04-01-2008, 05:33 PM
a Good article on how race came into picture during primaries. More blacks in a state means more polarization. In democrats primary, there is a sort of U-curve on obama margin of victories. Very less % means more whites vote for obama, but as blacks % increases the white vote goes down with obama losing until the black % is so high obama can win on black votes alone. But this higher black % will work only in primaries as in general election non-democrats also vote who are whites who will vote against obama and democrat nominee. this would have worked in the less black % states, but that is where Rev Wright played spoiler. (The logic is somewhat similar to muslim concentration in constituencies in indian elections. Lesser the number of muslims, more secular the hindus and higher concentration makes hindus more "communal")
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<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The New York Senatorâs last-ditch efforts to win the Democratic nomination could rely on the âRace Chasmâ and the trampling of democracy.
By David Sirota
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Google the phrase âClinton firewallâ and you will come up with an ever-lengthening list of scenarios that Hillary Clintonâs presidential campaign has said will stop Barack Obamaâs candidacy. The New Hampshire primary, said her campaign, would be the firewall to end Obamamania. Then Super Tuesday was supposed to be the firewall. Then Texas. Now Pennsylvania and Indiana.
For four months, the political world has been hypnotized by this string-along game, not bothering to ask what this Clinton tactic really is. The âjust wait until the next statesâ mantra has diverted our attention from the firewallâs grounding in race and democracy. But now, with only a few months until the Democratic National Convention in Denver, the firewallâs true composition is coming into focus. Whether Obama can overcome this barrier will likely decide who becomes the Democratsâ presidential nominee.
The Race Chasm
Since at least the South Carolina primary, the Clinton campaignâs message has been stripped of its poll-tested nuance and become a rather crass drumbeat aimed at reminding voters that Obama is black. Whether it is former President Clinton likening Obamaâs campaign to Jesse Jacksonâs; Clinton aides telling the Associated Press that Obama is âthe black candidate,â or Geraldine Ferraro tapping into anti-affirmative action anger by claiming Obamaâs success is a product of his skin color, barely a week goes by without a white Clinton surrogate injecting race into the nominating contest.
That is one of the twin pillars of the Clinton firewallâa well-honed strategy aimed at maximizing âthe Race Chasm.â The Race Chasm may sound like a conventional discussion of the black-white divide, but it is one of the least-discussed geographic, demographic and political dynamics driving the contest between Clinton and Obama. I call it the Race Chasm because of what it looks like on a graph. Hereâs how it works.
To date, 42 states and the District of Columbia have voted in primaries or caucuses. Factor out the two senatorsâ home states (Illinois, New York and Arkansas), the two states where Edwards was a major factor (New Hampshire and Iowa) and the one state where only Clinton was on the ballot (Michigan) and you are left with 37 elections where the head-to-head Clinton-Obama matchup has been most clear. Subtract the Latino factor (a hugely important but wholly separate influence on the election) by removing the four states whose Hispanic population is over 25 percent (California, New Mexico, Texas and Arizona), and you are left with 33 elections that best represent how the black-white split has impacted the campaign.
As the Race Chasm graph shows, when you chart Obamaâs margin of victory or defeat against the percentage of African-Americans living in that state, a striking U trend emerges. That precipitous dip in Obamaâs performance in states with a big-but-not-huge African-American population is the Race Chasmâand that chasm is no coincidence.
On the left of the graph, among the states with the smallest black population, Obama has destroyed Clinton. With the candidates differing little on issues, this trend is likely due, in part, to the fact that black-white racial politics are all but non-existent in nearly totally white states. Thus, Clinton has less built-in advantages. Though some of these states like Idaho or Wyoming have reputations for intolerance thanks to the occasional militia headlines, black-white interaction in these places is not a part of peopleâs daily lives, nor their political decisions. Put another way, the dialect of racismâthe hints of the Ferraro comment and codes of Bill Clintonâs Jesse Jackson reference, for instanceâis not politically effective because such language has not historically been a significant part of the local political discussion. Thatâs especially true in the liberal-skewed Democratic primary.
On the right of the graph among the states with the largest black populations, Obama has also crushed Clinton. Unlike the super-white states, these statesâmany in the Deep Southâhave a long and sordid history of day-to-day, black-white racial politics, with Richard Nixon famously pioneering Republicanâs âsouthern strategyâ to maximize the racist segregationist vote in general elections. âBut in the Democratic primary the black vote is so huge [in these states], it can overwhelm the white vote,â says Thomas Schaller, a political science professor at the University of MarylandâBaltimore. That black vote has gone primarily to Obama, helping him win these states by big margins.
