 |
Fri May 16 2008
|
|
|
Departments Election Issues
Can SuperDelegates stop the scorched earth campaigning?
by Paul Rogat Loeb
March 24, 2008
No matter how well Clinton does in the remaining primaries, her future is going to be in the hands of the superdelegates. It's time for them to exercise their power to rein in scorched-earth campaigning.
Oregon Congressman Peter DeFazio recently criticized both Clinton and Obama in a public letter for allowing "the long-term goal of beating the Republican nominee [to take] a back seat to the short term goal of proving one's viability by tearing down the other Democratic candidate.
"Run the next six weeks of your campaign against McCain," DeFazio urged, "not against the other Democrat. Go after McCain for his policy positions, not the other Democrat for theirs. Allow the Democratic voters to believe in a campaign that can provide a new direction for this country and stop McCain from continuing the failed policies of the Bush Administration. In the end, it is the candidate who can take the fight to McCain and win that deserves my support and, most importantly, the support of the Democratic Party."
This is where other superdelegates could help. Since what the New York Times recently called Clinton's increasingly narrow path to victory depends on her overwhelmingly sweeping those still undecided (aided in part by Rush Limbaugh and Fox supporters crossing over to support her in the remaining primaries, as they have since Ohio & Texas), they could stop the Democratic blood-letting by lining up behind Obama now. At that point, the battle for the nomination would end, and Obama would have seven months to focus on defeating McCain. I'd like to see as many as possible do this, but if they want to wait until the last primaries are run, DaFazio's letter suggests another alternative.
A significant group of uncommitted superdelegates (and maybe some committed ones) could follow DaFazio's lead and make a public statement condemning the destructive campaigning. They could make clear that either candidate who attacked the other enough to seriously benefit McCain would immediately lose their support.
Those who signed such a statement would still keep their autonomy. They could still endorse whomever they preferred between Obama and Clinton, and do so in their own time frame. But they'd be making overt what most Democrats are feeling—that the Party can't afford to tear itself apart in the process of selecting a nominee. It can't afford to give credence to Republican talking points or so stoke the mutual demonizing that Democratic voters end up staying home, or even vote for McCain. Because the superdelegates would be responding to negative attacks with their votes, this just might put enough teeth into their responses to deter them.
This shouldn't be necessary. Barack Obama just gave an amazing speech that looked deep into his life to ask the hardest imaginable questions about race, class, and faith, who we are as Americans, and who we want to be. This speech seemed to touch people in a way that's rare in our political life, and open up at least the possibility of becoming a watershed moment America's march toward greater justice. I'd have no problem if Clinton continued to compete with Obama by offering her own take on the issues he's raising and others of similar consequence.
But I doubt that will happen. Given Obama's nearly insurmountable lead in elected delegates, I suspect Clinton will soon be back pursuing the massive personal attacks that seem her only chance to damage Obama enough to give the superdelegates second thoughts. And the media, especially the broadcast media, will likely buy in, because they'd rather report on mud-wrestling than on political arguments.
Last week, in Harrisburg PA, Hillary whipped up a crowd to boo Obama, something I've never witnessed in a Democratic presidential primary. In Youngstown, OH, a couple weeks before, she stood by and said nothing when Machinist's Union head Tom Buffenbarger introduced her at a rally by calling Obama supporters (in language taken from recycled anti-Dean ads of the right-wing Club For Growth), "latte-drinking, Prius-driving, Birkenstock-wearing, trust fund babies." And writing the Republican script, she's argued that she and McCain are ready to be Commander and Chief but Obama is not. If Clinton and her supporters are saying these kinds of things about Obama now, it's going to be tough for them to turn on a dime and encourage voters to unite behind him come November.
By the same token, to the degree that Obama seriously returns the fire, and continues to do so, that similarly damages Clinton's chances, should she become the nominee. As a friend who supports Clinton said, the situation risks both the candidates and their passionate supporters becoming "intellectual arms traders in the aid of John McCain."
So DaFazio's approach makes sense. But he needs other superdelegates to sign on or issue their own statements, to magnify the impact. They don't have to entirely ban all drawing of distinctions, because real policy differences exist. But they need to make clear that whatever destructive attacks gain in primary votes, they'll more than lose them at the convention. Drawing this kind of line may be the only way that the Democrats can begin to pull together again, and end the disastrous stands of Bush's past seven years.
