Cultivating deliberate obliviousness


The rise of Bernie Sanders just before the Iowa caucuses has given rise to real concern in the Democratic party establishment that they might lose control of ‘their’ party and they are steadily rolling out critics. NBC News reports on a conversation that was overheard involving 2004 Democratic nominee John Kerry who is now canvassing for Joe Biden.

Former Secretary of State John Kerry – one of Joe Biden’s highest-profile endorsers – was overheard Sunday on the phone at a Des Moines hotel explaining what he would have to do to enter the presidential race amid “the possibility of Bernie Sanders taking down the Democratic Party – down whole.”

Sitting in the lobby restaurant of the Renaissance Savery hotel, Kerry was overheard by an NBC News analyst saying “maybe I’m f—ing deluding myself here” and explaining that in order to run, he’d have to step down from the board of Bank of America and give up his ability to make paid speeches. Kerry said donors like venture capitalist Doug Hickey would have to “raise a couple of million,” adding that such donors “now have the reality of Bernie.”

Kerry said later that his words were misunderstood/misinterpreted and issued a strong denial that he was considering entering the race or that he was worried about Biden’s chances.

If he did say something along those lines, Kerry is right on one thing though, and that is that he is deluding himself. Just consider the facts. Bernie Sanders has done well by attacking the big banks and wealthy who run this country and whom he accuses of driving inequality. And so Kerry, an already very wealthy man, is concerned that he would have to step down from the board of the Bank of America, give up well-paid speeches to fat cats, and get venture capitalists to fund his campaign, thinks he might be just the person voters are looking for instead of Sanders.

Another critic who has emerged is former Maryland governor Martin O’Malley, who himself made a run for the Democratic nomination in 2016 but pulled out early after failing to gain any traction. He now teaches at various colleges and has issued a harsh criticism of Sanders, saying: “I would frequently tell my students, ‘Look, I know in my own generation we fell for the Nigerian prince scam, but how do you all fall for the Bernie Sanders scam?’ I don’t get that.” Really? He betrays a condescending attitude towards his students if he thinks that the people who are supporting Sanders do not have actual reasons for doing so but are as gullible as those who fall for the Nigerian prince scam. I actually thought that O’Malley had promise the last time around as a better centrist alternative to the center-right Hillary Clinton but he now reveals himself to be cut from pretty much the same cloth as her.

This widespread puzzlement as to why progressive ideas in general and Sanders in particular are gaining traction prompted Anand Giridharadas to give advice for those who are baffled by the surge in interest in those candidates who are bucking the establishment.

This prompted the following tweets in response.

The Iowa caucuses are tonight, beginning with voters assembling in their 1,600 precinct venues at 8:00pm and ends at around 9:00 pm (all Eastern Time), with results being released soon after. The process is quite different from primary voting. It is simple and short but requires voters to commit to at least an hour of their time. It looks like fun actually, a throwback to old-time gatherings in the public square to decide important issues, but the lack of secrecy about whom one is voting for might bother some.

It isn’t a secret ballot. In that venue, a representative for each candidate will be standing in a certain area of the room.

Voters have to go and stand in the area where their candidate is represented. So Joe Biden supporters would be in one corner, Elizabeth Warren’s in another, and Bernie Sanders supporters in another. Everyone is tallied.

For the Democratic caucuses, in particular, second choices are important. If a particular candidate does not attract 15% of total voters present, they are not seen as “viable” and are taken off the ballot, leaving their voters free to throw their weight behind another candidate. For example, a Pete Buttigieg supporter could sidle over to the Warren area.

Once the bartering for supporters is over, the votes are totted up, and state delegates are awarded to each candidate proportionately. That, in turn, determines how many national convention delegates each candidate receives.

Given the large field of candidates who are closely spaced in the polls, it is highly unlikely to produce a clear-cut result. So it will leave plenty of room for the spinning of the results that can leave one dizzy.