It is in the chasm where Clinton has consistently defeated Obama. These are geographically diverse states from Ohio to Oklahoma to Massachusetts where racial politics is very much a part of the political culture, but where the black vote is too small to offset a white vote racially motivated by the Clinton campaignâs coded messages and tactics. The chasm exists in the cluster of states whose population is above 6 percent and below 17 percent black, and Clinton has won most of them by beating Obama handily among white working-class voters.
In sum, Obama has only been able to eke out victories in three states with Race Chasm demographics, where African-American populations make up more than 6 percent but less than 17 percent of the total population. And those three states provided him extra advantages: He won Illinois, his home state; Missouri, an Illinois border state; and Connecticut, a state whose Democratic electorate just two years before supported Ned Lamontâs insurgent candidacy against Joe Lieberman, and therefore had uniquely developed infrastructure and political cultures inclined to support an outsider candidacy. Meanwhile, three-quarters of all the states Clinton has won are those with Race Chasm demographics.
Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell (D), a Clinton supporter, publicly acknowledged this dynamic in February. He suggested to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette editorial board that Obamaâs ethnicity could prevent him from winning the state, which, at 10.6 percent black, falls squarely in the Race Chasm.
âYouâve got conservative whites here, and I think there are some whites who are probably not ready to vote for an African-American candidate,â Rendell said.
That was echoed by Obama supported David K. Levdansky, a state representative from western Pennsylvania. âFor all our wanting to believe that race is less of an issue than ever before, the reality of racism still exists,â he told the New York Times. âItâs not that [Pennsylvanians] donât think heâs qualified, but some people fear that it might be empowering the black community by electing Obama.â
Primaries are now looming in a critical group of Race Chasm statesâPennsylvania, Indiana (8.8 percent black), Kentucky (7.5 percent black) and West Virginia (only 3 percent black, but a place influenced by the Ohio, Maryland, Virginia and Pennsylvania media markets, which undoubtedly makes race politics more customary than in other mostly white states).
Clinton, knowing the Race Chasm can fortify her firewall, has subsequently intensified her efforts to put race front and center in the campaign, most recently attacking Jeremiah Wright, Obamaâs former pastor who has delivered fiery speeches indicting white racism. She is so determined to raise race issues in advance of these Race Chasm contests that she gave an in-person interview to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review specifically to criticize Wright. For reference, the Tribune-Review is a conservative newspaper in western Pennsylvania owned by the same Richard Mellon Scaife who funded the anti-Clinton witchhunts of the â90s.
Clearly, each primary and caucus contest has its own unique politics, and race is not the only factor moving votes. Despite the oversimplified punditry that comes with presidential campaigns, demographic groupsâwhite, black or any otherâdo not vote as monoliths. That said, a phenomenon as stark as the Race Chasm over 33 elections is obviously affecting the campaignâparticularly considering the regional and red-blue diversity of each state cluster on the graph.
âWhen the black population is really small, racial polarization is small enough that Obama can win, and when the black population is large, any polarization is drowned out by the overwhelming size of the Democratic black vote,â says Schaller, who recently authored the book Whistling Past Dixie analyzing demographic voting trends. âBut in the middle range, polarization is sizeable enough that black voters cannot overcome it, and these are the states where she wins.â
The Superdelegates
Clinton has two reasons to try to highlight race and maximize the Race Chasm, both related to the second pillar of her firewall: the superdelegates. These are the senators, congress people, governors and party officials who control roughly 40 percent of the Democratic National Convention votes needed to secure the nomination.
First and most obvious, she wants to win as many of the remaining states as possible to keep her tally of âpledgedâ delegates (i.e., delegates won in primaries and caucuses) as large as possible. The Politico.com correctly reported in March that âClinton has virtually no chance of winningâ the race for pledged delegates. But winning some remaining states and keeping the count close will make it easier for her to argue the race was almost a tie, and thus theoretically easier to convince superdelegates to throw their support to her, even if she loses the popular vote and the pledged delegate count.
Clinton, in fact, is already making the argument that she is only narrowly behind. âWeâre separated by, you know, a little more than a hundred delegates,â she told Time, not bothering to note that a hundred delegates is more than the entire delegate count from major states like Missouri or Wisconsin.
