Now that he’s the winner, Obama decides to change the rules of the game

JasonJohnsonBox

(REAL TIMES MEDIA)—One of the best things about being the winner is you often get to re-write the rules of the game. Mind you, when you are re-writing the rules the temptation is the make sure they work in your favor, and not necessarily in the best interest of anyone else who wants to compete. The fact that Barack Obama is now trying to re-write the rules of the Democratic primary almost two years after winning the nomination tells us that he is not only interested in staying in power, but that he’s failed to understand part of magic that got him into office in the first place.

 

It was a mere two years ago on Jan. 8 the Democratic primaries got interesting. Obama enjoyed a 13- point lead heading into the New Hampshire primary after trouncing Hillary Clinton in Iowa and showing the world that maybe this junior senator from Chicago had some fight in him. Oh yeah, and he was Black, too! Then Hillary pulled off the upset, cried crocodile tears on CNN about how much she wanted to win, and took New Hampshire by 3 points, splitting the state’s delegates 9 to 9 with Obama. At this point Clinton began a strategy of winning not only a state’s popular vote, but winning the superdelegates as well, in the hopes of cutting off the oxygen to Obama’s nascent campaign.

In case you need a refresher to 2008, superdelegates are elected officials from each state: governors, senators and the like, as well as prominent party activists. Their individual votes, along with the popular vote of the state, determined how many delegates a Democratic nominee got for each contest. The concept made its first splash in the 1984 presidential election as a way to more fairly balance power between the regular voter and party activists. By trying to get rid of delegates now, under the cover of health care and terrorism noise, Obama is changing the rules of the game and essentially cutting out the chances of another insurgent campaign like his for the Democrats for years to come.

Superdelegates are a lot like the Electoral College, by having party insiders as part of the voting process it theoretically compels both the outsider candidates and the established ones to put effort into campaigning in as many states during the primaries as possible. If Kansas didn’t have any electoral votes would anyone bother to campaign there? Candidates would only focus on big media markets in their home areas and leave the rest to television. Superdelegates give challenger primary candidates a chance to get some face time with important party activists and elected officials that may one day be part of their ground war for the general election. If you get rid of superdelegates the insider candidate will always win, because entrenched leaders and incumbents have no incentive to change loyalties during an election. In fact, why should they even bother meeting with the “new guy” since he won’t be offering anything for their “vote.” Obama and his team probably believe that their plan will increase competition in the primaries but it will likely choke off oxygen to those who don’t already have big name recognition.

Further, it’s not like the supers have ever ruined an election like the Electoral College did in 2000. In every Democratic nomination since 1984 the superdelegate count has more or less gone the way of the popular vote, these party leaders aren’t overturning the popular will. The superdelegates may operate in smoke- filled cloakrooms, but at least the current process requires them to come out in the open for challengers and insiders alike to see. Obama is flirting with disaster by cutting these power brokers out of the process, they’ll still be pulling the strings, but now they’ll be harder to influence and less amendable to working with newcomers to the political stage.

These changes won’t come into effect until the presidential election of 2016, since barring some monumental collapse, Obama is going to be running for re-election in 2012. However, it does tell us more about how Obama chooses to operate now that he’s the president. The man who claimed to be the ultimate outsider by race, class, is changing the rules in a way that will make it harder for the next “Obama” to travel the same road he did. Let’s hope that he and his DNC team reconsider their plans before the Democrats shoot themselves in the foot again.

(Dr. Jason Johnson is an associate professor at Hiram College in Ohio.)

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