Ralph Nader Biography Continued:
In 1955, he graduated magna cum laude from Princeton, and 1958 from Harvard Law
School. It was at Harvard where Nader first explored an unorthodox legal topic:
the engineering design of automobiles. His research resulted in an April 1959
article published in The Nation, "The Safe Car You Can't Buy," in which
he declared, "It is clear Detroit today is designing automobiles for style, cost,
performance and calculated obsolescence, but not—despite the 5,000,000 reported
accidents, nearly 40,000 fatalities, 110,000 permanent disabilities and 1,500,000
injuries yearly—for safety."
In 1963, Nader, then an unknown twenty-nine-year old attorney, abandoned a conventional
law practice in Hartford, Connecticut, and hitchhiked to Washington, DC, to begin
a long odyssey of professional citizenship. "I had one suitcase," he recalled,
"I stayed in the YMCA. Walked across a little street and had a hot dog, my last."
(A few years later he would expose the repulsive ingredients that go into hot
dogs.) He took a job as a consultant to the US Department of Labor, working for
Assistant Secretary of Labor Daniel Patrick Moynihan. Nader moonlighted as a freelance
writer for The Nation and The Christian Science Monitor. He also
acted as an unpaid adviser to a Senate subcommittee which was exploring what role
the federal government might play in auto safety.
In 1965, he targeted General Motors and the American auto industry in his best-selling
book Unsafe at Any Speed: The Designed-In Dangers of the American Automobile. When GM attempted to discredit him, he sued them for invasion of privacy. This
landmark case forced the president of GM to go before a Senate Committee and admit
wrongdoing, and a series of safety laws were passed in 1966 which forced the auto
industry to make drastic design changes for safer motor vehicles. With the money
Nader won in the settlement, he launched the modern consumer movement.
The publicity he received, and the reputation he created for standing up to predatory
corporations, inspired activists from around the nation to go to Washington, DC
to work with Nader. They became known as "Nader's Raiders." Organizations were
launched to push for laws to protect people as consumers, workers and taxpayers,
and the environment, combating corporate abuse, and increasing citizen access
to government.
Ralph Nader and his Raiders have identified and confronted political and corporate
bosses on hundreds of issues. They have fought against insurance companies; global
trade arrangements that allow other countries to evade our environment, labor,
and consumer protection laws; corporate lobbyists and politicians who attempt
to block safety standards, or to deny fair access to court for injured parties.
In 1971, Nader founded Public Citizen, to be the consumers' eyes and ears in Washington,
working for consumer justice and government and corporate accountability. More
than 150,000 people are involved in the six branches of Public Citizen: Congress
Watch, Health Research Group, Litigation Group, Critical Mass Energy Project,
Global Trade Watch and Buyers Up, which protect Americans from government and
corporate power that threatens our well-being.
Congress Watch protects citizen interests before the US Congress. It works
to strengthen protection of health, safety and the environment; demands an end
to corporate subsidies; ensures citizens' ability to address corporate wrongdoing;
exposes money's corruption in politics and advocates for campaign finance reform.
The Health Research Group works for safe foods, drugs and medical devices.
It fights for consumer control over personal health decisions and universal access
to quality health care. It promotes system-wide changes in health care policy,
and advises and informs and the public about drugs and medical devices. The HRG
has exposed the tobacco industry's powerful influence in Washington, the failure
of state medical boards to discipline incompetent doctors, and the excessively
high rate of caesarean section deliveries.
The Litigation Group is the nation's leading public interest law firm. Its
attorneys bring precedent-setting lawsuits on behalf of citizens to protect health,
safety and rights of consumers.
The Critical Mass Energy Project protects America's natural resources and
promotes safe, economical, environmentally sound energy use through conservation
and renewable sources. This organization is a watchdog for nuclear safety issues,
and stops the reckless disposal of radioactive waste.
Global Trade Watch educates the American public about the enormous impact
of international trade and economic globalization on our jobs, the environment,
public health and safety, and democratic accountability. GTW was created in 1993
to focus on an area few public interest groups covered: the international commercial
agreements shaping the current version of globalization.
