Bush-Cheney strategy involves G.O.P. crossover voting to take out
Hillary, marketing newcomer Obama, an "independent" ticket, and maybe
even martial law...
Evidence of a covert campaign to undermine the presidential primaries
is rife, so it's curious that the Democractic Party and even some
within the G.O.P. have ignored the actual elephant in the room this
year. That would be Karl Rove. After rigging two previous presidential
elections, this master of deceit would have us believe that he's gone
off to sit in a corner and write op-eds.
Not so. According to an article in Time Magazine, Republicans have
organized to throw their weight behind Barack Obama, the democratic
rival of frontrunner Hillary Clinton. Early in Obama's campaign, three
former fundraisers for President Bush flushed his coffers with cash,
something the deep pockets hadn't done for any candidate in their own
party. With receipts topping $100 million in 2007, the first-term
Illinois senator broke the record for contributions. It was a
remarkable feat, considering that most Americans had not even heard of
him before 2005.
The Time magazine article goes on to explain that rank and file
Republicans in red states have switched parties for the Democratic
primaries to vote for Obama . Some states, like Virginia and Texas,
have open primaries, allowing citizens to vote for any candidate
regardless of their party affiliation. In Nebraska, the mayor of Omaha
publicly rallied Republicans to caucus for Obama on February 9th.
Called crossover voting, the tactic is playing a crucial role in the
Rove push to deprive Clinton of the Democratic nomination. Even with
the help of his more familiar hodge-podge of dirty tricks -
swiftboating, , bogus polling data, paperless electronic voting
equipment, Norman Hsu, etc. - Rove would be hard pressed to defeat
Clinton in November, since she's a generally popular nationwide and has
promised an immediate troop withdrawal from Iraq. If the contest isn't
close, the vote-rigging won't matter.
If, on the other hand, Obama wins the nomination (or even the VP spot),
Rove's prospects brighten considerably. Largely unvetted by the media,
the self-described agent of change carries considerable baggage from
his stint as a state legislator, particularly his long-running
relationship with a Chicago slumlord Tony Rezko, who's about to go on
trial for defrauding taxpayer-funded social service programs. So far,
the mainstream press has paid lip service to the connection and instead
portrayed Obama as a fresh new face in American politics. The author of
the Time magazine article, Jay Newton-Small, offered the following
explanation to account for the bizarre love affair G.O.P. voters say
they're having with an African American senator on the other side of
the aisle. "It seems a lot of Republicans took to heart Obama's
statement in his rousing speech at the 2004 Democratic National
Convention that 'there is not a liberal America and a conservative
America — there is the United States of America.'"
Is he kidding? The conservative publication National Journal claims
Obama's voting record is the most liberal in Washington, eve moreso
than Ohio Congressman Dennis Kucinich. Although not everyone agrees
with the assessment, it's nevertheless hard to picture the voting
pattern that Mr. Small implies here: Nixon - Reagan - Bush - Dole -
Bush - Obama. Remarkably, journalists across the media spectrum - from
NBC to NPR - have provided this very spin on reality at they disparage
Clinton as a has-been in her own party. Last year, at the same time she
commanded a huge lead in the national polls, political analysts and
professional strategists hired by CNN and other broadcast networks
began hammering across the notion that "the voters don't like her". The
adjectives "unlikable", "divisive" and "polarizing" are repeated over
and over in the same manner as terms like "biological warfare" and
"weapons of mass destruction" were branded on the American conscience
in the lead-up to the Iraq War. In both cases, the terminology traces
back to right-wing ideologues, especially those who keep the studio
seats warm at Fox News. "There is no candidate on record, a
front-runner for a party's nomination, who has entered the primary
season with negatives as high as she has," Rove told Reuters last
August. The G.O.P.'s senior election strategist recently joined Fox an
a part-time news analyst.
Obama himself recites Rove's "high negatives" comment in press
interviews whenever discussing Clinton. His often bitter criticism of
the former First Lady and other "Washington insiders", who he says want
to "boil and stew all the hope out of him", represents a staple of his
core political message. His campaign slogan of "I'm a uniter, not a
divider" is also reminiscent of the Bush 2000 campaign, which Rove
managed. According to Marisa Guthrie of BC Beat, Obama campaign
speechwriter Ben Rhodes is the brother of David Rhodes, a Fox News VP.
