.S. Presidential elections, indicated that Nader drained at least 2 to 5 times as many voters from the Democratic candidate as he did from the Republican Bush. (This isnt even considering throw-away Nader voters who would have stayed home and not voted if Nader had not been in the race; they didnt count in these calculations at all.) Naders 97,488 Florida votes contained vastly more than enough to have overcome the official Jeb Bush / Katherine Harris / count, of a 537-vote Florida victory for G.W. Bush. In their 24 April 2006 detailed statistical analysis of the 2000 Florida vote, Did Ralph Nader Spoil a Gore Presidency? (available on the internet), Michael C. Herron of Dartmouth and Jeffrey B. Lewis of UCLA stated flatly, We find that ... Nader was a spoiler for Gore. David Paul Kuhn, CBSNews.com Chief Political Writer, headlined on 27 July 2004, Nader to Crash Dems Party? and he wrote: In 2000, Voter News Service exit polling showed that 47 percent of Naders Florida supporters would have voted for Gore, and 21 percent for Mr. Bush, easily covering the margin of Gores loss. Nationwide, Harvards Barry C. Burden, in his 2001 paper at the American Political Science Association, Did Ralph Nader Elect George W. Bush? (also on the internet) presented Table 3: Self-Reported Effects of Removing Minor Party Candidates, showing that in the VNS exit polls, 47.7% of Naders voters said they would have voted instead for Gore, 21.9% said they would have voted instead for Bush, and 30.5% said they wouldnt have voted in the Presidential race, if Nader were had not been on the ballot. (This same table also showed that the far tinier nationwide vote for Patrick Buchanan would have split almost evenly between Bush and Gore if Buchanan hadnt been in the race: Buchanan was not a decisive factor in the outcome.) The Florida sub-sample of Nader voters was actually too small to draw such precise figures, but Herron and Lewis concluded that approximately 60% of Floridas Nader voters would have been Gore voters if the 2000 race hadnt included Nader. Clearly, Ralph Nader drew far more votes from Gore than he did from Bush, and on this account alone was an enormous Republican asset in 2000.