Delegate Math = Majority, not Plurality

Have you noticed, the political press/media/punditry is suddenly awake to the real chance there will be a multi-ballot contested Democratic National Convention?

They have begun to look at the math, the delegate math as the question is asked if a candidate who arrives at the convention with a plurality but not a majority of delegates should he be afforded presumption and pushed over to a majority that gains the Democratic presidential nomination?

Bernie Sanders says yes, all the other candidates say no. No wonder in that, as he is likely to have the highest delegate count when they all get to Milwaukee in July.

Continue reading “Delegate Math = Majority, not Plurality”

And the Candidate Is: Part XIII

Approaching the New Hampshire primary or as Bernie Sanders would say, the New Ham-Sha primary, the pundits tell us that it is critical to make a strong showing to be able to raise money to go on running for president.

Wrong. Why wrong? Because it is already Feb. 10 and there are not but two realist outcomes left in the race for the Democratic nomination.

Either someone will emerge to be the overwhelmingly likely nominee by April 2  — only seven weeks from now — or no one will, pointing the contest toward negotiation and perhaps some candidate withdrawals in mid-to-late June as the decision could head toward the first multi-ballot convention in either major party since 1952.

Ah but all the pundits keep harping on the likelihood that candidates will be forced to withdraw because their money will run dry long before then.

Have they been right yet? Nope. And aren’t you beginning to hear the first noises from them about this being a long, drawn-out battle?

First, money is a lesser factor in a contest in which one man is spending three times what all other candidates are combined. As of the Iowas caucuses —  whose failure is one of one state Democratic committee, not of an entire party — Michael Bloomberg had spent $300 million in two months since entering the race.

The day after Iowa, Bloomberg announced he would double down and spend $300 million more to gain the nomination and would double his staff of 1,000 campaign workers nationwide to 2,000 workers.

Against the onslaught of his money, the amount any other candidate can raise and spend is relative —  as in relatively meaningless. That is especially so knowing that at his present pace, by the time the convention rolls around it is likely Bloomberg will be in for $1 billion. His convention operation will cost millions more than anyone else’s simply because it can.

Second, and equally relevant as to why money is less the measure it has been up to now is the calendar.

As noted, it is Feb. 10. New Hampshire votes Feb. 11 (tomorrow as this is being written). Late polls point to at least five candidates obtaining 10% of the vote statewide. At least three and possibly four are within reach of the 15% needed to get a share of the state’s pledged delegates, of which for all the commotion there are but 24 — 8 each in the state’s two congressional districts, 3 PLEO delegates (if my readers by now do not know what PLEO means I am not explaining it again) and 5 statewide at-large delegates.

As Bugs Bunny would say, “Duh, that’s all folks”.

Yes, that’s all folks because for all the rapture on MSNBC and CNN, 24 delegates is a spit in the delegate ocean. Oh, Iowa? That was 42 delegates where 5 candidates came away with at least a few and the highest number was 14 for Pete Buttigieg.

Get the point? February is deciding pretty much nothing.

And that will signal what? Nothing actually, absolutely nothing except that the race goes on. Why? Because Democrats so far fail to perceive a president among their choices, allowing that yes, so far, Bloomberg is not one of the choices they have had and he won’t be until March 3.

After New Hampshire, the contest moves on to Nevada (where more orderly caucuses will occur Saturday, Feb. 22 ) and then to the South Carolina primary on Saturday, Feb. 29 (it’s a leap year).

South Carolina has rightfully been advertised as the first test of how black Democrats will vote except that proposition too is subject to dissection. Yes, African Americans comprise well more than half the Democratic electorate in the Palmetto State.

But their outlook, political experience, and expectations in small-city, rural South Carolina are very different from African Americans in, for example, the largest black city in the United States – Brooklyn, N.Y., where more than half the 2.7 million population are black people.

All that being said and said and said by the media and when it concludes with the South Carolina vote, February results in the election of just 154 pledged delegates among the 3,981 pledged delegates who will be elected to cast votes on the 1st convention ballot. On that first ballot, 1,991 delegates will comprise the majority necessary to win the nomination. So, after Iowa, Mayor Pete for example still needs 1,977 delegates to be nominated.

Three days later, on March 3 is Super Tuesday: 14 states including California (415 pledged delegates) and Texas (268 pledged delegates), American Samoa and Delegates Abroad will vote.