The latter Rhodes has been with the network since its inception in
1996. You may recall that on election night in November 2000, it was
Fox that called Florida for Bush, even though the other networks
declared Gore the winner, citing the exit polls. How Fox knew the polls
were wrong in advance of the vote tabulation has never been explained.
Her naysayers aside, on Super Tuesday, Clinton captured sizeable
majorities in the population-rich states of California, New York,
Massachusetts and New Jersey. While Obama won most of the the red
states in play, Clinton took Tennessee, Oklahoma, Arizona, New Mexico
and Arkansas. Obama later closed the gap in delegates with wins in the
caucus states of Washington and Nebraska, along with the Louisiana
primary on February 9th. These victories were followed by Maryland,
Virginia, D.C., Wisconsin and Hawaii, giving Obama a 75-delegate lead,
according to the Associated Press. However, neither candidate is
expected to reach the 2025-delegate mark needed to cinch the nomination
before the convention in August.
Presidential Race or Next American Idol?
Now that McCain has locked up the Republican nomination, it's likely
that crossover voting will intensify in the remaing primary statses.
Yet even when the race was hotly contested, only one in three voters
cast ballots for Republican candidates nationwide. In red-state New
Hampshire, 50,000 more votes were cast for Democrats than Republicans,
about 10 pecent of the total voter turnout. In Iowa, the lopsided vote
was even more pronounced. G.O.P. winner Mike Huckabee received only
half the number of votes cast for Clinton, who placed third behind
Obama and Edwards.
As ominous a portent as that may be, the Clinton campaign must also
contend with a succesful branding campaign mounted by the professional
public relations team working for her opponent. Both traditional
progressives and younger voters appear to have taken the Obama agent of
change premise at face value. A constant stream of You-Tube videos
touting the candidate's rock star status, especially the popular "Obama
Girl" clip watched by millions, hasn't exactly hurt his cause. And
nobody would have predicted a few years ago that left-leaning pundits
would join in an unholy alliance with Fox to help defeat a popular
liberal promising immediate troop withdrawals, but here we are.
Journalists like Ari Berman, editor of The Nation, are popping up on
Fox programs they once labeled as 24/7 campaign commercials for the
Republican Party. The fact that Obama is known to have watered down
legislation requiring nuclear giant Exelon to publicly disclose
radiation leaks doesn't seem to trouble them in the least. Exelon is
Obama's fourth largest campaign contributor. (Read the New York Times
article about the controversy.)
In a blog posted the morning after the Iowa Caucus, Adrianna Huffington
lauded the Illniois senator as practically the Second Coming. She
didn't have much to offer in the way of specifics, however, and spent
the bulk of her remarks railing at Bill Clinton, who she said had
conducted himself in an interview as "arrogant and entitled, dismissive
and fear-mongering". With an eye to social justice, the founder of
Huffington Post might have viewed as a mitigating factor the former
president's four-year mission to raise hundreds of millions of dollars
for Africa, Asia and New Orleans. Yet like his wife, Bill gets no
points for actual public service.
Huffington, it should be noted, was one of several progressive
politicos swindled by the California recall referendum in 2002.That was
the year Enron's Ken Lay, on the hook for $3 billion pilfered trom the
state in the rolling blackouts scandal, succeeded in installing
"Governator" Arnold Schwarzenegger through the back door. Candidate
Huffington dropped out of the race a few days before the election,
conceding the entire affair had been a set-up to divide the Democratic
vote.
That she and her peers have allowed themselves to be bamboozled a
second time is astonishing. With a few clicks of a mouse, they might
have easily learned that former Speaker Dennis Hastert and the Illinois
G.O.P. fielded a non-Illinois resident named Alan Keyes to run against
Obama for the U.S. senate seat in 2004. Keyes, who had little public
office experience, was hand-picked to replace Jack Ryan, the candidate
who offically won the G.O.P. primary. Ryan was forced to resign in the
wake of an alleged sex scandal involving his ex-wife. (A bit of trivia
- The ex-wife is actress Jeri Ryan, who played the character "Seven of
Nine" in the television series Star Trek Voyager.) In the general
election, Alan Keyes received 27 percent of the vote to Obama's 70
percent.
Here's a little more history you won't find at HuffPost or The Nation:
At the time of his senate run, Obama was a relatively minor player, a
two-term state legislator who lost a congressional race against African
American incumbent Bobbie Rush in 2000. Obama's first significant
campaign donor in the 1990's was Antoin "Tony" Rezko, a Chicago power
broker and developer who he met while still in law school. After
leaving Harvard, Obama hired on with a community nonprofit agency in
Chicago called Project VOTE, where he helped organze voter registration
efforts. He later joined the law firm Miner Barnhill & Galland,
whose clients included Rezko, and taught constitutional law at the
University of Chicago.