---
Paul Rogat Loeb is the author of The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear, named the #3 political book of 2004 by the History Channel and the American Book Association. His previous books include Soul of a Citizen: Living With Conviction in a Cynical Time. See www.paulloeb.org To receive his articles directly email sympa@lists.onenw.org with the subject line: subscribe paulloeb-articles
Email this article to a friend
|
|
 | |
Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008Election Issues
"Did the Limbaugh effect also flip Michigan?" May 14, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"Obama-Clinton funny math: Guam update" May 4, 2008 David Swanson
"Did the US Supreme Court deliver the Indiana Primary to Hillary Clinton?" May 2, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
"Did the US Supreme Court just elect John McCain?" April 30, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
"The 2008 election will be stolen" April 19, 2008 David Swanson
"The done deal" April 18, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
"Letter to Hillary: remember when John McCain slimed your daughter" April 17, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"Fire and race" April 3, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
"Keep the Republic" March 27, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
"What it's all about..." March 25, 2008 Sheila Samples
"Can SuperDelegates stop the scorched earth campaigning?" March 24, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"An election without meaning" March 23, 2008 Peter Phillips
"We have a dream" March 23, 2008 Phil Tajitsu Nash
"Hope, change, and pissing in the wind: "Of Obama, Democrats, and the Power Elite"" March 19, 2008 Patrice Greanville and Jason Miller
"Ohio's voting machines are now an official crime scene" March 17, 2008 Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
"Did Republicans give Hillary her victory in Ohio?" March 8, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
"Primary day at the polls in Columbus, Ohio" March 5, 2008 David S. Lewis, National Affairs Editor
"Obama & Clinton: who's more likely to confront global warming?" March 4, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"If you think Karl Rove is evil, make phone calls today" March 4, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"Obama's talking points" March 1, 2008 Gregg Gordon
"Adventures in inaudible audio with Senator Barack Obama" February 27, 2008 David S. Lewis, National Affairs Editor
"Attention all voters: this is a must-see video" February 26, 2008 Free Press staff
"On the campaign trail in the Buckeye State stalking the candidates: John McCain" February 24, 2008 David S. Lewis, National Affairs Editor
"Will Clinton's advisors tell her the hard truths?" February 22, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"How much damage will Clinton do before she folds?" February 22, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"The Hillary nutcracker" February 21, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
"Behind Obama's wave of victories: the more they know him….." February 17, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"Hillary's hawks -- How Obama's and Clinton's advisors mirror their stands on the war" February 11, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb, introducing a Stephen Zunes article
"Poll shows John McCain faces tough road in gaining conservative support" February 11, 2008 Richard A. Viguerie
"The Obama Factors" February 11, 2008 Todd Huffman
"Vote against Clinton" February 4, 2008 David Swanson
"Why this Edwards voter Is now backing Obama" February 2, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"Liveblogging Obama v. Clinton v. CNN" February 1, 2008 David Swanson
"It's all about Hillary, not her party" January 29, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"The South Carolina you won't see on CNN - South Carolina primary colors: black and white?" January 26, 2008 Greg Palast
"The South Carolina you won't see on CNN - South Carolina primary colors: black and white?" January 26, 2008 Greg Palast
"Conspiracy theorist" January 24, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
"Hillary Clinton's sleaze parade " January 20, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"Bob & Harvey's 3-Step "Ohio Plan" for fair and reliable voting and vote counts" January 16, 2008 Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman
"Media misses story: Obedwards wins New Hampshire" January 11, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"Primary concerns" January 10, 2008 Robert C. Koehler
"Clear evidence of widespread vote fraud in New Hampshire" January 10, 2008 Paul Joseph Watson
"The Kudzu Effect: The Voting-Industrial Complex chokes our democracy" January 6, 2008 Sheri Myers, Bob Fitrakis and Harvey Wasserman
"Still true to ObEdwards: Why I keep donating to both Edwards and Obama" January 6, 2008 Paul Rogat Loeb
"Clinton campaign office re-occupied by peace activists on day of Iowa voting" January 4, 2008 Mike Ferner
Read Articles by Year: 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

All content © 1970-2008 The Columbus Free Press Disclaimer |