Saturday, December 01, 2007

The Effort to Change California Election Law, Through an Initiative, to Help the GOP:

Why Democrats Should Not Only Fight It, But Also Push For a National Popular Vote Plan

By JOHN W. DEAN

Soon we will learn whether a few desperate but very well-funded Republicans have succeeded in collecting the necessary 434,000 valid signatures to go directly to California voters on a ballot initiative to change the election laws. If the initiative were to succeed, it could significantly help elect a GOP presidential candidate in 2008.

With a tone of considerable loathing,
The American Conservative magazine - a very Republican magazine -- describes this "California Schemin'" as a gimmick, arising out of a loser mentality, "to change California from a state that awards its electoral votes on a winner-take-all basis to one that hands them out proportionately." Simply stated, the magazine notes, the goal of this effort is "to scrape up another 20 electoral votes" for the next Republican presidential candidate.

Most of the media attention has focused on the money behind this effort, which has been laundered through a dummy corporation in Missouri - and believed to come from Rudy Giuliani backers - along with the failed early efforts toward the same goal. But by late October 2007, more money and more professional help had arrived to rescue the effort. According to reports in the Los Angeles Times, it appears that they will reach their goal, and today, November 30, 2007, they will meet their deadline.

I expect the initiative organizers to announce their success soon. Of course, official confirmation of the signatures will take a bit longer, but we should all fully expect this to be on California's ballot this coming summer. The organizers, according to the New York Times, are suggesting June as "a realistic goal for a statewide vote" on their proposal.

Will this measure succeed? Maybe, but either way, it appears this nasty drill is a no-lose undertaking for Republicans. Let me explain why, and what Democrats and others might do about
it.

Voter Approval of the Presidential Reform Act Measure Is Not Impossible, but Not Likely


The Republican money that is behind this effort to break up California's block of 55 electoral votes is not unlike the money that supported the recall drive against former Democratic Governor Gray Davis. In fact, wealthy GOP California Congressman Darrell Issa, who was a principal mover in the Davis recall that put Republican Arnold Schwarzenegger in the governor's chair, is among those backing this latest effort to game the processes. No one believed the recall would succeed.

Without descending too deeply into the weird world of California initiative politics, suffice it to say that California ranks close to the bottom for voter registration in the nation, but more importantly, it ranks almost as poorly for voter turnout. When an issue is hot and there is a general election, you may get 45% of the voters voting. But for a statewide vote outside the normal election cycle - as this would be, as a June 2008 election - not even 30% of registered Californians may take part, and those who do will likely be the activists with an agenda who are supporting the measure.

This initiative, innocuously and misleadingly known as the Presidential Election Reform Act, will be sold to California voters as the rebirth of American democracy, with deep-voiced narrators reminding Californians that they are "fair-minded" people, and nothing is fair about the elections where the winner takes all. Of course, the winner-take-all rule is the norm in 48 states, with only Maine and Nebraska apportioning electoral votes by the popular tallies within congressional districts. However, Californians will be told that they should follow the efforts of Maine and Nebraska.

Column continues <--

2 comments:

airJackie said...

It's time to vote and stop the crime machine of the GOP. I know how the people who are losing their homes, jobless, fire victims, flood victims, vets, immigrants, blacks, Spanish, Muslims, Chinese and all who know what the Criminal Machine GOP is up to will vote not to change our voting rules.

KittyBowTie1 said...

OK, so when do we go back to only the land-owning white men get to vote?

NOT OVER MY DEAD BODY.