Obama worked on (and later endorsed as a senator) a low-income senior
housing development deal in which Rezko and a partner firm run by
Allison Davis collected $855,000 in development fees. According to the
Chicago Sun-Times, "In addition to the development fees, a separate
Davis-owned company stood to make another $900,000 through federal tax
credits." Later, while Rezko was busy fundraising for Obama, tenants in
other Rezko developments launched with taxpayer dollars were having
their heat cut off and other maintenance left unattended. The City of
Chicago eventually sued Rezko, and an F.B.I. investigation into fraud
allegations led to a felony indictment, charged the developer with
illegally obtaining income through kickbacks and bribes. His trial, set
to begin February 25th, has been postponed to March 3rd. Last June,
Davis' longtime business associate William Moorehead was convicted of
stealing $1 million in public housing funds.
According to Edward McClelland, writing for Salon.com, "Rezko, after
all, built part of his fortune by exploiting the black community that
Obama had served in the state Senate, and by milking government
programs meant to benefit black-owned businesses." While it may be
unclear why Obama would continue his relationship with Rezco after this
point, it's indisputable that he did. In 2005, Obama approached Rezko
for help in purchasing a $2 million Georgian-revival home in a Chicago
suburb. The property deal involved two adjoining lots that the owner
wanted to sell together. Rezko's wife bought the first, while Obama
acquired the parcel with the mansion for $300,000 less than the asking
price.
Although no laws were broken in the transaction, Obama's 17-year long
relationship with Rezko may represent a significant liability in
achieving his presidential aspirations. If nothing else, it seems
logical to assume that a President Obama will spend his Day One in
office mulling over a pardon for the man who made possible his meteoric
rise in politics. Regrettably, the press is having none of it, and only
grudgingly reported the affair after the CNN debate in South Carolina
on January 17th. That's when Clinton raised the matter of the Chicago
slumlord in one of the night's most invigorating exchanges. CNN duly
followed-up, interviewing Sun-Times reporter Tim Novak, who first broke
the story, and confirmed her claim.
Some of Obama's campaign donations over the years have come from
sources named in the federal indictment. While the Chicago Sun-Times
puts the figure of known tainted cash at $168,000, the senator
initially agreed to give half that amount to charity, but only as an
"abundance of caution", a senior staffer said. Later, after NBC Nightly
News grudgingly broadcast a story about the affair, the campaign
announced it would donate the entire amount. Soon, however, the crimes
of Clinton's opponent would be transferred onto her. During an early
morning interview broadcast on the Today show, Matt Lauer brandished a
photograph showing Rezko posing with President Clinton and his wife
during the 1990s, then grilled the sleepy-eyed, former First Lady about
her relationship to Rezko. Neither she nor the former President
appeared to have any history with the developer, yet NBC deftly managed
to cast aspersions on them, not Barack Obama. More recently, Brian
Williams repeated the journalistic sleight of hand when airing a
segment on Obama's Exelon ties.
(For more on the housing deals and Obama's strange bedfellows, read the
articles in the Sun-Times.)
OutFoxing Fox News
NBC may in fact be outFoxing Fox News when it comes to sabotauging
Clinton's presidential hopes. On the night before the New Hampshire
primary, Williams followed Obama around on the campaign trail, flashing
a Newsweek cover of the senator while proclaining to viewers that the
Obama campaign had now become a "movement". During the same broadcast,
Andrea Mitchell described the Clinton campaign as broke, desperate, and
ablaze with in-fighting. Mitchell continued with this theme the
following night, even as Hillary led in the vote tally. She assured
viewers that the results would eventually tip in favor of Obama. She
was mistaken.
Following the South Carolina primary, both Mitchell and Tim Russert
claimed on Nightly News and Today that the leadership of the Democratic
Party was "mad as hell" at Bill Clinton for "attacking" Obama, and were
lining up to back the Illinois senator. The charge was not corroborated
with any sources. Russert also informed Matt Lauer that Ted and
Caroline Kennedy's endorsement of Obama represented a sea change in the
election, insinuating that because Bobby Kennedy was friends with Cesar
Chavez, founder of the United Farmworkers, the endorsement should pave
the way for Obama to capture the Latino vote.
