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(s)Elections See other (s)Elections Articles Title: Why the Iowa voting fiasco matters The Democratic party looks incompetent, and public trust in election integrity has been further eroded The Monday night caucuses were the biggest moment in four years for Iowa Democratic party. They screwed it up beyond belief. They had one task: to produce timely, accurate, and reliable vote totals, and they failed completely. TV anchors sat around filling time, waiting for Godot to show up with election returns. None appeared. The candidates themselves began flying off to New Hampshire for next weeks primary. It was a fiasco, a huge embarrassment not only for state officials but for the national party. It denied the winners their big moment before the TV cameras on election night and the fundraising bonus that goes with it. It left the losers wondering if theyve been robbed. It left Iowans questioning whether they will ever hold caucuses again or keep their prime spot as first-in-the-nation. The bitterness over this mess will linger, and the Republicans will exploit it. To begin with, this failure makes the Democratic party look ridiculous. The damage is compounded because they are the party of government. Thats their brand, and it has been since Franklin Roosevelt proposed the New Deal. Democratic policies almost always call for more government, run from Washington. When people point to social or economic problems, Democrats reflexively respond with laws, regulations, and bureaucracies to tackle them (and taxes to pay for them). That prospect looks a lot less appealing when you cant count the votes in a high school gym. It doesnt encourage people to say, These are just the people to handle my healthcare. banner Second, Bernies voters came into the caucuses (a) thinking they would win, and (b) not trusting the party apparatchiks to give them a fair shake. This mess deepens those fears. If they dont come away victorious, many Sanders supporters will think they were cheated. Thats a problem for Democrats, who need a united party to win in November. The fiasco in Iowa only deepens the mistrust between Bernies supporters and the partys traditional center-left. It was already deep, and mistrust may be too mild a word. Third, the confusion over vote-counting in Iowa underscores a larger, more ominous problem: Americans declining confidence in the integrity of their elections and the legitimacy of the winners. For democracy to flourish, voters must believe elections are fair and the winners honestly chosen. The publics growing skepticism is fed by party leaders who refuse to accept defeat graciously. Thats more than simple courtesy. It is the foundation for the peaceful transfer of power between opposing parties, democracys great achievement. That transfer requires that the losers publicly acknowledge the winners legitimacy. In recent years, losers have grown more reluctant to do that. At a 2016 Republican presidential debate, a moderator asked the candidates if they would accept the results if they lost. It was troubling enough that the question needed to be asked. It was more troubling that Donald Trump didnt immediately say yes. (He did later.) Unfortunately, nobody asked the Democratic candidates. They should have. The Democrats refusal to accept the 2016 results has been the leitmotif of the entire Trump presidency. Hillary Clinton has never accepted her loss. She has never given a full-throated acknowledgment that Trump was honestly elected. Her party seems to agree. It was why they pressed for the Mueller investigation. Dissatisfied with those findings, Adam Schiff is now making the same argument about the coming election. Unless we remove Trump immediately, he told the Senate trial, he might steal the 2020 election. Thats nothing more than a dangerous slur unless he provides supporting evidence. He hasnt. But its the thought that counts, and its a malicious thought. Still, it does highlight the crucial importance of fair elections and reliable results. What happened in Iowa doesnt help. Monday nights Iowa Caucuses were a mess, a debacle, a failure, a fiasco
a Dead Parrot. They made the Democratic party look incompetent, stole the spotlight from the winners, deepened the rift between Bernie Sanders and party regulars, and further eroded public trust in election integrity. Its hard to image a worse way to begin the primary season. Charles Lipson is the Peter B. Ritzma Professor of Political Science Emeritus at the University of Chicago, where he founded the Program on International Politics, Economics, and Security. He can be reached at charles.lipson@gmail.com Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 2.
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Tech Firm Whose Half-Baked App Cocked Up Iowa Results Run By Ex-Clinton, Obama Staff Profile picture for user Tyler Durden by Tyler Durden Tue, 02/04/2020 - 12:44 0 SHARES Twitter Facebook Reddit Email Print An app developed by a Democratic digital nonprofit group that botched the Iowa caucus results is run by former staffers for Hillary Clinton's 2016 campaign, Obama's presidential campaign, as well as Google, Apple and former DNC employees. The app was created by Shadow, Inc., which was acquired in January 2018 by the nonprofit, ACRONYM and paid $60,000 by the Democratic Party for "website development" - which, according to the Huffington Post, was used to develop the app which caucus site leaders were supposed to use to upload the results at their locations. According to the Post, Shadow CEO Gerard Niemira, COO James Hickey and product manager Ahna Rao worked together on the Hillary for America campaign.
It's so bad that you don't know where to begin except to recall an old saw, "Vote fraud - it's as American as apple pie." Which don't let the scoundrels in the "Democratic" party off the hook. An app developed by a Democratic digital nonprofit group that botched the Iowa caucus results is run by former staffers for Hillary Clinton's 2016 campaign, Obama's presidential campaign, as well as Google, Apple and former DNC employees. That tells us a lot about where the source of the electoral infection in this country lies. Folks love to bloviate over our reverence for the principles of democracy, but among those that view this land from the outside, places like Iowa and in particular the Democrat machine there, make a laughingstock of our electoral institutions.
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