RESTORE THE REPUBLIC
Why Voting for a Third Party Candidate is NOT Throwing Your Vote Away
July 07, 2004
by Jason Marianna, President - Yay God! Ministries
[email protected]
You hear it every election year. Those 5 little words, strung together to make
up the biggest lie in politics: “You’re throwing your vote away.” The media
even has a name for the candidates that get the “throw away” votes. They call
those candidates “spoilers”. Why? Because it ruins the whole two-party myth. It
shows evidence that there are more choices out there than tweedle-dee and
tweedle-dum.
The two major parties are beginning to realize this too. No longer can they sit
back as the Greens, Constitutionalists, Libertarians, and Independent Americans
take away a percentage of the votes. They can’t rely on people to automatically
disregard these third parties any more as “fringe groups” because the fringe is
getting awfully big. Instead they try to scare you into believing that a vote
for a third party is a vote for the opposition. For example, when Ralph Nader
announced his candidacy for President in 2004, the Democrats began rounding up
the troops with threats that support for Nader is really support for Bush in
disguise. In their opinions, John Kerry has the only real chance of beating
Bush, and therefore is the only candidate worth anyone's support.
It’s not that I defend Ralph Nader, in fact my viewpoint is quite the contrary.
My support will go to Michael Peroutka (www.peroutka2004.com), and I’m sure
Republican campaign against him will come closer to election day. They’ll scare
their big supporters into believing that a vote for Peroutka is a vote for John
Kerry.
It’s an age old tactic, do whatever you can to get votes. Run emotionally
charged commercials, scare people with trumped up charges and exaggerated
claims about the opponent, kiss babies, jump on band wagons, hold whistle stop
tours, sign autographs, throw out first pitches at ball games, use every press
opportunity as a campaign commercial, do whatever you can to get elected.
Unfortunately, in the effort to score as many votes as possible, the two major
parties often forget one thing . . . principle. How much do they really
believe in their principles if they are willing to sacrifice them so freely for
a vote?
For years the two parties have followed the same model of getting elected. They
run to the left or right during the primaries, and run to the center in the
general election. What we are left with is two candidates essentially saying
the same thing, but disagreeing in name only, and occasionally on
implementation of the same policies. This year is no different. Bush pushed the
Patriot act because he is interested in removing God given rights from
Americans. Kerry opposes the Patriot act, but that doesn’t mean he’s not
interested in taking away American’s God given rights. He’ll still try to take
our second amendment. He’ll still seek to hold “terrorists” without legal aid
or trial. He’ll accomplish the same things Bush would, just under a different
banner and in different ways. It’s politics. It’s the system. It’s anything but
principled.
When you ask people why they vote for a candidate, they give you a few basic
answers. For one, they may actually truly believe in the candidate and his
policies. This is rare in the two-party system, but it does happen. Another
reason many people give is because the candidate is the lesser of two evils.
Some say that although they disagree with the candidate on some things “at
least he’s not the other guy.” They imply with this thinking that there
are no other choices, despite the emergence of viable third parties for both
the left and the right.
The lesser of two evils argument frustrates the daylights out of me when I hear
it. First of all, it is a flawed argument. As I’ve demonstrated above, in the
general election, the parties run to the center. The result of this is that
both parties become the big tent party. What has happened in America is that
both parties have gotten so good at running to the center that they are almost
exactly alike. There is no “lesser” in the lesser of two evils.
Since when is voting for evil a good thing? Does it matter if you drive a
car off a cliff at 55 MPH or 80 MPH? Either way, you’re driving off the cliff.
A vote for the lesser of two evils is a vote for evil, plain and simple. It
doesn’t take a master’s degree to figure this out.
How many Americans grumble every year that all politicians are only in
office for their own interests? The basis of these feelings is that Government
has not progressed in America for nearly 100 years. There have been some
victories on both sides of the spectrum, but for the most part, we’ve been in
the same rut of one step forward and two steps back. Yet, these same Americans
who complain about the hole we’re in, get out their two-party shovels on
election day and dig us further in the hole by perpetuating the heart of the
problem: The two-party system itself. If you want to change Government, change
your vote.
I spent a week really campaigning for my candidate to my circle of conservative
friends and acquaintances recently. I got the same response over and over
again. “I would vote for Peroutka if I thought he had a chance of winning.
However, even though I agree with nearly everything he says, he can’t possibly
win, so I would be throwing my vote away, or worse yet, actually voting for
John Kerry.” What they didn’t realize is that if they all vote for him, we
are all actually that much closer to having someone we actually want in office,
instead of someone we barely tolerate.
The two parties don’t care about you. They care about power. They care about
winning elections, no matter the cost. They’ve abandoned the American people
and their needs. They’ve forgotten that the rights Americans enjoy are to be
protected, not manipulated. They don’t care to hold to the constitution’s
limitations. This must change, but will not change if we continue to give them
our support. If you want government to reflect your principles, vote for
candidates and parties that reflect those principles, no exceptions. The only
result of holding to principle is government changing for the better, one
individual vote at a time. Changing government for the better is not throwing
your vote away. Quite the contrary, it is using it properly.