Additionally, in trying to maximize the Race Chasm by focusing on race-tinged issues, Clinton is tacitly making an âelectabilityâ argument to superdelegates. (This is not a stupid strategy in courting officials who are all, in one way or another, election-focused political operatives.) Part of that âelectabilityâ argument hinges on portraying Obama as âunelectableââand what better way to do that than stoke as many race-focused controversies as possible? It is a standard primary tactic: Launch a line of attackâin this case, the âWright controversyââand then claim the attack will be used by Republicans to defeat an opponentâin this case Obamaâshould he become the general election candidate. Of course, it doesnât hurt Clintonâs cause that, close to half of the superdelegates are white, according to The Politico.
Ruthless, but probably useless
As ugly as it is, the Clinton firewall strategy is stunning in its ruthlessness. It has been half a century since the major triumphs of the civil rights and party reform movements, yet a major Democratic candidate is attempting to secure a presidential nomination by exploiting racial divides and negotiating backroom superdelegate deals.
But success is not likely.
Even if Clinton wins big in the remaining Race Chasm states, Obama has advantages in Montana, Oregon, North Carolina and South Dakotaâsmaller states, to be sure, but probably enough for him to avoid losing his pledged delegate lead.
That leaves the âelectabilityâ argument with the superdelegatesâand the problem for Clinton there is that polls show Obama is at least as âelectableâ as Clinton, if not more so.
A state-by-state SurveyUSA poll in March found both Obama and Clinton defeating Republican nominee John McCain in a hypothetical general election matchupâand Obama actually getting four more Electoral College votes than Clinton. In Colorado, a key swing state, a March Rasmussen Reports poll found Obama tying McCain, but McCain clobbering Clinton by 14 percentage points. A February Rasmussen poll reported a similar phenomenon in Pennsylvania, with McCain beating Clinton by two points, but Obama beating McCain by 10.
And then there is the Pew poll taken immediately after the major wave of media surrounding the Wright controversy. The survey showed both Obama and Clinton defeating McCain, but more significantly, Obama actually performing slightly better among white voters than Clintonâa blow to those Clinton backers hoping that superdelegates may begin to fear a white voter backlash against the Illinois senator.
If her turn to more hardball tactics is any indication, Clinton may be trying to preempt the firewall strategyâs failure. In two bold moves at the end of March, her campaign launched a two-pronged initiative to intimidate Democratic leaders and to strongarm pledged delegates who are already committed to Obama through primaries and caucuses.
First, the Clinton campaign organized 20 major Democratic Party financiers to release a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi upbraiding her for appearing on ABC News and saying, âIf the votes of the superdelegates overturn what happened in the elections, it would be harmful to the Democratic Party.â According to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics, the contributors who signed the letter have given a combined $23.6 million to Democrats since 1999. These mega-donors, clearly wielding their financial heft as an implied threat, claimed that Pelosi had taken an âuntenable positionâ by merely suggesting superdelegates should avoid overturning the results of democratic primaries and caucuses.
At the same time, Clinton told Time that technically, even pledged delegates who are supposed to represent the will of voters are permitted to change their vote at the Democratic National Convention. âEvery delegate with very few exceptions is free to make up his or her mind however they choose,â she said, introducing the possibility of a new, more brass-knuckled kind of delegate campaign. âWe talk a lot about so-called pledged delegates, but every delegate is expected to exercise independent judgment.â
A late March NBC News poll reports that if a candidate âloses among delegates selected by voters but still wins the nomination,â a plurality (41 percent) of Democratic voters believe that candidate would be ânot legitimate.â Many of those surveyed probably remember both the recent episodes of stolen elections, and the past eras of brokered conventions and corrupt, often racist political machines stuffing ballot boxes.
The latter, in fact, was precisely how the epithet âDemocrat Partyââas opposed to âDemocratic Partyââwas coined. As the language-obsessed William Safire documented 24 years ago in a New York Times column, the term âDemocrat Partyâ was created by Republican leaders in the mid-20th century to imply that their opponentsâmany bigoted segregationists and machine polsâwere, in fact, undemocratic.
After the Florida and Ohio debacles in the 2000 and 2004 election, Republican lamentations about democracy are, of course, absurd. Additionally, many machines have long ago decayed ⦠except for the one inside the Democratic Party itselfâthe Clinton machine. If that machineâs firewall strategy continues to exploit the Race Chasm and threaten to trample the will of voters, Clinton will be asking the Democratic Party, one that has come to champion racial tolerance and democracy, to truly become the Democrat Partyâone that ignores those ideals in favor of a single Democrat.
