Before I start, for the sake of full disclosure, I am an Obama supporter. However, I want to make it clear that I am more interested in the future of our Democratic Party than any particular candidate. It is out of this concern for the party that I am writting this diary.
Much attention has been paid to the delegate situations in Michigan and Florida. I want to provide some background for these states' decisions to schedule their contests in violation of party rules and some clarification regarding party rules.
Both the Democratic and Republican parties create a nomination contest "window." Both parties in 2008 set the date as February 5th. For the GOP, if a state scheduled their contest before that, then half of their delegates are removed from the convention. So, for the GOP, Iowa, New Hampshire, Michigan, South Carolina, Nevada, and Florida were only allocated half of their normal share of delegates. They have their punishment for early states already built into the rules.
The Democrats, meanwhile, don't have an established rule for how to handle states with contests outside of the window. The official 2008 rules only allow exemptions for Iowa and New Hampshire, due to their "traditional" status, and South Carolina and Nevada, which both applied for special exemptions and were provided them because of their large black and Hispanic populations, respectively. As we know, this year the party's rules and bylaws committee, which included 12 (out of 30)Clinton supporters, voted to strip Florida and Michigan of all of their delegates. The party also barred any candidates from campaigning in those two states and they also called on the candidates to even refuse to participate. The DNC placed the impetus to prevent the violation of party rules on not only its own enforcement mechanisms, but also on the candidates themselves.
Now, I'm not going to use this platform to argue the claims of Senators Clinton and Obama. What I do want to do is say that the party has a vested interest in preventing states from holding their contests too early. This year was horrible. Iowa's caucauses were held almost immediately after the new year, fully a year before the president is to be inaugurated. For historical perspective, the caucuses tended to occur in February or March before the past three cycles.
Excessive front-loading requires that presidential candidates start their campaign almost immediately after the midterm elections. This leads to many elected officials being absent from their elected jobs - whether they are the senator from Illionis or the governor of New Mexico.
Also, front-loading prevents worthy candidates who do not have a national profile at the start of a campaign from challenging the party's front-runners. With front-loading, we will never have another Jimmy Carter or Bill Clinton. Only those with large national connections that are able to raise hundreds of million of dollars from special interests will be able to compete in future nomination contests and succeed. This is not a good thing for the future of American democracy as only those who are already within "the club" will be able to vie for the nation's highest office.
Thus, it is very important that the party punish Flordia and Michigan in some way to prevent states in future cycles to do the same thing. At the least, give each delegate from the states half of a vote. The party must also reform the process to ensure that smaller states are on the pre-window schedule to ensure that less financed campaigns have a fighting chance to challenge front-runners. Finally, the state must officially include in its rules specific punishments that will be placed on states that hold contests outside of the window.
Florida and Michigan aren't about Obama-Clinton. It is about the future of American democracy and whether we would like to ensure that the already-entrenched have further advantages or whether we will provide for rules that give challengers a fighting chance.
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