"War on Florida" seems like a really odd move, particularly for the chairman of the DNC, who ought to be working to help his party. http://www.time.com/time/politics/article/0,8599,1656632,00.html [rquoter]Will Dean's War on Florida Backfire? By Tim Padgett/Miami What in the world is Howard Dean thinking? I don't know where the Democratic National Committee chairman was in late 2000, but I was here in Florida, shuttling between Miami, Tallahassee and Palm Beach County to cover the surreal presidential vote recount. You didn't have to have a Ph.D. in political science to learn from that crisis that Florida, because of its burgeoning size and centrist electorate, can swing a general election. It was also clear that Florida's losing Democratic Party had suffered wounds, some of them self-inflicted, that would take years to recover from. Until this year, in fact, Democrats seemed virtually irrelevant in the state legislature, and their 2002 and 2006 gubernatorial candidates had all the charisma of Gulf sea sponges. While the party triumphed all over the country in last year's national elections, the only major Republican opponent it defeated in Florida was Senate candidate and the former Secretary of State Katherine Harris — an erratic lightweight who most GOP leaders privately hoped would lose. So now, just as that state party is regaining full use of its limbs, it begs credulity to watch Dean and the DNC go out of their way to chop them off. This past weekend the DNC threw the book at the Sunshine State's Dems for signing on to Florida's recent move to hold its 2008 presidential primary election two months earlier than usual and a week earlier than DNC rules allow. Florida's Democratic Party has 30 days to back out of the new Jan. 29 primary or face forfeiting all of its delegates and votes at the Democratic National Convention next summer, according to the draconian DNC ruling. (The Republican National Committee's rules also frown on the earlier primary, but the RNC hasn't demanded that Florida's GOP reschedule it for a later date.) As Dean warned earlier this summer, if Florida's Democrats insist on holding their primary in January, it "essentially won't count." To which Florida's Senate Democratic minority leader Steve Geller says, "I question whether Howard Dean is working for the Democratic Party or the Republican Party." Geller's confusion is understandable for a number of reasons. Florida Democrats had, and have, little choice but to go along with the state's decision to leapfrog its primary from March to the front of the pack in January. First, they didn't have the votes to block it: Florida's legislature is controlled by the GOP, as is its Governor's mansion. More important, most Floridians want their primary moved up: the 2000 debacle may have subjected them to national ridicule, but it revealed the peninsula's new bellwether muscle — and they feel they deserve to flex it now in a presidential kingmaking process that could be decided by March of next year. Telling them they don't deserve it isn't going to endear the Democratic Party to a state that is regularly referred to these days as the new California. In Florida, as Geller notes, national elections are often "poised on the edge of a razor blade. They can go either way." As a result, Florida's Democrats are dumbfounded that Dean and the DNC would put the state's 27 electoral votes at risk, not only by muffling its say in the Democratic nominating process — top Democratic candidates will be less likely to stump in Florida if the DNC sanctions are carried out — but also by alienating the peninsula's legions of centrist and independent voters in the general election as well as local and state races. And for what? To make sure Florida and everyone else adhere to one of the most absurd presidential nominating processes in the free world? It's amusing to hear the DNC bigshots argue that if Florida got its way in this case it would invite "chaos" in the primary system. One of the main reasons Florida wanted to move its primary up in the first place was to get ahead of the chaos that already exists. Third World countries like Mexico today hold more modern and truly democratic primaries than America's, whose Iowa- and New Hampshire-centric traditions seem as atavistic to a lot of people as using groundhogs to forecast the arrival of spring. If a silver lining emerges from the Florida-DNC standoff, it might be a consensus on a new arrangement, like the rotating regional primary schedule endorsed by the National Association of State Secretaries of State — the people who actually have to run these elections. Meanwhile, Florida's Democrats are formulating a response — and don't bet on them caving in to the DNC. For one thing, the costs and logistics of arranging a separate, later primary election look prohibitive. More crucially, state party leaders like Geller simply believe Dean and the DNC are out of line. Florida's Democratic Senator, Bill Nelson, is threatening legal action to test whether poltiical parties actually have the kind of authority the DNC is trying to assert. And Geller says he even plans to urge Democratic donors in Florida, one of the country's most lucrative sources of political cash, to boycott the national party and keep their funds in the state if the DNC sticks to its ruling. Perhaps the national party will wise up, he says, if it faces the prospect of losing all that Flori-dough.[/rquoter]