David Sirota is a senior editor at In These Times and a bestselling author whose newest book, "The Uprising," will be released in June of 2008. He is a fellow at the Campaign for America's Future and a board member of the Progressive States Network -- both nonpartisan organizations. His blog is at www.credoaction.com/sirota.
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My Webpage
<img src='http://www.inthesetimes.com/images/32/05/racegraph.gif' border='0' alt='user posted image' />
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->The New York Senatorâs last-ditch efforts to win the Democratic nomination could rely on the âRace Chasmâ and the trampling of democracy.
By David Sirota
Click to zoom.
Share Digg del.icio.us Reddit Newsvine
Google the phrase âClinton firewallâ and you will come up with an ever-lengthening list of scenarios that Hillary Clintonâs presidential campaign has said will stop Barack Obamaâs candidacy. The New Hampshire primary, said her campaign, would be the firewall to end Obamamania. Then Super Tuesday was supposed to be the firewall. Then Texas. Now Pennsylvania and Indiana.
For four months, the political world has been hypnotized by this string-along game, not bothering to ask what this Clinton tactic really is. The âjust wait until the next statesâ mantra has diverted our attention from the firewallâs grounding in race and democracy. But now, with only a few months until the Democratic National Convention in Denver, the firewallâs true composition is coming into focus. Whether Obama can overcome this barrier will likely decide who becomes the Democratsâ presidential nominee.
The Race Chasm
Since at least the South Carolina primary, the Clinton campaignâs message has been stripped of its poll-tested nuance and become a rather crass drumbeat aimed at reminding voters that Obama is black. Whether it is former President Clinton likening Obamaâs campaign to Jesse Jacksonâs; Clinton aides telling the Associated Press that Obama is âthe black candidate,â or Geraldine Ferraro tapping into anti-affirmative action anger by claiming Obamaâs success is a product of his skin color, barely a week goes by without a white Clinton surrogate injecting race into the nominating contest.
That is one of the twin pillars of the Clinton firewallâa well-honed strategy aimed at maximizing âthe Race Chasm.â The Race Chasm may sound like a conventional discussion of the black-white divide, but it is one of the least-discussed geographic, demographic and political dynamics driving the contest between Clinton and Obama. I call it the Race Chasm because of what it looks like on a graph. Hereâs how it works.
To date, 42 states and the District of Columbia have voted in primaries or caucuses. Factor out the two senatorsâ home states (Illinois, New York and Arkansas), the two states where Edwards was a major factor (New Hampshire and Iowa) and the one state where only Clinton was on the ballot (Michigan) and you are left with 37 elections where the head-to-head Clinton-Obama matchup has been most clear. Subtract the Latino factor (a hugely important but wholly separate influence on the election) by removing the four states whose Hispanic population is over 25 percent (California, New Mexico, Texas and Arizona), and you are left with 33 elections that best represent how the black-white split has impacted the campaign.
As the Race Chasm graph shows, when you chart Obamaâs margin of victory or defeat against the percentage of African-Americans living in that state, a striking U trend emerges. That precipitous dip in Obamaâs performance in states with a big-but-not-huge African-American population is the Race Chasmâand that chasm is no coincidence.
On the left of the graph, among the states with the smallest black population, Obama has destroyed Clinton. With the candidates differing little on issues, this trend is likely due, in part, to the fact that black-white racial politics are all but non-existent in nearly totally white states. Thus, Clinton has less built-in advantages. Though some of these states like Idaho or Wyoming have reputations for intolerance thanks to the occasional militia headlines, black-white interaction in these places is not a part of peopleâs daily lives, nor their political decisions. Put another way, the dialect of racismâthe hints of the Ferraro comment and codes of Bill Clintonâs Jesse Jackson reference, for instanceâis not politically effective because such language has not historically been a significant part of the local political discussion. Thatâs especially true in the liberal-skewed Democratic primary.
On the right of the graph among the states with the largest black populations, Obama has also crushed Clinton. Unlike the super-white states, these statesâmany in the Deep Southâhave a long and sordid history of day-to-day, black-white racial politics, with Richard Nixon famously pioneering Republicanâs âsouthern strategyâ to maximize the racist segregationist vote in general elections. âBut in the Democratic primary the black vote is so huge [in these states], it can overwhelm the white vote,â says Thomas Schaller, a political science professor at the University of MarylandâBaltimore. That black vote has gone primarily to Obama, helping him win these states by big margins.