On Super Tuesday, a further 1,551 delegates will be chosen and the total elected to that moment will be 40%. By March 17 the total rises to 60% and by April 2 to 70%.

If Super Tuesday produces at least four — and with Bloomberg and his fortune in the mix from that day forward — quite possibly five still viable candidates, then money to finish the heart of the primary season to April 2 will be less consequential because only 30% of pledged delegates will still be available and because Bloomberg’s money will continue its deluge.

This is not to dismiss money as a factor but if by April 2 at least four of the candidates who rely on fundraising rather than a $55 billion fortune have accumulated sufficient delegates to continue, they will be able to ride increased public awareness in the media, on-line, and among actual remaining primary voters of the fact that a historic convention battle could loom.

If no candidate reaches or gets really close to the magic first ballot number of 1,991 delegates, candidates who can amass even a couple of hundred delegates would be foolish to drop out. Lightning doesn’t come in a bottle but at a contested convention a few hundred delegates can be tinder for a wildfire to sweep the convention floor.

It may be an oxymoronic posit, but one doubt has become clear as crystal. If Bernie Sanders is not the candidate, and this writer bets heavily he won’t be, will he and his angry legion — who like their candidate reflect limited knowledge and narrow perception —  abandon the Democratic Party and its nominee?

This threat more than anything else —  and it looms and will loom larger as the competition becomes sharper — could thwart the election of a Democrat to the White House in November.

“Profiles in Courage”

JFK titled his well-known book, “Profiles in Courage”.
 
We saw two today. Senators Jones and Romney. Everyone knows that — everyone but the zombies saw it and sees it. History sees it.
 
This, from these two men today, was that rarest of rarest things in our time — honest, decent and brave. Like “Mr. Smith”, they went to Washington and spoke up, spoke up for us.
Theirs was that kind of moment. The one you only see in the movies and TV shows anymore.
 
Who is the opposite, who is, by every comparison, a sniveling, lying, in fact, indeed, in every way, a dirty-lying, conniving stinker? Susan Collins Susan Collins Susan Collins Susan Collins Susan Collins…
 
Her opponent is going to be Sara Gideon. Send money to Gideon.
 
Sen. Jones’s cause may be hopeless in Alabama. So what. Stand with him. Send his campaign what you can. He is a good, good, good man. He is our Mr. Smith.
 
And even if you are a Dem, make a statement -send a contribution to Sen. Romney. Say thank you for reminding us that we are supposed to be one nation, for reminding us that if we differ in philosophy we can yet respect one another and be true to the virtues of America and to virtue itself.
Yes, maybe he could afford to do this because he is from Utah, a state that barely gave Trump a 5% plurality compared to Mr. Jones’s Alabama that voted 70% for Trump. But Mr. Romney knows and knew what awaited him in the Republican Party because of what he would do and did.
I do not agree with Mr. Romney on much except that most fundamental understanding of who we are or say we are, we Americans. I did not want him to be president. I still don’t and will not if he yet runs again which may be impossible now in what remains, or claims to be the remains of the Republican Party.
But were he to be president, had he been president, the nation would have been safe in resolute, principled, hands. The hands of a decent man. And, in this terrible time, that may be the most we can ask and the most we can expect.
That is why the Democratic candidates are missing the essential message now, the one about our fundamental values. Without those values underlying a presidency, no president can pass a bill, enact any program. Stop promising the moon and pledge to restore our nation’s understanding of its creation and purpose.
That is the way to win this year. That is, not Medicare for all. This is bigger than any issue and, so far, no Democratic candidates have understood or expressed this.
 
These two men, Doug Jones and Mitt Romney redeemed America today, redeemed us. Their moment is our moment. It was and is and will for all time, for all time, in history, be that dramatic — that important, that much an expression of our American conscience.
 
We owe them. We sure do. Just as we owe Attorney Joseph Welsh for saying that day in 1954, “At last Senator (McCarthy), at long last have you left no sense of decency.”
I saw that moment too, live on TV.
Yhea, I am that old and yhea I tell you that today — TODAY, Senators Jones and Romney measured up to that moment. History remembers that sharply and clearly. Their explanations of their votes and then their votes are the first thing and perhaps the only thing that history will remember from this day.