Posted on 03/28/2008 11:13:58 AM PDT by Responsibility2nd
Its beginning to feel like a shoot-out at the O.K. Corral.
Yesterdays indictment of Puerto Rico Gov. Anibal S. Acevedo Vila brings the tally of Democratic super delegates facing criminal indictments, or threat of indictments, to four. (Make that five, if you count former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer, who was pledged to support Hillary Rodham Clinton, but resigned March 12 in a sex scandal and therefore lost his super delegate status.)
At the rate things are going, maybe the Democrats will have to move their convention to San Quentin to have a quorum.
These are the decision-makers who will get to choose the next Democratic nominee, in all likelihood, and whose votes at the convention will count thousands of times more than those of the rest of us. As long as they continue as public officials, they get to remain super delegates.
But while Acevedo Vila, who supports Sen. Barack Obama, can vote at the convention if he remains in office, he is unlikely to rally support on behalf of his candidate for Puerto Ricos June 1 primary.
Other officials facing criminal charges include Rep. William J. Jefferson of Louisiana, indicted last year on corruption charges following an FBI raid that found $90,000 in a home freezer. Jefferson is uncommitted, perhaps not surprising under the circumstances.
Theres also Nancy Worley, vice chairwoman of the Alabama Democratic party and former Alabama secretary of state, indicted last year charges of using her office to influence political action and soliciting political contributions from her employees. She is also uncommitted.
And theres Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, indicted Monday for perjury and obstruction of justice after his sexually explicit text messages contradicted sworn denials of an affair with a top aide. As of today, Michigans delegation wont be seated, but who knows how things will look in a few months. Kilpatrick is also uncommitted.
Finally, if the list is extended to include super delegates under an ethical cloud, theres also Jim Wright, the former speaker of the House from Texas, who resigned in 1980 after the House Ethics Committee probed his financial dealings. Wright, a super delegate by virtue of being a distinguished party leader - a category that includes 23 elder statesmen such as former presidents and vice presidents - now works for a life insurance company in Waco and teaches part-time. I want to support Hillary, he told the Los Angeles Times.
“Yet another (DEMOCRATIC) super delegate is accused of crimes”
Why be surprised? The word “DEMOCRATIC” says it all.
What makes you think the general population wants that kind of miscreant scum around?
“....Democrats will have to move their convention to San Quentin to have a quorum.
If so, they will be super-max delegates.
LOL..... at last I understand what a "superdelegate" is. He's a generic delegate who's lawyered up.
No wonder Hillary wanted a law degree.
They (super D's) are going to be deciding the Democratic nomination, possibly in opposition to the "will of the people". I wonder what the general population will think of that?
Now I finally understand why the Democrativc Party started with such a huge number of suerdelgates. They really only expect about 200 to vote. The other aproximately 600 will be in jail by the time of the convention
Others include New York's Gov. Eliot Spitzer, forced to resign after he was accused of soliciting prostitutes, and Alabama Gov. Don Siegelman, convicted for corruption in 2006 in what his allies allege was a politically motivated prosecution."
--yahoo news...
And NJ governor McGreevy...and California governor Gray Davis.
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