Posted on 04/03/2007 12:13:18 PM PDT by Keyes2000mt
The other day I received an e-mail from my cousin Kathy in California. Kathy is one of the most thoughtful people I know. Kathy teaches in the university system in California. She holds at least two graduate degrees. She is always open to new ideas. And while she and I sometimes do not agree, I know she is listening and studying different points of view.
Kathy said she was thrilled when California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed the law moving the primary date in California from June to February of 2008. At last, she thought, California would be a major player on the political scene.
Then she read my commentary and realized that this had been done in haste. She understood that it was helpful to have California round out the primary season in June because otherwise, the nation would see what it is like to nominate the leaders in both party primaries by, depending upon whom you believe, either February 5th or mid-March.
And that, my friends, is the problem. This has been done with too much haste. I received a similar reaction to that commentary from many others. They simply hadn't followed the situation enough as this was happening, and now, we are stuck with the whole political process having been changed before our eyes.
Can anything be done at this stage? The Republican Whip in the House, Representative Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), was asked that question at a meeting last week. Blunt is normally a proponent of having states handle as much as they can because he knows from experience that states know much better how to handle problems since the one-size-fits-all offered by the federal government usually doesn't work.
Blunt's son, Matt, is governor of Missouri, by the way. This time, however, Blunt said he thought the federal government should step in and perhaps set up a series of regional primaries that at least would give all parts of the country a chance to participate in the primary system.
I, too, usually favor states over the federal government unless it is a matter of having an equal chance at obtaining an education.
President Dwight Eisenhower was correct to send the troops to Little Rock to enforce the federal law which decreed that black children were entitled to a decent education and that keeping them out of the public school system was wrong. That offended the states-righters to the point that it took decades for an equal education for minorities finally to be accepted. To this day, that issue is debated in some circles.
My view is that it would have been preferable for states to have enforced the law, but since their position was immortalized by the late Alabama Governor George Wallace, who stood in the school house door shouting "Segregation forever," Eisenhower was correct in doing what he did, even though it cost his party support in the South.
I regret Rep. Blunt's answer, but I agree with it. Since a few big states have taken political power from small states, making them irrelevant, perhaps it is time for the federal government to step in. The question would be whether a bill establishing regional primaries or any other reasonable solution could pass the Congress.
If action were taken in the next few months, it would not be too late to remedy the situation. I doubt that such a bill could clear both houses to be signed by the president in such a short time frame.
Moreover, I see no incentive on the part of the Democrats, at least in the House, to enact such a bill. Think about it. They have strong majorities of House members plus two senators each in California, New York and Illinois. It is in their interest to let the big states dictate the show.
The Senate is a little different story. There, small states are on a par with the large. A hindrance to any such legislation is that some of the small states have Republican United States senators.
I doubt that Senator Harry Reid (D-Nev.), who hails from a small state, will be moved to set up regional primaries after large-state governors and senators get on his back. It is a lead-pipe cinch that the self-proclaimed most powerful woman in the world, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), would tell the drafters of a regional primary system to go shove it, if you would pardon the expression.
So while any idea can be introduced in the form of a bill, and I don't doubt that Blunt could find some Democrats as lead co-sponsors, I see no chance of this passing. Republicans would need to take back the House for any such bill to have a chance of passage, and then we would be speaking of the 2012 election.
By all measures, Democrats are likely to increase their strength in the Senate in 2008. Republicans have many weak candidates to defend, and there currently are only one or two vulnerable Democrats.
So, I hope you will enjoy the ride, America. You had better pay attention to what the candidates of both parties say. Early next year, it will be all over save the general election, and the public may well be so sick and tired of the nominees that the electorate will turn off and go into a deep political slumber.
Somehow I find this very difficult to believe.
Will Early Nominations Lead to Voter Disinterest?
Try voter ‘DISGUST’!!
Not all teachers are alike and coming from Weyrich, I’ll trust him.
Will Early Nominations Lead to Voter Disinterest?
No just candidates with no NON-PROFIT contributions to go away.
HELLO MOVE AMERICA FORWARD, SOROS INCORPORATED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
..you can bet your Wendell Wilke button on it. It's just what the RATS want (cept Sir hillary her interest is the $$$$)
New Hampshire gets to go in the first full week of February, tradition. Then 10 a week thereafter (yes one week will have nine, for now). Territories can go any time in march or April. Random selection process, pull slips of paper out of a hat in July of the preceding year.
Good idea.
The spectacle will be having co-presidents for 9 months where one applies political considerations upon the incumbent, while, the Bolshecrat candidate runs against both.
Brown vs Board of Ed in 1954 was but the first assault on the black community. Perhahps if they had demanded equal funding instead of sitting next to a white child things would be further along than they are.
While I agree with you statement, it’s connection to my post and this thread is not apparent.
More likely “Burnout”.
You want voters who are fresh from paying income taxes.Agreed!
I think ClaireSolt believes that equal funding for black schools in the 50s would have solved the racial problem better than integration. Therefore, I think she is saying lets not screw up in another area; lets have equal funding for all candidates to purify the political process.
Thats a stretch I know. Im just trying to make sense of it.
no dems
Never pet a burning dog.
It is a major theme of the article.
On the contrary, its historical information used to support the thesis that the federal government should step in and dictate primary dates.
Good idea, except I think you're a month or two early on the date range.
Specifically timed to coincide with tax day.
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