Ralph Nader is right. Dig this.
Here's the result.
In November of 2004, 401 of the 435 sitting members of the U.S. House of Representatives sought reelection. Of those 401, all but five were reelected. In other words, incumbents seeking reelection to the House had a better than 99% success rate (sic - it's better than 98%, but why quibble?). In the U.S. Senate, only one incumbent seeking reelection was defeated. Twenty-five of twenty-six (96%) were reelected.Ralph Nader said he knew he was going to lose, but he was trying to get the country to see how democracy had been stolen from them. He was willing to spend his time and energy pushing the concept along, one tiny step at a time.
As far as this part of his platform goes, more power to him.
4 comments:
Blame the Republicans for how the district lines are drawn. Specifically, blame Tom DeLay, who wanted the maps redrawn in order to squeeze out more Republican seats in the House.
It only took three legislative sessions called by Gov. Goodhair (Perry) to finally get it forced through.
THAT is when I realized all politicians are dirty.
I remember a ballot initiative hear in California to have the state districts redrawn by a panel of retired judges.
An ad against the initiative breathlessly intoned that the panel would be made up of.... "liberal judges". It was so over-the-top, I could only surmise it was ran by Democrats who have the state on lock-down as it is.
Anyway, I voted for it because a panel of nine freaking monkeys could do no worse than what we have now.
Amen to both of you.
Pretty useful information, thank you for your article.
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