Hi folks!
There are a few assumptions in the popular vote math that I would like to call out. I think this is an issue beyond winning the nomination for any one candidate and calls out a problem for us in the General Election, and which also needs to be fixed before we do this again in four years.
o First the unsolvable math. We have:
- Cuacus states we can't really calculate
- PR which can't vote in the GE
- MI that didn't vote out loud for each candidate
- FL where I live and witnessed "campaign irregularity" at the polling station (see my other comments or ask and I'll repeat that, but not trying to stir that pot atm so I leave it there)
- Rush Limbaugh Operation Chaos
- Ms. Ferraro's Feb 25 NYT article on why Super Delegate system was created.
- So, put them all together and if it is within a few hundred thousand votes there is literally no possibility of ever getting 100% consensus on what the exact numbers are, nor which candidate has the actual lead. This is a fault inherent in the current Democratic primary system - iny my opinion a critical one.
o I am concerned with a perception of unfair play if it is argued too far that the winner of the race is the loser in popular vote.
- Note I say "perception", because if any of us take one step back we should be able to agree that the final numbers on this will be - at best - "arguable". Whether there is any unfair play or not, it will be used against us by our opponents.
- This is in itself imo one of the larger threats in the GE regardless of who the Democratic candidate is. I can hear Rush and the Far Right Surrogates chanting "Florida 2000" endlessly as we approach November. "According to our next highly qualified guest, those filthy Democrats just repeated the 2000 vote inside their own party!!! What a bunch of elitist hypocrites!!!!"
- I'm an Indie and I was already pissed at both parties for taking away my ability to vote in the first race since I moved back from Canada - and I hadn't even picked a party (though I knew it was Dem time and liked the pack), much less a candidate. I can feel in my bones how this is going to resonate in the middle, and the more we do to fabricate the argument for the Right the more they will use it.
Frankly, I think the problems with the Republicans far outweigh the negatives this will add in the current cycle, but it is still a negative and it may well come back in future elections. This is a problem the Democratic Party is going to have to look hard at to prevent handing future "Florida 2000" arguments to the Republican party.
As you can see from Ms. Ferraro's article, the Super Delegate system was setup to fix a problem that crept up in a previous race. This "popular vote" issue is another such issue that needs to be remedied for the long-term health of the party.
-cheers!
-chris
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