It is in the chasm where Clinton has consistently defeated Obama. These are geographically diverse states from Ohio to Oklahoma to Massachusetts where racial politics is very much a part of the political culture, but where the black vote is too small to offset a white vote racially motivated by the Clinton campaignâs coded messages and tactics. The chasm exists in the cluster of states whose population is above 6 percent and below 17 percent black, and Clinton has won most of them by beating Obama handily among white working-class voters.
In sum, Obama has only been able to eke out victories in three states with Race Chasm demographics, where African-American populations make up more than 6 percent but less than 17 percent of the total population. And those three states provided him extra advantages: He won Illinois, his home state; Missouri, an Illinois border state; and Connecticut, a state whose Democratic electorate just two years before supported Ned Lamontâs insurgent candidacy against Joe Lieberman, and therefore had uniquely developed infrastructure and political cultures inclined to support an outsider candidacy. Meanwhile, three-quarters of all the states Clinton has won are those with Race Chasm demographics.
Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell (D), a Clinton supporter, publicly acknowledged this dynamic in February. He suggested to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette editorial board that Obamaâs ethnicity could prevent him from winning the state, which, at 10.6 percent black, falls squarely in the Race Chasm.
âYouâve got conservative whites here, and I think there are some whites who are probably not ready to vote for an African-American candidate,â Rendell said.
That was echoed by Obama supported David K. Levdansky, a state representative from western Pennsylvania. âFor all our wanting to believe that race is less of an issue than ever before, the reality of racism still exists,â he told the New York Times. âItâs not that [Pennsylvanians] donât think heâs qualified, but some people fear that it might be empowering the black community by electing Obama.â
Primaries are now looming in a critical group of Race Chasm statesâPennsylvania, Indiana (8.8 percent black), Kentucky (7.5 percent black) and West Virginia (only 3 percent black, but a place influenced by the Ohio, Maryland, Virginia and Pennsylvania media markets, which undoubtedly makes race politics more customary than in other mostly white states).
Clinton, knowing the Race Chasm can fortify her firewall, has subsequently intensified her efforts to put race front and center in the campaign, most recently attacking Jeremiah Wright, Obamaâs former pastor who has delivered fiery speeches indicting white racism. She is so determined to raise race issues in advance of these Race Chasm contests that she gave an in-person interview to the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review specifically to criticize Wright. For reference, the Tribune-Review is a conservative newspaper in western Pennsylvania owned by the same Richard Mellon Scaife who funded the anti-Clinton witchhunts of the â90s.
Clearly, each primary and caucus contest has its own unique politics, and race is not the only factor moving votes. Despite the oversimplified punditry that comes with presidential campaigns, demographic groupsâwhite, black or any otherâdo not vote as monoliths. That said, a phenomenon as stark as the Race Chasm over 33 elections is obviously affecting the campaignâparticularly considering the regional and red-blue diversity of each state cluster on the graph.
âWhen the black population is really small, racial polarization is small enough that Obama can win, and when the black population is large, any polarization is drowned out by the overwhelming size of the Democratic black vote,â says Schaller, who recently authored the book Whistling Past Dixie analyzing demographic voting trends. âBut in the middle range, polarization is sizeable enough that black voters cannot overcome it, and these are the states where she wins.â
The Superdelegates
Clinton has two reasons to try to highlight race and maximize the Race Chasm, both related to the second pillar of her firewall: the superdelegates. These are the senators, congress people, governors and party officials who control roughly 40 percent of the Democratic National Convention votes needed to secure the nomination.
First and most obvious, she wants to win as many of the remaining states as possible to keep her tally of âpledgedâ delegates (i.e., delegates won in primaries and caucuses) as large as possible. The Politico.com correctly reported in March that âClinton has virtually no chance of winningâ the race for pledged delegates. But winning some remaining states and keeping the count close will make it easier for her to argue the race was almost a tie, and thus theoretically easier to convince superdelegates to throw their support to her, even if she loses the popular vote and the pledged delegate count.
Clinton, in fact, is already making the argument that she is only narrowly behind. âWeâre separated by, you know, a little more than a hundred delegates,â she told Time, not bothering to note that a hundred delegates is more than the entire delegate count from major states like Missouri or Wisconsin.
Additionally, in trying to maximize the Race Chasm by focusing on race-tinged issues, Clinton is tacitly making an âelectabilityâ argument to superdelegates. (This is not a stupid strategy in courting officials who are all, in one way or another, election-focused political operatives.) Part of that âelectabilityâ argument hinges on portraying Obama as âunelectableââand what better way to do that than stoke as many race-focused controversies as possible? It is a standard primary tactic: Launch a line of attackâin this case, the âWright controversyââand then claim the attack will be used by Republicans to defeat an opponentâin this case Obamaâshould he become the general election candidate. Of course, it doesnât hurt Clintonâs cause that, close to half of the superdelegates are white, according to The Politico.
