CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CALIFORNIA DEMOCRATS: ARE THEY REALLY DEMOCRATIC?”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2019, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CALIFORNIA DEMOCRATS: ARE THEY REALLY DEMOCRATIC?”
It was
one of the biggest disconnects in last year’s elections. In early 2018, three
months before the June primary election, 54 percent of delegates to a
convention of the California Democratic Party voted to desert longtime U.S.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein and endorse the termed-out former president of the state Senate,
Kevin de Leon of East Los Angeles.
Voters
demurred. In the primary, rank-and-file Democrats backed Feinstein by about a
70-30 percent margin. But the party organization ignored them. Its executive
board voted to endorse de Leon anyway in their Democrat-on-Democrat November
runoff election. Again, Feinstein won.
This
proved the state party organization comes nowhere near representing the wishes,
philosophies or preferences of the party’s membership. The question for many
analysts was, why the disconnect?
For an
explanation, fast forward to January, when Democrats staged caucuses in all 80
California state Assembly districts, choosing 14 delegates per district for the
next party convention, set to begin May 30 in San Francisco.
Trouble
was, the party didn’t notify most Democrats of the vote. No postcards, no
emails, no phone banks to let voters know the where, when and who. There was
notice on the party website and via its internal listserv. But most who
attended were informed by candidates or word of mouth.
The
vast bulk of candidates leaned strongly left, many sporting “Bernie” t-shirts
and pledging universal health care, free college tuition and more, but never
mentioning how to pay for anything.
Those
who turned up for caucuses could hear a few speeches, for no more than half an
hour in most districts, then wait in line to vote. When they voted, no one
verified where they lived or whether they had voted before and then gone to the
end of the line and waited to vote again. The only hindrance to this was a hand
stamp some (but not all) voters received, which could be washed off in moments.
In this “honor system,” anyone could vote, citizen or not, district resident or
not, Democrat or not, multiple times.
The
only check on this was one laptop computer per caucus, used to verify
identification via a voter database – but only if someone challenged the
legitimacy of a would-be voter.
This,
said state party spokesman Roger Salazar, made becoming a delegate “depend on
the organizational skill of the candidate.” It also set apart California
Democrats as “the most (lower-case) democratic political party in America,” he
claimed. Certainly more democratic than this state’s Republicans, most of whose
party convention delegates are chosen by elected officials, past candidates
(winners and losers; mostly losers in California), and by the party’s county
central committees.
There
was also the matter of who won these delegate elections. First, the party
created two gender categories: “self-identified female” and “male/other than
self-identified female.” Voters could mark seven in each category, but no
matter who got the most votes, the top seven of each would become delegates. So
if 14 self-identified other-than-females got more votes than the leading
female, seven would be knocked out.
This is
democracy?
“This
is the type of election system the Democrats want not only for their party, but
the entire state and nation,” chuckled Republican campaign manager and blogger
Stephen Frank, a candidate for his party’s state chairmanship in the GOP’s
state convention starting Feb. 22 in Sacramento.
“Honesty
and integrity is not the hallmark of that party,” Frank added. “They stuff
ballot boxes even against themselves.”
Responded
Democrat Salazar, “At least we vote, and we’re working to make it better. The
Republicans have no democracy at all and that’s the way they like it. Yes, we
need to give more notice of our caucuses. But we can’t afford to send everyone
a mailer or an email.” This excuse comes from the free-spending party that
inundated virtually every California mailbox with election flyers last fall.
The
bottom line: Neither of California’s major parties is really democratic. While
Democrats make a token effort, there’s little participation in their process,
along with huge potential for corruption and cheating. Which goes far toward
explaining why wise voters in actual elections pretty much disregard whatever
the parties recommend.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough:
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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