Why I Want Barack Obama to Win, But Won’t Vote For Him

By Arlen Grossman/ The Big Picture Report

thesavoia.com

Four years of President Mitt Romney is not something I wish to contemplate. A Romney-Ryan win would be an unmitigated disaster for this nation. I would prefer that President Barack Obama be re-elected. The incumbent President is a pleasant, smart guy and has some accomplishments of note under his belt. But when I mark my election ballot in November, it won’t be for the moderately liberal, corporate-friendly Democrat. I’ll be marking my ballot for a third-party candidate, either Rocky Anderson of the Justice Party or the Green Party’s Jill Stein.

Here’s  why:

(1) I cannot in good conscience vote for a president who has condoned torture and other abhorrent war crimes, as well as the biggest white-collar crime in American history, the 2008 Financial Meltdown. President Obama did not cause either one, but by refusing to hold the perpetrators accountable, he is in effect, condoning them.

By allowing George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and their friends to escape accountability for lying us into an illegal, unnecessary war in Iraq, and ravaging the constitution and our civil liberties in the name of the “War on Terror,” and by continuing many of the same unconscionable practices, the Obama Admistration is in effect owning a share of these egregious crimes against American and international law.

And by allowing Wall Street to wreck the economy, and the lives of millions of innocent American families, and enabling the banksters to profit from their misdeeds and to persist in their misadventures, is another inexcusable offense.  The President’s appointments of some of the perpetrators to key spots in his administration makes a case for Obama as an accessory to those crimes.

squidoo.com

 Despite all that, there is no question that a victory by Mitt Romney and the Republicans would be far worse for this country, and would endanger the hard-won accomplishments of progressive Democrats over the past eighty-some years. Just the prospect of President Mitt Romney picking the next justice on the U.S. Supreme Court is frightening enough. Yet…..

(2) The antiquated American electoral system being what it is, I feel comfortable voting my conscience and marking my ballot for a true third-party progressive. I can comfortably do that because I see no reasonable scenario in which my third-party vote will hurt Barack Obama or help Mitt Romney.

That’s because my state, California, is solid Blue and Barack Obama has a lock on its 55 electoral votes. Obama won California by double digits in 2008, polls show a similar double-digit lead now, and he will win by double-digits in my state November 6.  The Obama and Romney campaigns understand this and will not put significant campaign money in California this year, instead concentrating their resources on the handful of swing states (Florida, Ohio, Virginia, etc) that will truly decide the election.

It is our 18th Century electoral college system that allows me that flexibility. Ultimately, it makes the presidential vote of the majority of the American voters virtually meaningless. Realistically, only a relative handful of undecided voters in a few key “swing states” will decide the winner of the 2012 presidential election. That, along with the unrestricted flow of billionaire and corporate money enabled by Citizens United, makes a mockery of our so-called American “democracy.”

Good luck, President Obama, I hope you win. Just don’t count on my vote.

ALSO PUBLISHED IN OPEDNEWS.COM (headline status) September 15, 2012
This entry was posted in Barack Obama, civil liberties, Democratic Party, elections, foreign policy, government, Justice, law, Mitt Romney, politics, Republican Party, Supreme Court, Wall Street, war and tagged , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

3 Responses to Why I Want Barack Obama to Win, But Won’t Vote For Him

  1. List of X says:

    I am in a safe Obama state too, so I might vote for Stein as well.

  2. mhasegawa says:

    I was going to be very upset with you until I read you were from California which is like my living in Massachusetts. The very first election I voted in I was living in Virginia and voted for Dr. Benjamin Spock and Dick Gregory because I couldn’t bring myself to vote for Humphrey despite his record on civil rights. Well, Humphrey lost VA and someone figured out that he lost by about one vote per percinct. Boy, did I feel terrible!

    • Ouch! I can understand your feelings about the VA vote. If I were in Virginia or another swing state today, I would vote for Obama. But as a resident of California, I feel I can safely make a statement with my vote, and it won’t hurt Obama or help Romney win the state.

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