The Association of State Green Parties
MEDIA ADVISORY

NADER'S INCLUSION IN THE DEBATES WILL BOOST TV RATINGS
Tuesday, August 15, 2000


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Contacts:
Nancy Allen, Media Coordinator
207-326-4576, nallen@acadia.net
Scott McLarty, Media Coordinator
202-518-5624, scottmclarty@yahoo.com

NADER'S INCLUSION IN THE DEBATES WILL BOOST TV RATINGS

WASHINGTON, D.C. -- If the Commission on the Presidential Debates decides -- or is compelled by court order -- to invite Green Party candidate Ralph Nader to participate in the debates this fall, one result will be higher ratings for the TV networks carrying the debates, as more viewers tune in to watch a dramatic, issue-oriented confrontation.

In 1996, the early October debate between Bill Clinton and Bob Dole drew a third fewer viewers than the 1992 debate that included Mr. Clinton, George Bush, and H. Ross Perot, according to Nielsen Media Research figures.

According to a 1996 Associated Press report ("Presidential debate viewership down by one-third, ratings show," October 8, 1996), "The numbers show the 90-minute faceoff between President Clinton and Bob Dole captured a total rating of 29.3 on ABC, CBS, NBC and CNN.  That translates into 28.4 million households."

"That figure can be most easily compared to 1992's second Bush-Clinton-Perot debate, since CBS did not air the first debate that year. The three-way debate drew total ratings of 46.3 for ABC, CBS, NBC and CNN, translating to a total of 43.1 million households."

The lackluster contest between Gov. George W. Bush and Vice President Al Gore will probably motivate even fewer Americans to tune in to this year's debates.  The TV networks, recognizing the lack of excitement in the 2000 national race between the major party candidates, decided to limit coverage of the Republican and Democratic Party conventions to one or two hours each evening. 

There's little doubt that a three-way debate, or four-way, with Pat Buchanan's participation, will produce sparks and attract viewers hungry for drama and political content.  Will the TV networks and their sponsors support the demand that Mr. Nader and Mr. Buchanan be invited?

Mr. Nader has joined Mr. Buchanan's lawsuit against the Debates Commission.  Many Greens and others plan to meet in Boston on October 3, the date of the first debate, to protest the engineering of elections inherent in the Bush-Gore debates' exclusion of national candidates.


More information...
* Get Nader into the Debates!:
http://www.votenader.org/debates/index.html
* Nader 2000 Campaign:  http://www.votenader.org
* Association of State Green Parties:
http://www.greenparties.org

More information:

Green Party platform: http://www.gp.org
Nader 2000 Campaign: http://www.votenader.org
Association of State Green Parties: http://www.greenparties.org

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