Buyers Up is a home heating oil cooperative group buying program that acts
as an information resource on home energy and environmental issues. Its reports
have yielded important data on the over-promotion of high-octane gasoline by the
oil companies, and the failure of many states to ensure the quality of gasoline
sold to consumers.
Nader's organizations have been responsible for federal consumer protection laws
such as the Safe Drinking Water Act. They have launched federal regulatory agencies
such as the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), Environment
Protection Agency (EPA), and Consumer Product Safety Administration. They've caused
the recall of millions of defective motor vehicles, and created access to the
government through the Freedom of Information Act of 1974.
Ralph Nader has written, co-written or sponsored many books, including Action
for a Change, Corporate Power in America, Taming the Giant Corporation, Verdicts
on Lawyers, The Menace of Atomic Energy, Who's Poisoning America, Winning the
Insurance Game, The Frugal Shopper. He has created trust, admiration and respect
with his action, integrity, and commitment to the people.
Other groups he inspired include the Aviation Consumer Action Project, Center
for Auto Safety, Clean Water Action Project, Disability Rights Center, Pension
Rights Center, Freedom of Information Clearinghouse, and the Congressional Accountability
Project. Nader helped establish the Public Interest Research Groups (PIRGs), the
organizations funded and controlled by students that function on college campuses
in 23 states. Their impact alone has been tremendous. The groups have published
hundreds of ground-breaking reports and guides, lobbied for laws in their state
legislatures, and called the media's attention to environmental and energy problems.
In November 1980, Nader resigned as director of Public Citizen in order to devote
his energy toward other projects. The organization is now headed by Joan Claybrook,
former head of Congress Watch and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
Today he lectures on the growing "imperialism" of multinational corporations
and of a dangerous convergence of corporate and government power. With the passage
of autocratic trade treaties like the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
and the new General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), the merger of corporate
and government interests is escalating. A magazine founded by Nader in 1980, The
Multinational Monitor, tracks the global intrusion of multinational corporations
and their impact on developing nations, labor, and the environment.
Nader has focused his efforts on empowering citizens to create a responsive government
sensitive to citizens' needs. The top of his agenda has been defending the US
civil justice system. Corporate lobbyists and certain legislators have worked
on both the federal and state levels to limit consumers' rights to seek justice
in court in the areas of product liability, securities fraud, and medical negligence.
Nader recently co-authored a book on corporate lawyers and the perils of the legal
system entitled No Contest.
The Savings and Loan bailout is also a large concern of his: the de-regulation
of the banking industry in the early 1980s led to speculative real estate deals
which taxpayers must now finance. This is one of many examples of corporate subsidies
taxpayers finance through a system Nader calls "corporate welfare."
He is an advocate of insurance reform including loss-prevention activity and insurance
consumer education. He co-authored the book Winning the Insurance Game,
and has been working with consumer activists in Massachusetts and California on
lowering the cost and raising the coverage of automobile and health insurance
in those states.
Nader is un-intimidated by the deregulations posed by the Reagan and Bush administrations
and perpetuated by Clinton. He says, "You've got to keep the pressure on,
even if you lose. The essence of the citizen's movement is persistence."
When asked to define himself, he always responds, "Full-time citizen, the
most important office in America for anyone to achieve."
Ralph Nader is one of America's most effective social critics. He has been called
Muckraker, Consumer Crusader, and Public Defender. His documented criticism of
government and industry has had widespread effect on public awareness and bureaucratic
power. Time magazine called him "US's toughest customer." His inspiration
and example have awakened consumer advocates, citizen activists, and public interest
lawyers who have established more public awareness organizations throughout the
country.
Nader's original research organization is the Washington, DC-based Center for
Study of Responsive Law. Since 1969, the Center has produced innumerable reports
on wide-ranging subjects such as the Interstate Commerce Commission, food safety,
pensions, corporate welfare, and government procurement.
His impact on the American political system is tremendous. As former US Senator
James Abourezk observed, "For the first time in US history, a movement exists
whose sole purpose is to keep large corporations and the government honest."
(This biography is from www.votenader.org)