What NBC's crack team of reporters failed to mention was that three of
Bobby Kennedy's own children, the son of Cesar Chavez and the United
Farmworkers union had already endorsed Clinton. In Nevada, Latinos in
the 60,000 member Culinary Workers Union defied their white male
leadership's endorsement of Obama and helped Clinton win the caucus
there. While the Florida primary was showing Clinton with a 15 percent
lead in the polls, CNN fill-in anchor Bob Acosta complemented NBC's
aggressive push by declaring the Obama campaign had become a "runaway
train" following its big South Carolina victory. On February 10th, CBS
anchor Katy Couric joined the Clinton-bashing fray in a 60 Minutes
segment, barraging Clinton with multiple questions about how she would
deal with losing the election. The contentious exchange followed a far
more upbeat piece on Obama, who at the time was trailing Clinton in
delegates.
To wit, if there's a runaway train in this race, it isn't either of the
candidates. For the past 20 years, media outlets have become
increasingly consolidated into chains owned by multinational
corporations whose primary mission is to enhance their bottom lines.
The NBC/MSNBC network, for example, is owned by General Electric. Tim
Russert's Meet the Press served as a principle outpost in the
dissemination of the weapons of mass destruction argument used to
justify the 2003 invasion of Iraq, while Andrea Mitchell, who appears
on televsion almost exclusively to criticize Hillary Clinton, is
married to former Federal Reserve chief Alan Greenspan.
Some journalists admit off-camera that Clinton has not been treated
fairly in the course of the campaign. For his part, Howard Kurtz
published an article in the Washington Post in December examining the
widespread media bias favoring Obama. "The Illinois senator's
fundraising receives far less press attention than Clinton's," Kurtz
wrote. "When the Washington Post reported last month that Obama used a
political action committee to hand more than $180,000 to Democratic
groups and candidates in the early-voting states of Iowa, New Hampshire
and South Carolina, the suggestion that he might be buying support
received no attention on the network newscasts." Fear of Flying
novelist Erica Jong later offered a possible explanation for the
unequal treatment in Hillary vs. the Patriarchy, also published in the
Washington Post.
Unlike her big Florida victory two weeks later, the news of Clinton's
New Hampshire win was not blacked out from coast to coast the next day.
Her detractors, however, were marsalling their resources for the next
round of Clinton bashing. In the lead up to the South Carolina primary,
on-air pundits and Obama surrogates argued that New England's white
voters had betrayed their publicly declared support of the black
candidate in the secrecy of the ballot booth - hence the reason why the
polls showed Obama so far out ahead of Clinton. When the New York
senator later made a speech tying Martin Luther King's civil rights
work to President Johnson's signing of the 1964 Cvil Rights Act,
highlighting the role of Johnson, the Obama camp siezed the opportunity
for another bloodletting. An advisor wrote out a four-page memorandum
urging surrogates to slam Clinton for disrespecting Dr. King.
If you tracked the coverage of the ensuing feud, you would never know
that it was this document that sparked the episode. Before the memo
surfaced on the internet, Obama insisted to reporters that neither he
nor anyone on his staff had accused Senator Clinton of any impropriety
in her speech about Johnson. Hed added that he was "baffled" by her
suggestion that they were somehow involved. Meanwhile, South Carolina
Congressman Jim Clyburn said the Clintons' incendiary reaction to the
charge of racism had compelled him to renege on an earlier promise to
the Democratic National Committee not to endorse a candidate before his
state's primary. A few days later, Clyburn retracted his endorsement of
Obama, but the damage was done. Black voters overwhelming voted for the
African American candiate. Since that time, the Clintons have been
barbecued for "playing the race card" in the campaign.
Clinton Unplugged
Intelligent and astute, the New York senator has historically shied
away from personal attacks, whether it comes from Manhattan's sexist
firefighters or Chris Matthews of MSNBC's Hardball. Her campaign only
briefly cut off relations with NBC when another reporter, David
Schuster, said the Clintons had "pimped-out" daughter Chelsea as part
of their election strategy. This is not to say Clinton isn't capable of
landing a knock-out punch when provoked. During the ABC New Hampshire
debate, she slammed the tag-team antics of John Edwards and Barack
Obama when they tried to portray her as the voice of the "status quo".
She informed the audience that both men supported Vice-President Dick
Cheney's 2005 energy legslation, a bill "larded with subsidies for the
oil companies". She opposed the legislation.
