Friday, December 18, 2015

MAYBE THE WRONG GUY IS THREATENING TO RUN THIRD PARTY

So why exactly is this Washington Post story such a big deal?
Officials with the Democratic National Committee have accused the presidential campaign of Sen. Bernie Sanders of improperly accessing confidential voter information gathered by the rival campaign of Hillary Clinton, according to several party officials.

Jeff Weaver, the Vermont senator’s campaign manager, acknowledged that a staffer had viewed the information but blamed a software vendor hired by the DNC for a glitch that allowed access. Weaver said one Sanders staffer was fired over the incident.

The discovery sparked alarm at the DNC, which promptly shut off the Sanders campaign’s access to the strategically crucial list of likely Democratic voters.
Charlie Pierce is right:
Let us stipulate a few things. First, the DNC, under the barely perceptible leadership of Debbie Wasserman Schultz, has greased the skids for Hillary Rodham Clinton. (A debate on the Saturday night before Christmas, when half the country's on an airplane going to visit the other half? Please.)

... This is still just a cock-up by a technology company that evidently should be selling lawn sprinklers instead of data access.

... what admittedly sends my thoughts up a grassy knoll is how this relatively minor blip made it to The Washington Post in the first place. After all, the bungling was with the vendor, and with the DNC for hiring the vendor, so wouldn't the smart play have been to keep this whole thing in-house? Also, if this story survives through the Saturday night debate, let alone becomes an issue therein, and if the Sanders campaign is shut out from the national party data for longer than this weekend, I'm going to be very, very suspicious. Devious and clumsy are, after all, the hallmarks of the DWS era.
The Democratic Establishment is certainly trying to hobble Sanders, and even many of us who are generally supportive of Hillary Clinton agree that Wasserman-Schulz has truied to rig the contest in an absurd and anti-democratic way on Clinton's behalf. This may be the only time in the Murdoch era that I've ever agreed with even part of a New York Post editorial, but the first few paragraphs of this are hard to rebut:
Busy Saturday night? Probably, what with the NCAA bowl games, the Jets’ must-win battle in Dallas and opening weekend for “Star Wars: The Force Awakens.” So you’ll skip the Democratic presidential debate -- just as Hillary Clinton hoped.

Long, long ago, Clinton set out to ensure she wouldn’t be robbed of the nomination by some interloper, the way she lost to Barack Obama in 2008.

The party’s power-brokers played along, handing the Democratic National Committee to Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, a co-chair of Clinton’s ’08 campaign. Fix, in.

And so the DNC did its best to see nobody would watch the debates, lest voters dare think for themselves. Tomorrow’s is the second in a row on a Saturday night -- easily the worst evening for TV viewership.
This isn't just bad for the Democrats -- as it turns out, it's bad for Clinton. Did you notice her, earlier in the week, telling a supporter with a Trump-loving father that Dad should be told Hillary doesn't "have horns"? Well, maybe more people would realize that Clinton doesn't "have horns" if they watched her talk about issues -- y'know, like in a debate. She can seem awkward in isolated soundbites, stiff and singsongy in speeches, forced-sounding when she's trying to seem casual and relaxed -- but when you get her talking about issues without a teleprompter, she's sharp, on point. Also, she's not at all the scary, power-mad extremist/harridan of right-wing (and mainstream) caricature.

And the notion that Clinton's record is a serious vulnerability has been overtaken quite a bit by events. No, she's not a dove, and yes, she's long had ties to Wall Street. But economic inequities aren't the only issue in the Democratic primaries now. We're talking about terrorism -- and whether progressives like it or not, the Clinton approach to foreign policy might resonate at this moment for a lot of moderate Democrats. For those voters, Clinton certainly passes the "commander in chief test," while Bernie Sanders always seems to want to change the subject when talk turns to overseas affairs. And this is also the Black Lives Matter era, and while Clinton might not be the most stalwart ally of the movement, she has much greater support among African-Americans than Sanders.

I'd like to see more Democratic debates. I'd like them to be scheduled when viewers would watch. No matter who does best, debates would be good for selling and promoting the party as an alternative to the current insane Republicanism. I think the result would be a platform for the Sanders economic message, much of which Clinton is trying to co-opt in any case, and a platform for Clinton's other strengths, as well as a demonstration of her general reasonableness. What's not to like?

Instead, the party wants to conceal Clinton and shut out Sanders. It's bad for the party and bad for Clinton.

Sanders has leverage in this situation, though he clearly won't use it. He could be making threats to run third party just the way Donald Trump has. Given his passionate fan base, a Sanders third-party run would all but guarantee a Clinton loss.

