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Wednesday, April 02, 2008
Donald Lambro :: Townhall.com Columnist
Dean Fiddles While Democrats Burn
by Donald Lambro
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With unemployment at 10.2%, what will happen by the end of Obama's first term?



WASHINGTON -- Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean has a plan that will produce a nominee before his party's convention in August, avoiding what he fears could be a "really ugly and nasty" fiasco.

Democratic leaders have begun complaining that he has bungled the party's nominating process and alienated voters because of his failure to engineer a political compromise in the DNC's ill-advised decision to strip Florida and Michigan of all its delegates. But Dean, whose internal polls show the party's internecine warfare is hurting its chances in November, has been talking to party bigwigs about a deal and now says the delegations will be seated before the nominating roll of the states is called.

The conventional wisdom says the battle between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton will go all the way to the August convention. But Dean wants it over well before then, and possibly before the last of the 10 remaining primaries are completed in June. And the likelihood is that's what will happen.

The scenario Dean and party leaders fear most is a bitter political floor fight in Denver that will deeply divide the party and send a message to the country that if the Democrats can't govern themselves, how can they govern the country?

"There'll be some nasty fights if it goes to convention, and people will walk out," Dean told the Associated Press last week in an unusually blunt interview in which he said the candidates' bitter infighting threatened to demoralize the party's base and weaken its chances in November.

Dean's stern admonition to both candidates to stop the attacks on one another, telling their supporters to "keep their mouths shut," got a lot of media attention. His plan to bring the nominating fight to an end, possibly before June, received little notice.

That plan calls on the remaining 350 undeclared superdelegates to break their neutrality sooner rather than later, providing enough votes to produce the 2,024-delegate majority needed to clinch the nomination.

"There is no point in waiting," Dean said, adding that he has been "talking to a fairly significant number of, by and large, nonaligned people about how we might resolve this."

Indeed, neutral superdelegates (governors, members of Congress, DNC members and other VIPs) have begun to break their silence in the past two weeks, all of them supporting Obama: New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey and Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar.

So far, the delegate math favors Obama. Turning the corner into this week, he had 1,631 pledged delegates to Clinton's 1,501. Even if Clinton were to win a majority of popular votes in most the remaining primaries, she still would not pass him, because the party's proportional delegate award system effectively preserves Obama's lead.

The deceptive nature of the system at its very worst was seen in Texas where Clinton won the popular vote, yet Obama edged ahead of her in the state delegate count because of its Byzantine system of separate caucuses that gave him four more delegates than she received.

She will likely win in Pennsylvania, but Obama will take Indiana and North Carolina and probably most of the smaller Western states to come. Continued...

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About The Author

Donald Lambro is chief political correspondent for The Washington Times.

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Thanks Robert
I was having so much fun

Thoughts on Operation Chaos
Those who listen to the Rush Limbaugh program are probably familiar with what he has dubbed "Operation Chaos." Operation Chaos is a deliberate attempt to get Republicans to cross over and vote in the Democrat primaries to keep Hillary Clinton in the race up to the convention and the ugly battle that will ensue. What occurs to me, is that there was much ado about Democrats who crossed over to vote for John McCain in the early primaries and caucuses facilitating his win in Ohio.

What a hoot if the Clinton campaign was so confident that it would win the nomination that it encouraged Dems to vote for McCain early on, believing he was the easiest to defeat in the general, opening the door early for Barak Obama. Would Barak have won in Ohio had so many Democrats not voted Republican?

Ok, it is a stretch but given that John McCain was all but written off in the beginning, it does cause me to wonder. What is even more ironic is that either Obama or Clinton could now lose to McCain.
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