However, it was her performance in two CNN debates broadcast from South
Carolina and California that elevated Clinton to the A-List of
celebrity icons. In both contests, she took the gloves off to pound
Obama on his record and statements uttered along the campaign trail. In
the first debate, she highlighted his habit of voting "present" in the
Illinois legislature, along his characterization of Ronald Reagan as a
"transformative" president and the Republican Party during that period
as the "party of ideas". She said, "I'm just reacting to the fact, yes,
they did have ideas, and they were bad ideas. . . . Bad for America,
and I was fighting against those ideas when you were practicing law and
representing your contributor [Tony] Rezko in his slum landlord
business in inner-city Chicago." In Hollywood, she delivered her other
memorable soundbite, "It took a Clinton to clean after the first
President Bush, and it's going to take another Clinton to clean up
after the second President Bush." Over four million domestic viewers
tuned in to the South Carolina debate, breaking a cable record. Twice
that many watched the second debate. Many millions more saw the verbal
prize fights on CNN's international broadcast.
Nevertheless, Clinton seems remiss in doing relatively little challenge
the media's manipulation of the electorate. Having agreed to appear in
an NBC debate shortly before the Texas and Ohio primaries, she's sure
to be walking into another ambush. Like Benazir Bhutto, the years of
political bludgeoning may have short-circuited her ability to navigate
the minefields of the body politic (or even to appoint competent
advisors). Regarding Karl Rove and the Bush-Cheney team, all she has
mustered to date is her oft-repeated statement, “They’re not going to
surrender the White House voluntarily." Last spring, she suggested that
another terrorist attack against the United States would inevitably
play into the hands of the G.O.P.
Vague as they sound, those two comments may prove prophetic in the
event the Obama strategy fails and she goes on to win the Democratic
nomination. The implications of a female president for American foreign
and domestic policy are profound, creating jitters not only on Wall
Street but for the Pentagon, the CIA and the State Department. It's
possible that a significant number of officials accused of breaking
U.S. laws or violating the Geneva Conventions might be arrested and
prosecuted by a Clinton-directed Justice Department.
If that's not enough to keep Bush appointees and generals lying awake
deep into the night, their long-running undercover operation with the
ayatollahs in Iran (who paved the way for Reagan's 1980 election), the
Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence, and the Saudi royal family could
be curtailed by the staunchly pro-women's rights democrat. The Saudis
especially have reason to fret now that they and their counterparts in
Kuwait and the U.A.E. have started buying up huge stakes in U.S. banks.
Condolleeza Rice and Nancy Pelosi are one thing. A Clinton White House
is quite another
For his part, President Bush may have implemented a back-up plan last
April when he signed National Security Presidential Directive/NSPD 51,
an executive order allowing him to suspend the constitution without
prior congressional approval. NSPD 51 gives the President the
discretion to declare a state of emergency (i.e. martial law) in the
event of a major terrorist attack or other “decapitating” incident
against the United States, even if the attack happens outside the
country. Under this scenario, he can cancel elections, padlock the
Capitol dome and send the Supreme Court justices home. The directive
also allows assigns the President's homeland security assistant ( a
low-level position exempt from senate confirmation) to administer what
has been dubbed the Enduring Constitutional Government. In other
words, another Sept. 11th disaster could reduce this year's election to
nothing more than the status of a season of Survivor. (Here’s the text
of the directive.)
Delegates, the Conventions and an Indpendent Ticket
Assuming the homeland security assistant doesn't take over the country
before next August, the Democratic Party's 796 superdelegates may
decide the nomination. About half are elected officials, the other half
party officials and campaign managers. The specter of less than 800
people determining the ticket in November has set Obama surrogates back
on their haunches, this time arguing that a "brokered convention"
decided in "smoky back rooms" will destroy the party. Initially it was
thought that two-thirds of the superdelegates were pledged for Clinton,
but more recent surveys suggest the situation is fluid.
Democratic National Committee chairman Howard Dean has issued a press
release reassuring Americans that he will intervene before August if
the race still remains deadlocked. The extent of his authority to do so
relies on the cooperation of both candidates. However, Clinton is
already under pressure from the media anad Obama supporters to "do the
right thing" and bow out of the race, instead of risking a floor fight
at the convention. The rules do not require her to do so.
Several times in the past, conventions have decided the party nominee.