I'll go to my grave hating Ralph Nader for his third-party run in 2000. But Sanders would be justified in using the threat of a third-party bid to demand more debates and better treatment. That kind of hardball isn't his style -- the fact that he lacks a taste for the jugular is part of the reason I'd rather have Clinton running against the thugs of the GOP in November -- but it's too bad. A threat to the party could be good for him, for Clinton, and for the country.

12 comments:

  1. This is yet another reason -- one of many upon many -- why the parties should choose their nominees by entirely opaque processes. In fact, they should choose them
    after
    the election, not before. Give people blue and red balls to vote with.

    No one votes for an individual candidate, or even for a party; everyone votes against a party. Individual candidates do not exist.

    Scrutin de liste, bitchez!

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  2. Maybe the debate would be good background for a solstice party? The nadir of the sun and of democracy?

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  3. Give up on the Nader bashing.
    Al Gore lost because he failed to carry Tennessee, his F'n home state.

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  4. I never thought both Hillary and Debby would appear on my shit list, much less simultaneously, but after the bitchcraft we've been witnessing, I'm on the verge of saying, if they squeeze Bernie out this way, I ain't voting. At least not Democratic. If we're going to lose the nation, I want to be more than an innocent bystander.

    Yours very crankily,
    The New York Crank

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  5. Gore didn't lose, the Retards can only "win" by cheating. So too, apparently, Hillary.

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  6. Jesus Christ, if the situation was reversed, every Bernie fan would be screaming, "We told you, sheeple, Hillary is Nixon in a pantsuit!"
    I'm sorry, who's cheating???

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  7. For starters, Sweet Sue's the only here making the point: the aggrieved party here is HRC.

    What's involved here the data of those registered Dem voters who've specifically indicated to the DNC that they have decided to support and/or voter for her, HRC, in at at least the party's primary election process, and presumably also in the general, as well as possibly in participating in campaign functions, proselytizing on behalf of the candidate and the candidate's policy platform issues, contacting members of outside associations, groups, movements, union locals & organizations open or responsive to political election campaigns,, door-to-door canvassing and contacts, fund-raising, working the phones, working the internet, contact contact contact (The chances that someone will vote for a given candidate don't star to increase materially until the SECOND outreach contact and there highest-bang-for-the-buck levels of reliable commitment of voter to candidate happen between the third and fifth contacts by actual live people working for or with the campaign).

    If some person or party outside a given campaign wants to organize a raid-to-convert on that campaign's softer supporters, or to disrupt that campaign's ground game, or analyze the data of the campaign's supporter to determine strategic targets aimed at interrupting the supporter/voter commitment process, there's two places to go to: the candidate's own campaign, or the party's membership data base. Regardless the 'real' motive of this privacy invasion, it was wrong to the point of being at least arguably criminal and it MATTERS, not just to the competing campaigns but to those members on the campaign's list who have entrusted their own private information to the party. And besides all that, the explanations I've heard from the Sanders campaign - under Jeff Weaver's control - don't make any freaking sense, against the default assumption that this was indeed a data raid.

    How the Living F! as Malcolm Tucker would say this is HILLARY looking bad, in any way, I just don't get. If you don't like HRC, if you wish her ill, fine, that's your right, but bashing HER and HER CAMPAIGN over an arguable act of DATA THEFT by another campaign committed on an agent of the candidates' mutual trustee, the party for whose nomination each is competing, is cleaver to the reptile brain stunned stupid wrong.

    This was not anything at all to do with anything intentional by Sanders, but tough titty: it's Sanders' problem now, and it's Sanders who has to fix it.

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  8. Calm down everybody, fergoodnesssakes, Clinton will be the next president. Wall Street and the International Bankers and Insurers have already made that decision and all the rest of this is naught but a facade leaving the rubes with a sense of participation.

    I am laughing, at the "superiority".

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  9. "Clinton will be the next president. Wall Street and the International Bankers and Insurers have already made that decision ..."

    If that were true, corporate media treatment of Clinton would be a lot more favorable than it is.

    I try to see 2 (at least) sides of a story and particularly try to avoid drawing conclusions based on a few media reports. After everything that's come out about the voter data screwup, I have no idea why anyone would think Clinton or her campaign is to blame. To be clear, I don't think this should affect Sanders standing - it was the fault of his campaign staff and the vendor.

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  10. According to the MSNBC report I just viewed the only person to see more media coverage than Hillary is Trump. And though the corporate media, the Little Eichmanns of Wall Street and the International Bankers and Insurers, fawningly kisses the Retard's asses the view from the street is not necessarily favorable. I have in fact a growing clientele - business is booming for some unfathomable reason - that as business types are quite conservative, and let assure you they are as dissatisfied, as freaked out, with the current offerings as I am.

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  11. It was certainly unforgivable of Ralph Nader to allow people to vote for a candidate of their choice. What a betrayal of democracy!

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  12. I'm sure a million dead Iraqis are grateful for your devotion to purity.

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