Here are two general rules that Democratic candidates and elected officials should follow but which, unfortunately, many of the most prominent ones often violate:
- Never say how holding a certain policy position will help either you, or other Democrats, win elections.
- Don't encourage rank and file Democrats to vote a certain way for the sake of winning elections.
The first point should be obvious enough, and I have harped on it many times before. Whenever a Democratic candidate or elected officials claims that Policy Position X will help get Democrats elected, it unavoidably results in the implication that Democrats only hold Policy Position X in order to get elected. In so doing, Democrats look like spineless, valueless, power hungry jackasses who think they can fool the country. The end result is that, by talking about how Policy Position X will help them get elected, Democrats. See Why People Don't Think Democrats Believe What They Say, On "Big Ideas" And Bill Clinton, and also Lack Of Convictions Versus Lack of Courage for more on this point.
#2 is a somewhat less obvious point, though still an important one none the less. Sure, Democrats want to win the general election, and finding a candidate who can defeat McCain is on the minds of many Democratic primary voters. However, when Democratic politicians encourage voters to choose a candidate based on electability, then they begin to drag Democratic primary voters down to the same spineless, soul-less, valueless level. Suddenly, not only do we have politicans who only believe in things in order to get elected, but not those politicians were nominated by voters who don't believe in anything, either. At that point, the party is really in a world of hurt. Both the leaders and the followers don't believe in anything except getting elected. That is not the image the Democratic Party needs, especially considering that only now is it recovering from twenty years of death by meta talk from the DLC.
Now, here is where the problem comes in (emphasis mine):
Neither of us will reach the number of delegates needed. So I think that that is, you know, the reality for both of our campaigns. And all delegates have to assess who they think will be the strongest nominee against McCain and who they believe would do the best job in bringing along the down-ballot races and who they think would be the best President. And, from my perspective, those are all very legitimate questions, and as you know so well, Mark, every delegate with very few exceptions is free to make up his or her mind however they choose. We talk a lot about so-called pledged delegates, but every delegate is expected to exercise independent judgment.
Clinton has already received a decent amount of flack for this quote, but I think for the wrong section. Clinton is technically correct that all delegates can vote for whoever they want, even though the pledged and add-on delegates are required to sign statements of good faith that they will support who they were elected to support (I'm not sure how that is an expectation to exercise independent judgment, but whatever). The real problem is that of the three factors Clinton thinks delegates should take into account, electability concerns are the first two factors. How empty and soul-less are she expecting the party to be?
The Clintons have long been the masters of telling Democrats that they need to fall in line in order to win elections, so the aburdity of making an electability argument when you are losing an election is probably lost on them. However, the simple fact is that we are not going to beat John McCain by saying that we are going to beat John McCain. That is just not a winning message. Independents and Republicans may not be able to vote in closed primary states like Pennsylvania, but that does not mean they are forbidden from hearing media on the campaign. Now that the Clinton campaign appears to be reduced to an electability pitch to superdelegates, this constant talk about electability is actually making her less electable. If Hillary Clinton's campaign is going to have any chance whatsoever, it needs to start making a case as to why she would be a better President, not just a more electable Democratic nominee.
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