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Ralph Nader Wants Liberals to Back Rand Paul — Don't Do It: A Left-Libertarian Alliance Would Hurt Liberal Goals


Ralph Nader's Left-Libertarian "alliance" idea doesn't address how such a  coalition will approach African American priority issues like racial profiling,  voter suppression, workplace discrimination, police brutality and other forms  of institutional racism. (Photo by Sage Ross)
Ralph Nader's Left-Libertarian "alliance" idea doesn't address how such a coalition
will approach African American priority issues like racial profiling, voter suppression,
workplace discrimination, police brutality and other forms of institutional racism.
(Photo by Sage Ross)
By
This week, Ralph Nader returned to the political stage with a new book, Unstoppable, whose triumphant subtitle is The Emerging Left-Right Alliance to Dismantle the Corporate State. To kick off his publicity tour, he has argued that liberals should "definitely" impeach President Barack Obama, abandon the "international militarist" Hillary Clinton, and instead embrace Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) as a possible leader of his dream coalition.

To what end? In the book, Nader writes that by marrying the Left with the libertarian Right, we can cut off government support for corporations and have "honest government," "fair taxation," and "more opportunity." Nader sees relatively low-hanging fruit in opposing "sovereignty-shredding global trade agreements, Wall Street bailouts, the overweening expansion of Federal Reserve power, and the serious intrusions of the USA PATRIOT Act against freedom and privacy." He also articulates loftier, if not fully fleshed out, aspirations to "push for environmentalism," "reform health care," and "control more of the commons that we already own"...

The Nader strategy of a permanent coalition with the libertarian Right greatly limits what liberals can accomplish. Where there is a joint desire to restrain government (end the drug war) and limit spending (stop corporate welfare), a Nader-Paul alliance can form. But you can forget about anything that involves new government regulation, higher taxes, and more spending. That would preclude big-ticket liberal priorities like capping carbon emissions, expanding anti-poverty programs, guaranteeing universal preschool, and investing in infrastructure.

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