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In the Democratic Party everyone ends up feeling like a winner. Until the general election that is.

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Stop Treating the Candidates Like Newborn Puppies

By Will Durst, AlterNet. Posted April 4, 2008.


In the Democratic Party everyone ends up feeling like a winner. Until the general election that is.

Poor Hillary. Everybody wants her to quit. Nancy Pelosi wants her to quit. Michelle Obama wants her to quit. Wouldn't be surprised to hear Fidel Castro thinks she's been hanging on too long. Even pundits who don't really want her to quit are calling for her to quit because the next vote isn't for three weeks and they're caught in the Primary Dead Zone Vortex and like an excited terrier piddling in the stairwell at the sound of the key in the door, just can't help themselves.

The media chorus is as insistent as a 3am car alarm: "Its time to go. Leave now while you have a shred of dignity intact. You're ruining it for everyone. How can we hug and kiss Barack when you're still wrestling with him, you sweaty old hag?" She, in turn, has put a brave face on her acknowledged uphill battle, comparing herself to Rocky Balboa, but seems to have forgotten, that in the first movie, Rocky loses. To a black guy.

The Left has long held a deep-seated need to fall in love with their candidate and while people may respect Hillary, she's as cuddly as a stainless steel teddy bear. Dora the Diaspora. A burlap banky. Besides, like her beloved Chicago Cubs, there is always next year. Say the GOP does bury Obama like a bone in the backyard of the 2008 election; she can run in 2012 on the "I told you so" ticket.

The Democrats have only themselves to blame for getting locked into this steel cage death match of theirs. Due to an inability to stifle an insatiable urge to comfort and coddle. Like everything they touch, they insist on treating primary participants like a litter of newborn puppies with learning disabilities. Shar-Pei puppies. The cutest kind. As opposed to the Republicans, who have more of a warrior slash and burn kind of philosophy. You win a state. You get the delegates. All the delegates. No wimpering. Shut up and sit down Mitt.

The Nanny Party, however, rewrote the rules to make sure nobody accidentally gets their feelings hurt. Because every one of us is special. You win a state, you get SOME of the delegates. And if you come in second, you get some too. Third? You bet. Have a couple delegates. Take one of the short ones. Fourth. Fifth. Sure, what the hell. And counseling is available. Everybody's a winner here. Because this isn't about electing a President, this is about sharing and caring and nurturing. Nobody goes away feeling like a loser in the Democratic Party. Except during the general election that is.

Hell, the Dems even figured out how to defy math. In the Nevada caucuses, Hillary received 51% of the vote compared to Obama's 45%, but Obama won more delegates. Well, there's your problem people. Simple arithmetic. Apparently, not one of your strong suits. And they still wonder why they lost in 2000 and 2004.

Why is it such a bad thing that this might not get sorted out till August in Denver? After all, isn't that what the conventions are for? And we haven't even addressed the whole super delegate mess. Of course if the super delegates had any sense of theater, they'd enter the convention at the Pepsi Center wearing tights and capes. But then the pledged delegates might feel less special. And require therapy.

Digg!

See more stories tagged with: nomination, super delegates, delegates, primary, obama, clinton, election 2008

Will Durst is a political comic, syndicated columnist, AM radio talk show host and defense liability.

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Kudos
Posted by: YogiBear on Apr 4, 2008 4:47 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
For comic effect, that was wonderful. I, for one, would like my vote for O8AMA to mean something when the North Carolina primary rolls around. Judging by the pundits nationwide and the posters here, however, I shouldn't be allowed to make that decision "for the good of the party." Of course, these were prolly the same cuddlies who insisted we go with the "safe" candidate against Bush in John Kerry. I only wish folks around here believed a little more strongly in democracy and free will, accepted Hillary as the choice of millions of Americans -- liberal Americans -- and quit pretending they own all sense of moral righteousness.

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i'm left and i cuddle my cats
Posted by: e rice on Apr 4, 2008 9:55 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but when it comes to leadership and responsibility, i want sinews, coherent effective plans, straight honest talk, and actions that support the talk.

i do not want any more of those short, superficial, silly, useless surveys from the dim-ocratic party. why surveys? haven't they been paying attention to the people--you know which people. the ones the dim-ocrats say they represent.

(i'm probably going to get slammed for this.) i do not appreciate being given a choice between a candidate who apparently sold out, crossed over after her respectable reform package was shot down; and a man who promises to respect the dignity of other nations, as long as it isn't necessary to nuke their countries against their will.

i don't even care about financing--take the money, promise in writing that the contribution does not buy favors, and then don't give any favors. dishonest? toward someone attempting to bribe or influence a (potential) officeholder? qu'elle domage.

the effect of that on the next election would probably be to return the candidate to office by voice (of the people) count.

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It's not just a campaign; it's an industry!
Posted by: just john on Apr 5, 2008 8:35 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Several years ago, I realized (and wrote) that with elections spending so much, it's in every state's interest to host an intensely-fought primary. With the two Dems taking in 60 million a month, that's a huge boost to media industries where they spend it.

So keep at least two candidacies going for as long as possible!

(What I do wish is that each candidate spend at least as much time talking against John Mark-of-Cain as they do against each other.)

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A First
Posted by: dockboy on Apr 9, 2008 7:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Durst finally writes something I agree with.

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It makes no difference...
Posted by: rjs on Apr 11, 2008 12:11 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
..if Clinton quits or not. Obama and Clinton both together wouldn't make a difference. Neither worthy of the highest office in the land, both liars and puppets.

And McCain, don't even get me started on that war monger.

Vote Ron Paul
--rjs

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Cleaning Advice?
Posted by: zoe kentucky on Apr 14, 2008 4:53 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I needed some help cleaning beer out of my keyboard after I read this:

Of course if the super delegates had any sense of theater, they'd enter the convention at the Pepsi Center wearing tights and capes.

What a fantastic image, man, do I wish they would. It might make all this bloodletting worth it-- well, almost.

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