November 28, 2009 2:17 PM

Nader Noncommittal on Conn. Senate Run

(AP)  Consumer activist and Connecticut native Ralph Nader said Friday he is "absorbing" the reaction he's receiving about a possible bid for the U.S. Senate, saying he wants to first gauge the level of grassroots support before making a decision.

Many people have called on Nader to jump into the hotly-contested race to challenge Democratic Sen. Chris Dodd, who has been struggling in recent polls. Nader said he's getting increasingly more requests from Connecticut Green Party members, independents and supporters of Ned Lamont, the upstart Democrat who challenged Sen. Joe Lieberman in the 2006 election.

"I'm just absorbing a lot of the feedback before I make a decision," said Nader, who appeared at the Noah Webster Library in West Hartford, where he was signing his new book, "Only the Super-Rich Can Save Us!" (Seven Stories Press).

More than 100 people turned out to hear Nader talk about his book, including some Green Party members who held signs that read, "Run Ralph Run!" The state's Green Party has been stepping up efforts to encourage Nader to get into the race, saying this marks one of the best opportunities for the Greens to win a U.S. Senate seat.

Some Democrats accused Nader of being a spoiler in the 2000 presidential election when he ran as the Green Party's candidate and got 2.7 percent of the vote. Republican George W. Bush won the electoral vote that year, defeating the Democrat, former Vice President Al Gore.

This time around, supporters look to 75-year-old Nader as the person who can reform government and hold the banking industry accountable. Dodd has come under criticism for his role in the national financial crisis as chairman of the Senate Banking Committee. A recent Quinnipiac University Poll showed 54 percent of voters disapprove of the job that he's been doing in Washington.

Nader said he wants to determine whether voters are truly dissatisfied with Dodd and whether there are enough willing to work throughout Connecticut's 169 towns "for a new breed of political representation in Washington."

"It really depends on what kind of momentum there is and how many people are willing to roll up their sleeves because I'm very accustomed to people saying 'Run, Ralph, run,' and then they drift away, predisposed and preoccupied with their daily life," he told reporters. "It has to be bottom-up."

Nader said Dodd is "very personable" and shouldn't be written off. He also warned against speculation that Connecticut's senior senator might be urged by national Democrats not to run for re-election. But he said Dodd "has been very concessionary to the banks and the brokerage houses for years."

Dodd's campaign and the state Democrats have declined to comment on a possible Nader candidacy.

When Vic Lancia of Portland made it to the front of the line Friday so Nader could sign his book, he told his hero that he would be willing to help out with a Senate campaign.

"I'm retired, Ralph. I've got good legs to go to work for you," Lancia told Nader, who just nodded and smiled. "Give me something to do next year, Ralph."

Tim McKee, a spokesman for the Connecticut Green Party, said the party is committed to proving to Nader there will be support, both volunteers and financial contributors. He said he's pleased to see that people not associated with the party already have begun Internet pages on social networking sites, such as Facebook, urging Nader to run.

"We're getting responses all across the nation. It's on all the blogs and stuff," McKee said. "They want him to run to win. That's the most important thing. This is not symbolic or anything like that. It's a run to win kind of effort."


For more info:
nader.org
By AP Political Writer Susan Haigh

© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 20 Comments
by justdatrooth November 30, 2009 3:45 AM EST
If Nader had had his way we'd still be driving those monster gas-guzzlers from the 60's!!! Nader protested compact cars with his book "Unsafe At Any Speed". Instead he advocated pollution and petroleum profligacy.
Reply to this comment
by ddog88 November 28, 2009 11:03 PM EST
Vincent Price looks really good, had no idea he had political interests.
Reply to this comment
by rightbehind November 28, 2009 9:23 PM EST
I would like to see him take one of the republican or even a republicrat seats. If he did he needs to remember not to throw the baby out with the bath water.
Reply to this comment
by rightbehind November 28, 2009 9:10 PM EST
I think Nader would make a great Senator. I wish he was running in my state.
Reply to this comment
by formrusmcsgt November 28, 2009 8:39 PM EST
Dodd needs to go, no doubt.

But could Ralph actually win an election?

I can't see it - way too eccentric.
Reply to this comment
by P0STING_AWAY November 28, 2009 8:24 PM EST
The last time I posted on this...it didn't make it on the board.
But, what I said was people are assuming that Nader is honest and
will represent them...we assumed that about Obama, too!
Has it happened, yet?
=====================================================================
Obama is honest and DOES represent most of us.
Are you a
Right-Wing-Koolaid-Drinking-Tinfoil-Hat-Wearing-Tea-Bagger ????????
He does not represent you.
Sarah "I've-gone-rogue-even-though-I-do-not-know-what-that-means" Palin
would like to represent you.
PLEASE vote for her every chance you get.
She is like a three-legged horse .... RACING IN THE KENTUCKY DERBY !!!!
Reply to this comment
by stn_sage November 29, 2009 2:49 PM EST
So far, Obama is representing corporate America like the Democrat Congress and he's not going to get the votes of Independents like me!

Neither, will they...unless they get a LOT of their promises enacted!
by stn_sage November 28, 2009 6:45 PM EST
The last time I posted on this...it didn't make it on the board.

But, what I said was people are assuming that Nader is honest and
will represent them...we assumed that about Obama, too!

Has it happened, yet?
Reply to this comment
by porcine_aviator November 28, 2009 6:44 PM EST
Even Nader is better than that creepy, obnoxious POS Joe Lieberman.
Reply to this comment
by P0STING_AWAY November 28, 2009 5:19 PM EST
RALPH-O-MATIC:
I will support ANYONE - except you.
I would even support BRAINLESS-AIMLESS (aka Sarah Palin).
OK, that was a lie.
So, I will support ANYONE BUT YOU (or B-A).
Reply to this comment
by AOCGUY November 28, 2009 5:01 PM EST
Ralph - You are getting a little long in the tooth for this aren't you?
Reply to this comment
by Midwest71 November 28, 2009 5:20 PM EST
You're kidding me right AOCGUY? These guys serve into their 90's . They are senile and can't walk like Senator Byrd or Strom Thurmond (now dead) who served (if you want to call it that) until he was in his 90's. Yes, there should be a law to prevent this, and I think Nader is they guy who would sponsor a law preventing this and establishing term limits, as well as REAL campaign finance reform.
by AOCGUY November 29, 2009 10:45 AM EST
midwest - I think you got my point. Heck I remember seeing this guy speak when I was in college and that was before many of the posters on this site were even born. If elected he will be 77 when sworn in and in his 80's before his first term is up. On the other hand his age does insure term limit.
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