Re: Silly debate in some ways
by
Issywise
04/28/2008, 3:01 PM #
You say "...there's nothing remotely
anti-democratic about not counting the votes in an election conducted
in breech of the rules."
So too said Bull Connor, so to say the Ayatollahs in Iran, so too said Joseph Stalin.
The DNC adopted it rules because if preferred that state's other than Florida and Michigan matter most--Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina. When the DNC adopted its rules it knew that the sentiment in Florida and Michigan was for moving their primary forward to matter for a change. In fact, the DNC you defend adopted its vote voiding rules for the very purpose of enforcing its decision that voters in Florida and Michigan should continue to not matter in the candidate selection process.
Forty nine year old Floridians have never voted in a presidential primary where their vote mattered. The last time a Florida primary vote mattered, George Wallace was on the ballot.
There was no "agreement" with Florida or Michigan--only their legislatures have the power to set election dates.
The DNC unilaterally decided other states would matter more and then added a threat to impose their will on the tens of millions of people living in Michigan and Florida, "Change your primary date in an attempt to matter then we'll void your votes, so you won't matter anyhow."
The challenge was accepted by the legislatures and we've picked up sides as a result.
You stand in support of a political party wherein a small group of operative can decide which states matter and which do not. You stand in support of a party that would void millions of votes rather than let the votes upset a preferred schedule for who should matter. You stand with the new tradition that party committees can void primary votes by the million in advance.
I stand on the ground, first and foremost, that any system that letting party officials void million of votes is undemocratic. I stand on the ground that legislatures--accountable to the voters in the states, should set election dates--including primary dates. I stand on the ground that party officials are unfit to decide whose important and who is not, unfit to design the mechanism by which we select our presidential candidates.
Look at the events of this primary season: voiding millions of votes, halving votes, doubling some votes, holding caucuses to water-down election result the minute primary balloting ends and setting-up a body of 800 free agents to act independent of voters in selecting the candidates.
All of that Rube Goldberg nonsense is antidemocratic. What we need is laws that every vote is counted and counted whole--the not unfamiliar principle of one-person one-vote.
What's mostly wrong is complacency in the public.
In 2000 the Republican Majority leaders in the Florida House announced, as the votes were still being counted, that because they had the power set forth in the Federal Constitution to do it, no matter how the vote totals came out, they were going to certify an electoral college slate for Bush.
This didn't offend our happy electorate either and so no correction was made at the time.
Democracy without standards is anything--even a nation where 30 or so political hacks can void millions of votes and other people will happily wander on content that all is well.
Add to your list of reasons not to vote for Clinton or Obama the disgusting kowtowing they did when millions of votes were voided.
You ought to be indignant. Democracy dies by complacency.