Establishment politicians and media journalists are increasingly concerned and hysterical about the possibility that the increase of Bernie Sanders’ performance in the Democratic primaries means that he could end up being elected president. Why are they so worried?

(Ted Rall)

Comments

  1. says

    Trump is stupid people’s reaction to a rigged system and inequality, they got fooled into thinking it is immigrants’ fault when it’s capitalists that exported their jobs and busted their unions then taught them “unions bad.” Sanders is talking about the same problem -- he’s just identified a different bad guy and has a different solution.

    It’s the centrists who are arguing that money has no loyalty.

  2. lakitha tolbert says

    Ironically, these same pundits who have used up reams of paper (in digital time), writing op-eds about who trump voters were, and what they actually wanted, can’t seem to use that same amount of time for Sanders supporters.

  3. cartomancer says

    cubist, #2

    Oh, I think you’re being a little unfair. The loyalty of the wealthy cannot be bought at any price.

    It can, however, be rented. And surprisingly cheaply…

  4. consciousness razor says

    The process is quite different from primary voting. It is simple and short but requires voters to commit to at least an hour of their time. It looks like fun actually, a throwback to old-time gatherings in the public square to decide important issues, but the lack of secrecy about whom one is voting for might bother some.

    It’s not just a sort of meaningless but fun old-timey stylistic choice that they’re making here. From wiki, with my emphasis:

    During both the presidential and midterm election seasons, registered Iowan voters vote in a per-precinct caucus for the party of which they are registered as a member.

    There are currently 1,681 precincts. And in each, you go to some church, library, house, or wherever, and enter a large enough room where this “move to the appropriate location” maneuver may be performed. You do this instead of casting a ballot (which by the way also means no concrete record is left behind of the choice you made).
    So of course it’s not secret, as was pointed out, but more importantly, it’s done on a precinct-by-precinct basis, just like the electoral college artificially divides up the votes into the various states and D.C. where those votes are cast. Then what happens is that “delegates” (or “electors’) are counted from each, instead of the votes from actual individual voters no matter where they may be. This method of course skews the results. There is no need to lump the individual people into groups, in order to count such groups, because you can simply count individuals.
    You don’t like dealing with big numbers? We have these things called “computers” these days, and they are on “the internet,” so all of those kinds of concerns are totally irrelevant now, although it was never an especially urgent issue, because there is no actual need to rush this process: we can be ever-so-slightly patient and give ourselves as much time as we need to do the counting. Big fucking deal, if it ever did take more than a few days or a week to complete.
    Anyway, if we were doing this in the simple, ordinary, obvious, no-nonsense, democratic way, that’s what we would do: we’d simply count the number of people who support each candidate, then go with the nationwide winner, because this is about a national office. Maybe it will require several rounds of voting to narrow down the candidates, but the point is that you should still be counting all of the actual voters directly (not “delegates,” however the party may want to gerrymander those or otherwise use this feature to manipulate the outcome).
    So the Iowa system just magnifies the broader problem, because on top of caring (for no good reason) about which state a voter happens to be in, there are also the precinct-level divisions which are created internally within the state (again, for no good reason).
    There was a hint of this dirty little secret, if you were paying attention….. Did you imagine that somehow they try to fit everybody from the entire state into a single room? If you had that picture in the back of your head, you should’ve realized this isn’t a feasible process that could reasonably be carried out in an hour or so. (Or you think Iowa is much smaller than it really is. That impression is sort of understandable, though….. I’ve been there quite a few times, and it is a lot of cows and corn and whatnot, not so much a lot of people.)

  5. consciousness razor says

    Apparently, the caucuses are more of a gigantic mess than usual this time. I don’t even have the words…. People outside the US may find it hard to believe, but here’s just a little taste of the madness:
    Tails!

  6. Dunc says

    “I would frequently tell my students, ‘Look, I know in my own generation we fell for the Nigerian prince scam, but how do you all fall for the Bernie Sanders scam?’ I don’t get that.”

    Lol. “I acknowledge that we’re idiots, but I don’t understand why you’re repudiating us.”

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