Saturday, December 31, 2022

The Democratic Primary States

President Biden proposed a change to the order of Democratic primaries to nominate a president.

It was a mistake.

He should not have put his thumb on the scale. It looks self-interested. Worse, the order he proposes is not likely to select the strongest candidate.

My own political tourism has a strong bias in favor of New Hampshire remaining the first primary state. New Hampshire has experience. Venues know how to host candidates. Voters show up at events. The state is small enough that the news media can cover multiple events in one day.  New Hampshire is also small enough that an observer like myself, attempting up-close views of presidential speeches, can compare and contrast two or three events every day. South Carolina is more spread out.

Herb Rothschild has a different reason for hoping South Carolina isn't the first state with a primary. It won't serve the interests of electing Democrats.

Herb Rothschild has been a life-long political activist on behalf of racial justice, the environment, civil liberties, peace, and political process. He is a retired professor of English Literature at LSU. He makes a home in Talent, Oregon.


Guest Post by Herb Rothschild

 

Unless the full Democratic National Committee rejects the decision of its Rules and Bylaws Committee, the first state to hold a Democratic presidential primary in 2024 will be South Carolina, not Iowa. Given that President Biden was the force behind the committee’s December 2 decision, its rejection is unlikely. The sequence will be South Carolina on February 3, Nevada and New Hampshire on the 6th, Georgia on the 13th, and Michigan on the 27th. The Republican primary schedule will remain as is.

Biden urged the Rules and Bylaws Committee to “ensure that voters of color have a voice in choosing our nominee much earlier in the process and throughout the entire early window.” That’s a praiseworthy recommendation in itself and in light of the diversity of the Democratic Party base. Both Iowa and New Hampshire are 90% White. The choice of South Carolina to address that reality, however, is problematic.


 

The lesser problem is the optics of the choice. Biden’s 2020 run for the nomination was flagging after weak showings in Iowa (fourth), New Hampshire (fourth) and Nevada (a poor second after Sanders). Endorsed by House Whip Jim Clyburn, the state’s only Democratic Congressman, in South Carolina Biden won almost 50% of the vote and 39 of its 54 delegates. That victory turned the tide. On Super Tuesday four days later, he won half of the 14 state primaries. Moving South Carolina to first in line seems like political payback.

The day before the committee vote, Biden called Clyburn to tell him of his intention to promote Clyburn's state. According to a report in the New York Post, Clyburn said, “I didn’t ask to be first. It was his idea to be first.” “He knows what South Carolina did for him, and he’s demonstrated that time and time again by giving respect to South Carolina.” Scratching the back of those who scratched yours is a time-honored aspect of politics, but this instance of it is more blatant than most.

The far greater problem is whether the winner of the South Carolina primary will have the best chance to win the general election. S/he will certainly not carry South Carolina--Biden lost it to Trump by 12%. Relevant to that consideration is that of the seven states Biden won on Super Tuesday--Alabama, Arkansas, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia--in November he carried only Virginia, and none of the others was close except North Carolina. Don’t both strategy and equity require that the candidate who does best in the blue and purple state primaries should be the party’s nominee?

Further, elevating South Carolina is hardly the only way to ensure that voters of color have an early voice in choosing the nominee. Pennsylvania and Minnesota have a smaller percentage of White people than does South Carolina, plus many more Hispanics and Asians. Indeed, their racial/ethnic makeup--all roughly 62% White, 12.5% Black, 19% Hispanic, and 6% Asian--closely approximate our national demographics. Nevada and Pennsylvania are crucial toss-up states, and Minnesota isn’t a slam-dunk for Democrats (Hilary Clinton beat Trump there in 2016 by only 1.5%).

Black voters are far more loyal to the Democratic Party than Hispanic voters (with them the recent trend is worrisome) and Asians tend to be independent. So the outcome in South Carolina won’t necessarily indicate which candidate will do best even with BIPOC voters? Further, Blacks in Southern states tend to be more conservative than Blacks in the large urban areas of the rest of the U.S. In 2016, Hillary Clinton was the overwhelming choice of Black voters in the Southern primaries, but the percentage of all Blacks who voted in the general election dropped significantly. In Wisconsin--a decisive loss for her--it dropped 19% below 2012.

