Nader wins!
Green Party hopeful edges Clinton in Utne Reader survey
September/October 1996
An Utne Reader Survey, September 1996
MINNEAPOLIS–Ralph Nader topped Bill Clinton in a presidential preference poll published in the July/August issue of Utne Reader. The Green Party candidate garnered 21 percent of the vote from more than 1,500 Utne readers and Cafe Utne users who responded to the survey. Clinton received 15 percent, while Republican Party nominee Bob Dole picked up a paltry 2 percent, trailing Senator Bill Bradley, Representative Pat Schroeder, and Hillary Clinton, each of whom pulled 10 percent. Meanwhile, Reform Party candidate Ross Perot drew only 1 percent.
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In other results, a vast majority (76 percent) of the respondents reported that they'd had it with the two-party system and would vote for a third-party candidate; 46 percent said they would give up megamalls for a more human world; and 31 percent singled out "moral and spiritual decay" as the biggest issue facing the nation today.
Support for a third-party alternative partly explains Nader's popularity, but his reputation as an unflinching opponent of corporate America also struck a powerful chord with respondents, who clearly value leaders who mean what they say and say what they mean. More than a third of them (36 percent) said the key attribute they look for in a leader is "courage of convictions"; another 23 percent said they demand "personal integrity."
Nader outpolled Clinton in all age categories, but was particularly strong among 31- to 50-year-olds, drawing nearly twice as many votes from that group as the president. Only among voters aged 50 and over did Clinton compete favorably with Nader.
As expected, Utne readers see beyond the issues the mainstream media tirelessly trumpet. Only 8 percent of the respondents, for instance, cited crime as the nation's number one problem, and such issues as corporate downsizing and the budget crisis drew little attention. In addition to the moral and spiritual crisis already mentioned, respondents said they were mostly concerned about the environment (24 percent) and racial tension (15 percent), while campaign finance reform and corporate domination of society were among the issues that received write-in votes.