[StBernard] national primary

Westley Annis Westley at da-parish.com
Tue Feb 12 22:06:08 EST 2008


Ddk,

I think you should forward your comments to the editors of the
Times-Picayune at letters at timespicayue.com . I'm not sure at this point if
I agree with it a hundred percent since it would be a madhouse for
candidates to run in all 50 states at the same time, but you make very valid
points that need to be addressed by the national parties - you're definitely
on the right track. Perhaps just have a few "super Tuesdays" where you have
some big states in the mix with smaller states, some on the east coast and
some on the west. Separate each Tuesday by a month go give the candidates
time to campaign and raise money for the next round.

John Scurich

-----Original Message-----
Even without discussing the electoral college system created at a time when
mail was delivered on horseback and few citizens could read and write, I am
surprised there is no public outcry for a single primary presidential
election day. By the time that a few states, which are not representative
of the country's voters, and the media, whittle away the candidates, is it
any wonder that the decision for president is practically made for us by
narrowing the field?

Not only would it save millions in campaign costs (maybe that's the reason
the media for doesn't object to the status quo which creates millions in ad
revenue), but it would level the playing field. The first Tuesday in
February could be a national primary day for Republicans and Democrats and
any other party with multiple candidates.

Of course, as you delve into the whole nomination process i.e.,
superdelegates, delegates not bound to the state's results, etc. the primary
system we have now is a farce. Seems like a few powerful people behind the
scenes ( and the media by their coverage) decide for the whole nation and
candidates that may have had widespread popular support drop to the wayside.
What a waste of talented candidates who may have made great leaders had they
survived the system or been put on a primary nationwide ballot on the
same day.

We haven't progressed much since the election of George Washington and I
think those who control the two party system like it that way. Naturally,
the person elected to be president isn't going to bite the hand that feeds
him/her and call for reform. Perhaps it's just a reminder that the US is
NOT a democracy, but a republic. ddk





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