Ruthless, but probably useless
As ugly as it is, the Clinton firewall strategy is stunning in its ruthlessness. It has been half a century since the major triumphs of the civil rights and party reform movements, yet a major Democratic candidate is attempting to secure a presidential nomination by exploiting racial divides and negotiating backroom superdelegate deals.
But success is not likely.
Even if Clinton wins big in the remaining Race Chasm states, Obama has advantages in Montana, Oregon, North Carolina and South Dakotaâsmaller states, to be sure, but probably enough for him to avoid losing his pledged delegate lead.
That leaves the âelectabilityâ argument with the superdelegatesâand the problem for Clinton there is that polls show Obama is at least as âelectableâ as Clinton, if not more so.
A state-by-state SurveyUSA poll in March found both Obama and Clinton defeating Republican nominee John McCain in a hypothetical general election matchupâand Obama actually getting four more Electoral College votes than Clinton. In Colorado, a key swing state, a March Rasmussen Reports poll found Obama tying McCain, but McCain clobbering Clinton by 14 percentage points. A February Rasmussen poll reported a similar phenomenon in Pennsylvania, with McCain beating Clinton by two points, but Obama beating McCain by 10.
And then there is the Pew poll taken immediately after the major wave of media surrounding the Wright controversy. The survey showed both Obama and Clinton defeating McCain, but more significantly, Obama actually performing slightly better among white voters than Clintonâa blow to those Clinton backers hoping that superdelegates may begin to fear a white voter backlash against the Illinois senator.
If her turn to more hardball tactics is any indication, Clinton may be trying to preempt the firewall strategyâs failure. In two bold moves at the end of March, her campaign launched a two-pronged initiative to intimidate Democratic leaders and to strongarm pledged delegates who are already committed to Obama through primaries and caucuses.
First, the Clinton campaign organized 20 major Democratic Party financiers to release a letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi upbraiding her for appearing on ABC News and saying, âIf the votes of the superdelegates overturn what happened in the elections, it would be harmful to the Democratic Party.â According to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics, the contributors who signed the letter have given a combined $23.6 million to Democrats since 1999. These mega-donors, clearly wielding their financial heft as an implied threat, claimed that Pelosi had taken an âuntenable positionâ by merely suggesting superdelegates should avoid overturning the results of democratic primaries and caucuses.
At the same time, Clinton told Time that technically, even pledged delegates who are supposed to represent the will of voters are permitted to change their vote at the Democratic National Convention. âEvery delegate with very few exceptions is free to make up his or her mind however they choose,â she said, introducing the possibility of a new, more brass-knuckled kind of delegate campaign. âWe talk a lot about so-called pledged delegates, but every delegate is expected to exercise independent judgment.â
A late March NBC News poll reports that if a candidate âloses among delegates selected by voters but still wins the nomination,â a plurality (41 percent) of Democratic voters believe that candidate would be ânot legitimate.â Many of those surveyed probably remember both the recent episodes of stolen elections, and the past eras of brokered conventions and corrupt, often racist political machines stuffing ballot boxes.
The latter, in fact, was precisely how the epithet âDemocrat Partyââas opposed to âDemocratic Partyââwas coined. As the language-obsessed William Safire documented 24 years ago in a New York Times column, the term âDemocrat Partyâ was created by Republican leaders in the mid-20th century to imply that their opponentsâmany bigoted segregationists and machine polsâwere, in fact, undemocratic.
After the Florida and Ohio debacles in the 2000 and 2004 election, Republican lamentations about democracy are, of course, absurd. Additionally, many machines have long ago decayed ⦠except for the one inside the Democratic Party itselfâthe Clinton machine. If that machineâs firewall strategy continues to exploit the Race Chasm and threaten to trample the will of voters, Clinton will be asking the Democratic Party, one that has come to champion racial tolerance and democracy, to truly become the Democrat Partyâone that ignores those ideals in favor of a single Democrat.
David Sirota is a senior editor at In These Times and a bestselling author whose newest book, "The Uprising," will be released in June of 2008. He is a fellow at the Campaign for America's Future and a board member of the Progressive States Network -- both nonpartisan organizations. His blog is at www.credoaction.com/sirota.
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