Beyond the sequence of the primaries and how early results unduly impact campaigns, it’s worth thinking about whether every state should have votes at the party convention proportional to its votes in the electoral college (i.e. based on its population). Why should a state like South Carolina or Alabama or Tennessee, where Democrats consistently fail to deliver their electoral votes to their party’s presidential candidate, proportionately have as much say in selecting the nominee as California or New York or swing states like Michigan and Wisconsin?

There is an alternative. The number of delegates a state has at the national convention could be based on how the Democratic candidate fared in that state in the previous presidential election (or the average of the last two or three elections). One way to implement such a principle would be to give a state a number of delegates exactly proportional to its electoral votes if the Democrat won. If not, the number of its delegates would be fewer than its electoral votes in proportion to the size of the loss. Thus, swing states would have just about as much say in choosing the nominee as they now have, but Red states like Alabama, where Biden won almost two-thirds of the vote in the primary but only one-third in the general election, would have considerably less say. 

I think such a system consistently would produce the nominee most likely to win the White House. In 2016, Hillary Clinton finished with 359 more pledged delegates than Sanders mainly because she won the former Confederate states by a margin of 418. Then, the South went overwhelmingly for Trump and she lost states like Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania that Sanders probably would have won. Additionally, such a system would incentivize each state party to get out the vote even if the Democratic presidential candidate typically loses the state. That would help its down-ballot candidates. Turnout is never close to what it should be. Alabama Democrat Doug Jones’ historic victory over Roy Moore for U.S. Senate in 2017 illustrates what can be achieved, even in a deep Red state, when there is a strenuous effort to get out the vote.


[Note: To get daily delivery of this blog to your email go to Https://petersage.substack.com Subscribe. The blog is free and always will be.]  



8 comments:

Mike said...

When Donald Trump ran against Hillary Clinton, he had the worst unfavorable score in presidential polling history and she had the second worst (according to Gallup). The result was four years under a clueless madman. In 2020, both candidates’ favorable ratings were again lower than their unfavorable. At least our current president is well qualified and well intentioned, but he’s too damn old.

It’s obvious we need to do something different that will ensure higher quality candidates, but relocating where the primaries begin isn’t going to cut it. The process itself needs to be changed. Mr. Rothschild’s suggestions sound interesting, but what’s the procedure for getting them adopted?

Michael Trigoboff said...

The “reforms“ of the 1970s left us with political parties that have less and less say over who their presidential candidate will be. Instead, primaries empower the small percentage of each party’s most extreme voters, the ones who actually turn out to vote in primaries. This pulls the Democratic Party too far towards the extreme woke left, and the Republican Party too far towards the extreme Trumpist right.

Herb’s idea is interesting and clever, but it won’t solve the above problem. We need a process that empowers the middle of the political spectrum, not its extreme ideological wings.

I would be happy to see us scrap our current primary system, and go back to the old “smoke-filled rooms“. The cure has turned out to be worse than the disease.

Anonymous said...

Ageist, hateful comment

Kevin Stine said...

It is a great thing that there is some change to the order of the states. I'm sure that Democratic Party voters in Iowa and New Hampshire are good people, but they don't have any special ability to help choose the nominee better than people of Michigan, Pennsylvania, Georgia, or *gasp* Oregon would have if given the chance.

Anonymous said...

The "smoke-filled rooms" solution is also the most undemocratic. That is how it works in China and Russia. Unreal

Anonymous said...

NH and Iowa are not representative of the country or the Democratic Party, that I know.

Since we are already talking about the primaries and 2024, I would like to slide this is in.

The Democratic Party needs to be very careful not to take liberal women and African-American voters for granted. Pushing the transgender, so-called "non-binary" and gay "drag" agenda is a big turn-off to more than a few folks in these "factions" or groups.

If anyone is interested in who started all of the gender identity insanity, look up John Money. In a nutshell, he was heavily involved with the case of a baby boy being raised as a girl, because the baby's penis (SADLY) was cut off during circumcision. LOOK IT UP

My other comment is that there is a huge difference between gender roles and gender identity.
Anyone who is unsure about her or his sex (gender) can take a DNA test.

Michael Trigoboff said...

I am advocating for the leaders of each party to have control over whom they nominate.

The primaries we currently have are not necessarily “democratic,“ when you consider that only around 10% of the voters participate in primaries.

In China, and Russia, there is only one party. Here in America, we have multiple parties; this makes us democratic, regardless of the internal processes of a particular party.

Rick Millward said...

How about this?

Primary Day...national holiday. July 4...