The most memorable took place in 1932, when neither Franklin Roosevelt
nor his rival Al Smith secured enough delegates to cinch the
nomination, causing the convention to deadlock. Corporate media
tycoonWilliam Randolph Hearst took advantage of the predicament,
forcing FDR to adopt an isolationist foreign policy in exchange for the
delegates of the third-place candidate, Texas Congressman Jack Garner.
FDR also had to take Garner as his running mate. What's interesting
here is that after FDR beat Hoover in the general election, a would-be
assassin nearly liquidated the new President-elect in Miami.
Fortunately the shots went astray when a woman in the crowd grabbed the
assailant's arm. Otherwise, Jack Garner would have become president.
Today, with only two candidates left in the race and the innovation of
superdelegates, that scenario is moot. Still, the VP slot remains open
and there are also lingering questions about what, if any effect the
Tony Rezko trial in Chicago this year will have on Obama. It's possible
that global warming crusader Al Gore, who says he'd still like to be
president, may be jockeying to enter the election, perhaps as a draft
candidate if Obama is forced to withdraw. (Although few voters
remember, Gore is the same gentleman who received a grade of "F" from
the League of Conservation Voters when he ran for president in 2000. To
jog your memory, here's his 1998 press release on Kyoto Treaty.)
If Gore doesn't surface as a candidate at the convention, he could be
tapped by the so-called centrist politicians who met last January in
Oklahoma to lobby for a bi-partisan, independent ticket. A similar
effort, the internet-based initiative known as Unity '08, likewise
hopes to field a Democrat and a Republican to run together in the
November election. New York mayor and billionnaire Michael Bloomberg is
said to be testing the waters for a possible run, but his poll numbers
to date look unpromising. Because the G.O.P. played such an anemic role
in their own party primaries, the Karl Rove camp may field their
Bush-Cheney successor team as independents.
The DNC is also considering the possibility of holding caucuses in
Michigan and Florida in April or May as a way to allocate their
delegates, which were stripped because the states were not granted
"waivers" to hold primaries before February 5th. The Clinton campaign,
which originally agreed to the ban, has since argued that both
delegations should be seated according to the primary results. In the
case of the Florida primary, the argument has merit, given that
Democratic voters there recorded the largest turnout in history. It
also appears some of Obama's cable TV spots appeared in the state,
though he was not accused of violating the pledge not to campaign
there. Clinton won 50 percent of the popular vote, Obama 33 percent,
and John Edwards 16 percent. State Senator Bill Nelson, a Clinton
supporter, has balked at the suggestion that the ballots cast by 1.7
million Floridians - it's the nation's fourth most populous state -
should be replaced with caucuses that might at best attract 50,000
participants. It was Florida's Republican-controlled legislature that
set the date for the primary, state party officials point out, not them.
Michigan held its primary on January 15th. Since Obama and Edwards
pulled their names from the ballot beforehand, the votes for Clinton
cannot be said to represent a mandate. Unfortunately for her, the
stripped delegates in both cases have worked in Obama's favor. With its
high percentage of hispanic voters, Florida could have been forecast as
a Clinton treasure trove. The same is true for Michigan, whose native
son Mit Romney's candidacy precluded the possiblity of a large
crossover vote of Republicans there. Michigan boasts a relatively low
number of upper-middle-class whites, one of Obama's strongest
performing constituencies. Had the DNC not sanctioned the state,
Clinton would likely have hauled in the lion's share of 156 delegates
up for grabs. (The G.O.P., by the way, didn't punish either state for
moving up their primaries.) One cannot blame her for experiencing some
measure of frustration.
If the DNC opts to schedule caucuses, Obama would emerge the victor,
since this form of voting typically requires traveling long distances,
waiting outside a building in while volunteers sort out the logistics,
and then attending a meeting that lasts one or two hours. Such factors
tend to deter the participation of older voters; immigrants; those who
work, need childcare or have other obligations during the narrow time
frame of the caucus; and those for whom English is a second language.
In a nutshell, this represents the Clinton base.
And it gets worse. Of the remaining states left to vote, Texas and
Wisconsin will hold open primaries, which portends of a large crossover
vote to put Obama over the top. (Texas was gerrymandered under Tom
Delay to favor a Republican lock on most districts.) The state party in
Texas also allots a third of its delegates by way of a caucus. Thus,
even Clinton's superdelegate failsafe may prove insufficient in
overcoming the shrewdly stacked deck against her. Thanks to Karl Rove
and his friends in the shadows, the Democratic nominee may ultimately
be determined not by Democrats but by the G.O.P., with the help of its
unwitting accomplices at the DNC.
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