[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Disaster Relief (INSIDER) Tells Why FEMA Won't Let Citizens Help.

The $212 Billion Dollar Food ingredient poisoning your Brain

"Last Election EVER" - Elon Musk vs Mark Cuban: Billionaires BATTLE Over Dangers If Trump Loses 2024

"This is a Deep State coup trying to stop Trump" Ivan Raiklin has a plan to prevent it

Navigating the Global Debt Bubble: Are We on the Brink of Crisis?

Western North Carolina Residents Claim Feds Are Seizing Their Land

Proud Southerner Tells Kamala to Take her $750 and “Wipe Your A$$ with It!”

RFK Jr.: This Is How Hillary Clinton Accusations Against Tulsi Gabbard Changed Political Beliefs

Trump Rips Into Kamala For Spending FEMA Money On Housing For Illegal Migrants

Republican Senate Candidate Hung Cao Reveals He Helped Recover JFK Jrs Body and Plane During Navy Operation

Is your “private” VPN service controlled by Israel?

Julian Assange on AI in Modern War

The Sun, not CO2, drives the Earths climate, a new study says

63 central banks are implementing Basel III which includes bail-ins to rescue failing banks

Illegal Migration to Italy Falls 64%

New Day for World as Myth of Israeli Invincibility Shattered

MSNBC Producer Admits Network is ‘Doing All They Can’ to Help Elect Kamala Harris (VIDEO)

The UK's "Chicken License" Rebellion: The Good Way To Deal With Bad Laws

Ukrainian Lines Collapsing In East With World's Attention On Middle East War

COL. Douglas Macgregor: Israel is getting SLAUGHTERED in Lebanon, Americans are trapped

Every elite Israeli army force who entered Lebanese territory today was either killed, wounded, or fled - Hezbollah

“I hate Donald Trump — and I’m voting for him in 2024.”

How Biden/Harris Blew-Up The Middle East In Five Easy Steps

US Port Workers Agree To End Strike After Accepting 62% Wage Increase

How THIS Exercise Supplement Enhances Your Mitochondrial Function?

Tuberville Decries Ukraine Aid And NATO Expansion, Says War Is 'Unwinnable' And Demands Peace Talks

Israel have just invited the MOTHER of all retaliations!

One of the biggest wealth transfers in US history is happening RIGHT NOW. Are you aware?

Iran Missile Strike Compilation - Waiting For a Star to Fall!

FEMA: No Funds for Hurricane Victims After DHS Allocates $454M to Secure 'Mostly Jewish Institutions'


(s)Elections
See other (s)Elections Articles

Title: GOP seeks order to primary chaos (wants nomination rules change this year)
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0508/10099.html
Published: May 5, 2008
Author: ROGER SIMON
Post Date: 2008-05-06 09:44:12 by Peppa
Keywords: None
Views: 81
Comments: 3

In past elections, most of the stuff discussed would have been considered “deep in the weeds,” but this year there has been an intense concentration on the process itself.

Is our current system of selecting presidential candidates doomed?

It certainly is under attack. And that’s because it has become so messy.

It often starts with a fight over whether Iowa and New Hampshire will go first, and then the rest of the states jostle and elbow each other to move up close behind them.

This year has been downright chaotic. We have two “rogue” states on the Democratic side that have been stripped of all their delegates, and five “semi-rogue” states on the Republican side that have been stripped of half of them. And the Democrats are at an ethical crossroads over whether superdelegates should overturn the choice of pledged delegates.

It has all been very exhausting, which is to say fun. Though I realize not everybody has found it as jolly as I have.

“The most glaring weakness of American democracy is the primary process,” according to Jim Leach, a former Republican congressman from Iowa and currently the director of the Institute of Politics at Harvard. (Actually, I think the most glaring weakness of American democracy may be the quality of the politicians it produces. But we can leave that for another day.)

Leach convened a conference at Harvard last week that included members of Congress, members of the Democratic and Republican national committees, state party chairmen, state secretaries of state, campaign consultants, academics and journalists.

In past elections, most of the stuff discussed would have been considered “deep in the weeds,” but this year there has been an intense concentration on the process itself. (Issues? We don’t need no stinkin’ issues.)

There are at least four major plans kicking around in the two parties to reform the nominating process, and Congress is also considering a reform plan, though nobody knows if Congress has the constitutional authority to intervene.

All the plans group states into pods or regions and then rotate the pods or regions so a different one would go first every four years. Some plans would still let Iowa and New Hampshire go first, and some would not.

For any plan to be adopted by both parties and the individual states would require an extraordinary amount of cooperation and goodwill and a commitment to the belief that stability and order is better than turmoil and disarray.

Which is why I think none ever will be adopted.

But the Republican Party is on its way to a valiant try, its Rules Committee having approved a reform plan on April 2 that could be adopted by the Republican convention in September.

The plan is called the Ohio Plan. It would allow Iowa and New Hampshire to go first, followed by Nevada and South Carolina.

A group of 15 small states and five territories would vote next. Then would come regional groupings roughly divided into a Midwest/Eastern region, a Southern region and a Western region. These regional groups would rotate every four years to see which region goes first. The order for 2012, the first year this plan would go into effect, would be determined by lottery.

This plan has the benefit of being fair and orderly — and largely incomprehensible.

It is ironic that the Republican Party is moving ahead with a reform plan, considering that Republicans really don’t have very much to be angry about this year.

After all, the Republicans chose a winner early, there has been little or no argument that the system was unfair to the losers, and the Republicans don’t have superdelegates to complicate things. Why, therefore, do Republicans want to “reform” things?

It may be that Republicans place a higher value on order and efficiency — Republicans have winner-take-all primaries because that system chooses a nominee more quickly — while Democrats concentrate more on trying to achieve what is viewed as “fair” to the different factions in their party.

The Republican National Committee did not like the jostling by some states to go early in the primary calendar this year and stripped New Hampshire, Florida, South Carolina, Michigan and Wyoming of half their delegates as punishment. The Ohio Plan would prevent future jostling.

David Norcross, chairman of the RNC Standing Committee on Rules, said at the Harvard conference that there was “consensus” within the party for the Ohio Plan, which passed the Rules Committee by a vote of 26-12. “If the candidate thinks it’s a good idea, we will adopt it at the convention and there will be pressure on the Democrats to go along,” he said.

But wait. What if John McCain doesn’t think it’s a good idea? What if he doesn’t want to throw out a system that, after all, resulted in his nomination?

In that case, Norcross said, the plan would be “dead in the water.”

So there may be no change at all. I, for one, would not be crushed.

Our process of selecting presidential nominees is brawling, raucous, chaotic, sometimes goofy, sometimes splendid and utterly imperfect.

In other words, it is very American. Works for me.

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Peppa (#0)

"It does not take a majority to prevail, but rather an irate, tireless minority, keen on setting brush fires of freedom in the minds of men." -- Samuel Adams (1722-1803)‡

ghostdogtxn  posted on  2008-05-06   9:58:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: ghostdogtxn (#1)

In other words, they want to change the rules to keep Ron Paul out.

IOW, they want to insure that Democrats like Juan McTraitor always get the Republicrat nomination...


FOH  posted on  2008-05-06   10:03:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: ghostdogtxn (#1)

GOP seeks order to primary chaos (wants nomination rules change this year) In other words, they want to change the rules to keep Ron Paul out.

Smells that way.

Peppa  posted on  2008-05-06   10:04:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]