Independents Win! Bloomberg Pulls Out
Mike Bloomberg's Decision Not To Run Is A Sign That Independents Have Found Candidates They Like, Says CBS' Dick Meyer
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New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a Democrat-turned-Republican-turned-independent, has ties to Democratic presidential candidates Sen. Barack Obama and Sen. Hillary Clinton, as well as the likely Republican candidate, Sen. John McCain. (AP)
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Independent voters in this country won a huge victory when New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced he was not going to run for president.
Bloomberg isn’t running, and indeed could not have run credibly, because independent voters have found candidates in the main parties that they like, for a change. That is a victory for independents, if not for Mayor Bloomberg.
Self-identified independents make up about one-third of the electorate. But they make up about one one-hundredth of the people who talk about politics on television, which is why you may think there aren’t so many.
John McCain is extremely popular with these independents. So is Barack Obama. Hillary Clinton is not. If Obama gets the nomination, the election of 2008 will be a paradigm shift backwards to the days when candidates ran to capture the middle. In this case, regress is progress. Important progress
Even if there is a major transformation in the dynamics of electioneering in 2008, however, it does not follow that there will be a transformation of governance in 2009.
That is why I am still disappointed, though just mildly, that Bloomberg isn’t running. Bloomberg would have had to govern independently. We would have had to have a bipartisan cabinet. He would have had to tick off both parties.
This would not be true of Obama or McCain.
The three or four regular readers of this column know I have been a shill for “Bloomberg 2008” for well over a year. My enthusiasm was inspired less by faith in the man than by the conviction that the two main parties are kaput. It is my view that any important and enduring improvement in the business of campaigning and governing cannot be spawned by the two party system.
That system is entrenched, intellectually and commercially, in a view of the country as polarized that is phony and destructive. Mainstream candidates, mainstream media and the mainstream political elite are heavily invested in polarization. It spawns good talk shows, fiery direct mail campaigns and rousing speeches. It’s just that most voters aren’t polarized. They’re sensible, eclectic and independent-spirited.
Bloomberg knows this. So do Obama and McCain.
That does not mean there aren’t intense and significant differences between Americans, the parties and between Obama and McCain. Of course, there are. There are intense differences on some important issues between almost any two people you pick randomly. That is not polarization. That is freedom. Polarization is the Civil War or the protests of the sixties.
If Obama gets the Democratic nomination, 2008 will be a transformational election, and not just because Obama would be the first black presidential candidate from the two party system. It will represent the resurrection of the independent voter.
But a transformational campaign does not mean a transformed government or style of governing. Bloomberg, or another independent president, would have provided that. Obama or McCain could provide that. It would be in spite of two parties.
Still, Bloomberg’s withdrawal is a huge win for independents, ironically. It shows that the two parties have produced candidates independent voters like, for a change.
E-mail questions, comments, complaints, arguments and ideas to Against the Grain. We will publish some of the interesting (and civil) ones, sometimes in edited form.
By Dick Meyer
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





The whole country loses by Bloomberg not becoming our president. It''s a real shame.
I guess people in Washington DC are a little slower at figuring things out (to put it nicely).
And all of Mr. Meyer''s platitudes and cliches about how wonderful bipartisanship is (which I agree with on an intellectual level) mean absolutely nothing when one of the two main parties has gone completely off the deep end. How are you supposed to work with a party that is completely corrupt, dishonest, treats the government as a giant cash ATM for it''s political pals, and just like banana republics everywhere, treats the law like a malleable inconvenience.
But I digress.
What we really need is to get to the bottom of the whole Clemens matter. (sarcasm)
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That is a really ignorant statement. Independents are interested in the person running and their positions, not the party.
False, independents are people with value systems (ie libertarian) that are not represented by either major party. I personally dislike the left wing economics of the Democrats and the corrupt corruptist economics of the Republicans. I also don''t like the evangelical and intolerant social politics of the Republicans and I don''t like the collectivist politically correct social politics of the Democrats (ie affirmative action). As you see, I have strong ideological views, but don''t like either party. There are enough others like me, even if we are a minority.
Posted by gwagener
Both of Nader and Paul want to end the sickness of warfare-fetishism and stop forcible leverage of our EARNED money for corporate subsidy and maintenance of the good-ole-boys (in public and private sectors) who could never earn a dollar in a free market.
Nader is very bad at finding solutions -- but he''s good at identifying problems. Paul is vice-versa.
Obama/McCain and all the other mental-asscracks refuse to put down the ****** guns they are pointing at us, so it is best to call them what they are: violent criminals.
And talking about independents as some kind of unified voting block is another error. Independents are apolitical people who don''t have the interest in politics to make ideological choices and will choose their candidate on election day with the same lack of focus as the independent candidates who from time to time choose to run.
Maybe Ron Paul could be Ralph Nader''''s VP running mate
Nader/Ron Paul 2008
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Posted by mocaIeo at 11:43 AM : Feb 28, 2008
Nader wahts the Government to do everything for everyone. Paul wants the Government to go back to pre-1900 level. That does not sound like a good match to me.
- by mars4earth3 February 28, 2008 2:41 PM EST
- No! I am an independent and I want a better choice than McCain or Obama. Both of them are completely unfit to be President. McCain will easily beat Obama. Obama has never come under heavy fire from the Republicans. Until now the Republicans have given him a free pass. The Clintons have withstood Republican attacks for decades and kept winning elections. The only Republican that Obama beat in a federal election was Alan Keyes, a man that even Al Sharpton could beat. Obama and his supporters whined that the Clintons were too hard on him. If he thinks the Clintons are too tough he will have a big surprise in the election. Remember the Swiftboaters for Truth, and the Willie Horton ads? Once the Republican attack groups start against Obama he will be history. That is why only Hillary can beat McCain.
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