Hello All,
Thanks for the recs yesterday.
There are a few outside factors involved in this controversy over the popular vote.
A. Caucus Craziness - Obama did better in caucuses, the best example (because of direct comparison) being Texas. There have been reports of funny business by both camps, but neither campaign has pursued them or seriously challenged the result. My guess is that some supporters got overzealous on both sides, just like what we have seen in the blogosphere.
B. Al Gore in 2000 - Everyone who supported Gore was annoyed at the result of 2000's election, when more people voted for Gore than Bush, but Gore didn't get the presidency. Additionally, we're still experiencing the effects of that decision, so the idea of choosing a nominee who lost the popular vote can strike a raw nerve.
C. MI and FL - These two states continue to be a difficult issue. There is no completely successful resolution, because revotes were tabled/canceled. I would LOVE a sourced,investigative diary into how all that happened, because I'm frankly not sure why a MI revote didn't occur. In any case, using the popular vote metric is an easy way of counting MI and FL, which is much more palatable for some.
D. Bias for Clinton - Sorry folks, but you and I know its there. The popular vote wasn't used as a metric by the Clinton campaign until the delegate count didn't look too good. I can't (and won't) speak you, the reader, as an individual, but ask yourself: when did the popular vote become so important for you? Why did that occur?
E. Pledged delegate weirdness - For some, this metric is messed up, since it doesn't look like what happens in November, and because a candidate can "win" a state but lose in the delegates (See Nevada). This one I have to reject outright - these are the rules of the game, and we can't change them now. This is a more Democratic process, and I think it's better than that of the Republicans.
So with all those said, I still assert that I don't buy the popular vote argument without a grain of salt for the spin that I feel is involved. It takes some guts to deny Obama any votes from Michigan when he honored his pledge not to "participate" by taking his hame off.
I also don't buy the argument that these states were disenfranchised. Both of those states and the Democrats involved knew full well the possible consequences of their vote, and the DNC was very clear on what would happen. MI and FL made a choice to have a voice in the process through a delegateless vote, because the conventional wisdom was that this race would be over by Super Tuesday.
That choice backfired just about as well as it could have. The governance of these states took a risk - and lost. I have no sympathy with either state's Democratic leadership - they were complicit in the change as well.
The question, then, is about honoring the voters who did show up. In FL, there were several important things on the ballot, so people had other motives to show up and vote. In MI, I'm not sure, but turnout there was tiny compared to 2004.
Here's a neat calculator for such things, but remember that Clinton's WV margin was about 30000 greater than predicted.
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/horsera ceblog/chooseyourown.html
I don't accept those votes at face value, because of the depressed turnout and the lack of campaigning. Before Super Tuesday, Obama was behind in MANY of the states - he had to work to close some margins and widen others. The lack of campaigning in FL and MI did hurt him, and many, many voters who would have shown up didn't - because they were told this vote didn't matter.
I don't think the votes were meaningless, but they certainly have to be taken with a grain of salt. I do think FL and MI messed with the DNC's early calendar (and didn't apply for waivers), and I do think that needed to be stopped - we use 4 smaller states from all around the country for a reason.
For these reasons, I don't buy into the popular vote argument. This is and was a race for delegates, and you can (and I expect some of you will) say that it produced the wrong nominee. However, you would be saying that REGARDLESS of the popular vote.
This is the process we have. I think the Supers are smart enough that they can judge the popular vote figures while figuring out their endorsements, and I think it makes sense to consider them. I hope that both sides respect the process and what it produces,.
A race for the popular vote would have produced a different campaign, with more efforts to run up turnout in certain primary states. That didn't happen, because the Democratic party made this a delegate race.
All of us are free to criticize the process, and I expect to myself once it is resolved for one candidate or the other. However, the process is what we have - pledged and supers.
The compromise I expect is that FL and MI will be seated at 50% strength, just like the GOP decision. However, I'm glad that their counts have stayed out of the totals thus far - I think these states surrendered their voice in the process, and that they are privileged to get that voice back. Remember, politicians made this decision. If they thought it would have been hugely unpopular, they wouldn't have done it. They chose to have a voice in a different way, and their primaries were reported by the media. I haven't heard much from MI or FL residents who feel hugely disenfranchised.
No matter who is chosen, we won't get anywhere by screaming about the resulting nominee. The process will choose who it chooses, and we all need to get behind the policies that both candidates ran on.
Thanks.
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