Posted on 04/10/2016 7:28:25 AM PDT by Kaslin
The usual cycle of political disillusion is compressing. We can now have our illusions eroded almost instantly, no waiting.
This election year is unusual in a myriad of ways not just the surprising success of an avowed socialist on the Democratic side and a billionaire businessman leading on the other, with the socialist never having had a substantive private sector job, and the businessman never having even run for public office before.
Both parties current front-runners for the presidential nomination Mrs. Hillary Clinton and Mr. Donald Trump are actively disliked by a majority of Americans. We seem virtually assured of not liking our next Oval Office occupant.
From the start, I mean, without benefit of going through a disillusionment period.
Perhaps even more interestingly, the grassroots of both major parties are set ablaze, in open revolt against their over-grown establishment wings, so thoroughly ensconced in the wealth and faux-power of Washington . . . but, of course, this isnt really new or unique to this election cycle. Except that this time the enormous voter dissatisfaction and frustration have resulted in hotly contested and potentially splintering nomination battles in both parties.
For the first time in four decades, the Republican Party is very likely to choose its presidential standard-bearer at a contested national convention. Mr. Trumps path to the 1,237 delegates that comprise a majority is very difficult. Sen. Ted Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich have no remaining path, mathematically, to a majority of delegates whatever their chances for final ballot success, neither can achieve an uncontested first-ballot victory.
Its even possible, though much less probable, that Democrats will find themselves with a contested or open convention. Hillary Clinton currently holds a slight lead over Sen. Bernie Sanders among delegates won in primaries and caucuses, but a much greater margin once super delegates are thrown in to the totals. These super delegates are the Democratic Party bigwigs incumbent congressmen, governors, past elected officials, party officials (read: the problem) and make up more than 15 percent of the delegates overall. Clinton leads more than 40 to one among those super delegates who have pledged to either candidate. Less than a third of Democratic super delegates remain uncommitted.
The goal of politics should be for the people to put in place the sort of government they would like to have, within the limits on government in the Constitution, of course, and the individual freedoms protected by the Bill of Rights.
So, when the insiders on the Democratic side, as super delegates, poise their collective thumbs on the scale to swing a party nomination contest against the candidate most people have voted for, that doesnt seem like an effective or particularly democratic nominating system.
Democratic Party defenders argue that, historically, super delegates have never voted against the wishes of most primary and caucus voters. But why have a system whereby the party higher-ups can tilt the voters decision?
Its as undemocratic as the Electoral College.
This problem echoes loudly on the Republican side. When one person, say Trump, wins a primary that has been promoted to the voting public as the opportunity to decide the awarding of delegates, and the person who comes in second gets more delegates than the person, say Trump, who wins . . . well, it doesnt seem like how elections should work.
Except for one thing: the Republican Party and the Democratic Party are private organizations, who should be able to make their own rules about their own partys nomination process. We dont want our political parties to be part and parcel of the government.
Now being private doesnt mean that the voting public as a whole has to approve of how a particular political party runs its affairs. Nominate an unpopular candidate and lose. Nor should state taxpayers be forced to cough up the cost of primary elections as is presently the case. Especially when the results of those elections can simply be dismissed by the private party.
One person who gets the proper role of political parties is Eric OKeefe, an activist for citizen self-government. In recent years, OKeefe gained a name for his heroic and successful battle against out-of-control campaign finance police in Wisconsin, as head of Wisconsin Club for Growth. He has been a key player in numerous issue campaigns and played an especially important role in the term limits movement of the 1990s.
Hes affirmatively excited about a contested convention. Asked by the Wall Street Journals Kimberly Strassel if that wouldnt be choosing the presidential nominee in the proverbial smoke-filled backroom, OKeefe volleyed back, And whats wrong with that process? It worked well. Those rooms were full of engaged citizens people who had an interest in the success of their party and their country. They vetted the nominations, they imposed accountability, they shook up the system.
OKeefe believes the country was better served when the grassroots, rank-and-file party members had more power over party politics and incumbent politicians. That is, before state governments began to regulate and subsidize and control and merge with the incumbency-wings of the two major parties.
Im interested in self-governance, he told Strassel, in having people learn what it is that they own, and then exercising that power. Our citizens have been turned into spectators its what the left wants.
It behooves the parties to find ways to listen to the voters, so as to win elections. It also behooves freedom-lovers to separate the government from the political parties.
OKeefe is not advocating insider wheeling and dealing, but that the Republican Party membership rise up and practice a great national tradition, to exercise their legal, historical right to defeat a man who opposes most of what they believe in, and instead nominate a candidate who represents them.
That candidate opposed by OKeefe is Donald Trump. I hate bullies, and of late Ive come to hate them more, says OKeefe, who argues that, Trump means institutionalized bullying. Tyranny grows from ambitious people grabbing whatever levers of power are available.
Instead, Mr. OKeefe wants the Republicans convening in Cleveland this July to take a firm hold of the levers and give voters a better choice.
That is, he urges Republicans in convention to assert their rights as Americans, to freedom of association. If Republicans want to throw off the chains of the bipartisan establishment, they will have to do it in their own association party first.
Otherwise, disillusionment is going to grow to gargantuan proportions as the election year unwinds.
By avoiding Trump?
By nominating Paul Ryan?
Don't think so.
Quote from the article....
“Our citizens have been turned into spectators its what the left wants.”
And with the exception of the primary election, the modern Republican Party has already accomplished this generations ago.
Guy Debord, french intellectual (Marxist) from the 1950s and 60s founded the Situationist International and wrote a book “The Society of the Spectacle”. This whole concept has indeed been in the works for a long time.
Fortunately, smoked filled rooms are illegal in most of the country. The first Party that can rally behind a leader will have the advantage going into the general. People have been speaking. That is why the Bush family was retired and Hillary has a few feds on her tail. If the Republican or Democratic leaderships fail to nominate the high vote getter, they will lose voters permanently at this stage.
‘Intellectual’’ and “Marxist’’ are a contradiction in terms.
This isn't Dancing with the F'n Stars, we are choosing a government official through a process which one must meet certain legal requirements to participate. They can talk themselves until they're blue. There is no excuse for what they are trying to justify.
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