http://www2.tbo.com/content/2007/aug/28/na-by-refusing-to-count-our-votes-democrats-are-wr/ here's more, looking more and more like this could be a major strategic error on the part of Dean. [rquoter]By Refusing To Count Our Votes, Democrats Are Writing Off Florida The Tampa Tribune Published: August 28, 2007 The Democratic National Committee, which accused Florida of failing to count every vote during the 2000 presidential election, says it won't count the votes of Florida Democrats in the 2008 presidential primary. That's right. The party that castigated Florida for disenfranchising voters now plans to disenfranchise every Democratic voter who participates in Florida's primary. What hypocrisy. The DNC treads dangerous ground by snubbing Florida voters at a time when Republicans are running hard. Although Florida is a battleground state, it leans Republican in presidential politics. In the last eight presidential elections, only two Democrats have won the Sunshine State: Bill Clinton in 1996 and Jimmy Carter in 1976. Yet with its actions, the Democrats' tone-deaf leadership is encouraging Florida Democrats to re-register as Republicans so that their votes will count in the primary. Think of the implications there. The DNC made the no-count decision over the weekend to punish Florida for moving its primary to Jan. 29, where it will play a bigger role in presidential politics. Party leaders are trying to maintain control over the antiquated nominating process that gives small states - Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina - the first and loudest voice in picking the nominee. Certainly every state would like to go first, which is why a rotating system of regional primaries is preferable to the system we now have. The party's hard-line decision to keep the status quo provoked a nasty split between national and state leaders, with Florida Democrats contemplating a federal voting-rights complaint against their own party. Those who care about civil rights should challenge the Democrats' move, too. By writing off Florida, the DNC risks making its national convention even more irrelevant than it already is. Increasingly, citizens pay scant attention to political conventions, which have become coronations for presumptive nominees. As a result, television networks have reduced prime-time coverage and threaten to cut it even more. If the Democrats don't count Florida's votes, Florida television stations should refuse to broadcast the Democratic National Convention in prime time. While the candidates watch the fight from the sidelines, they should realize that it would be political suicide to not campaign in Florida. Remember the bounce that Republicans Mitt Romney and Mike Huckabee recently gained from the straw poll in Ames, Iowa - an event so small that Republicans Rudy Giuliani and John McCain refused to participate? Consider the bounce that Florida's victor would get just a week or two before several other big-state primaries. Most likely, they will become their party's nominee. The DNC has given Florida's party 30 days to come up with a solution, but a flawed primary system is the national party's problem to solve. If the DNC wants to stop states from leapfrogging each other, then come up with a better system. But don't punish Florida's Democrats for wanting their voices to be heard and their votes to count.[/rquoter]
What's good for the goose is good for the gander....I guess.... G.O.P. Plans Early-Primary Penalties By MARC SANTORA Published: August 29, 2007 The Republican National Committee plans to penalize at least five states holding early primaries, including New Hampshire and Florida, by refusing to seat at least half of their delegates at the national convention in 2008, a party official said yesterday. Candidate Topic PagesMore Politics NewsMuch of the focus in the primary scheduling fight up to now has been on the Democratic National Committee’s moves to penalize Florida by not seating its convention delegates because of the state’s decision to move up its primary. But the Republican rules are just as stringent, and the national party said yesterday that it would not hesitate to enforce them. The action by Republicans and Democrats to move against states holding early contests is a rare instance of the two parties moving in concert, in this case to regain control over a rapidly evolving primary calendar that has thrust the nominating system into deep uncertainty just months before it is to begin. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/29/u...96f49aaee&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland&emc=rss