[NewPacifica] Dems and Pacifica. The same lessons?



The fighting within the Democratic Party reminds me so much of 
Pacifica Foundation.  This election should have been the grand slam 
for Dems across the entire country.  Instead, it's a house divided.

Nalini
=======================================
http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-dems30mar30,0,4277084.story

>From the Los Angeles Times CAMPAIGN '08 Clinton, Obama supporters 
wrangle over delegates The acrimony is evident at district 
conventions in Texas this weekend, with each side accusing the other 
of underhandedness.
By Tom Hamburger and Peter Wallsten Los Angeles Times Staff Writers

March 30, 2008

HOUSTON - Less than a month ago, Texas Democrats turned out in huge 
numbers for the presidential nominating contest between Hillary 
Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama, confident that, no matter who won, 
the party would have a popular, well-financed candidate.

But that exuberance is gone now.

Across the state this weekend, tense confrontations -- even shoving 
matches -- erupted as partisans for Clinton and Obama battled over 
how to interpret the March 4 election results and how to choose 
delegates to the Texas Democratic convention.

At one particularly raucous session Saturday at Texas Southern 
University, a leading Clinton backer, U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson-Lee, 
was booed by hundreds of Obama supporters, and police were called 
later to break up heated exchanges that left some in tears.

"It's bedlam," said Houston lawyer Daniel J. Shea, a Clinton backer.

Democrat-on-Democrat clashes over delegates have been playing out in 
Iowa, Colorado, Florida and other states -- the latest indication 
that the feel-good nomination race of the era has veered into a 
political ditch.

The contentious battle in Texas shows the high cost of this unending 
campaign. To hold his delegate lead, Obama has kept a team of 65 paid 
organizers and lawyers in the state this month, while Clinton has 45.

As the feud rages -- even in states that voted weeks or months ago -- 
each side has its own game plan for victory. For Obama, it means 
highlighting his lead in delegates to the party's national convention 
in Denver. For Clinton, it means lengthening the campaign so that she 
can use every tactic to narrow her delegate deficit and to win 
upcoming primaries in her bid to raise doubts about Obama's 
electability in the fall.

The candidates have also become far more combative, and that 
hostility has party leaders worried. In a year that looked to be a 
Democratic romp, Obama and Clinton are burning money, erasing 
goodwill and eviscerating each other's reputation while the 
presumptive Republican nominee, John McCain, prepares to kick off his 
general-election campaign with a nationwide tour designed to 
highlight of military and congressional experience. On Saturday, 
Clinton told the Washington Post that she was prepared to take her 
campaign all the way to the party convention in August.

"This thing has turned from being an adventure to being a grind," 
said Robert M. Shrum, a Democratic strategist who managed John F. 
Kerry's 2004 presidential campaign.

Polls published last week showed some of the dangers: McCain has 
gained ground against both Democrats, and at least 20% of each 
Democratic candidate's supporters now say they would consider 
abandoning the party in November if their candidate is not the 
nominee.

The potential for anger is more pronounced -- and the consequences 
more dire -- than in most campaigns because this contest is being 
waged along the fault lines of gender and race, with the would-be 
first female president versus the would-be first black president.

That was starkly evident Saturday at one convention in Houston, where 
mostly white Clinton supporters repeatedly challenged the credentials 
of black Obama backers in a heavily black district that had voted 
overwhelmingly for Obama. Democratic leaders, who had been thrilled 
by the massive turnout in early-voting states, now fear the 
consequences not only in the presidential race but also in state and 
local ones.

"When you have a divided party, I think it hurts you up and down the 
ticket," said Tennessee Gov. Phil Bredesen, a Democrat, who said his 
party cannot afford to lose seats in an evenly divided state Senate 
and a state House controlled by a narrow Democratic 
majority. "Somebody who's mad enough at one of the candidates to want 
to vote for John McCain is more likely to [vote] down that side of 
the ballot."

Bredesen has circulated a plan to stave off a potentially divisive 
national nominating convention in August by holding a "primary" 
earlier this summer among the nearly 800 superdelegates -- the 
party's elected officials, leaders and activists -- whose votes could 
decide the race and forestall the type of delegate fights now 
unfolding in Texas.

Another party elder, former New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, proposed 
Saturday that Clinton and Obama avert a "disaster" by agreeing to 
share the ticket, with the delegate winner running for president and 
the loser for vice president.

"If, on the other hand, the candidates refuse to work out a way to 
keep both constituencies firmly in the Democratic camp for the 
general election," Cuomo wrote in the Boston Globe, "the 2008 primary 
may be the story of a painfully botched grand opportunity to return 
our nation to the upward path and [instead] leave us mired in Iraq 
and government mediocrity."

Such concern prompted one prominent U.S. senator, Patrick J. Leahy of 
Vermont, an Obama supporter, to call Friday for Clinton to step 
aside, while Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean urged 
the candidates to find a resolution by July.

The acrimony was on sharp display Saturday in Texas as Democrats met 
in 280 district conventions, part of the complicated system the state 
uses to determine the makeup of its delegation to the national 
convention.

Clinton won the primary in Texas, but Obama won the caucuses that 
followed after the polls closed. It was those caucus results that 
were being challenged Saturday at conventions that drew thousands of 
boisterous participants.

Even after Saturday, individual delegates can still be challenged. 
The count will not be secured until the state party convention in 
early June, and possibly not even then.

While party leaders openly fret about the potential harm in the 
November election, the ongoing battles in Texas and other states come 
with political benefits for Clinton -- particularly in states that 
held caucuses in which Obama was far more successful.

Not only do Clinton aides believe that scrutinizing the caucus 
process can help them squeeze out more delegates, due to math or 
certification errors, but they believe that a drumbeat of complaints 
about the caucuses bolsters Clinton's argument to superdelegates that 
they are not as legitimate as primary elections. In addition, the 
fighting delays the official delegate count, which helps keep Obama's 
lead from growing too fast and gives Clinton more time to raise 
questions about his electability.

Both the Clinton and Obama teams encouraged supporters to get to 
Saturday's conventions amid reports that dirty-trick e-mails told 
delegates the conventions had been canceled or moved. Thousands of 
Texas households received a recorded phone call from former President 
Bill Clinton reminding delegates of the importance of attending.

Definitive results were not available Saturday evening from the often 
chaotic district conventions. Nonetheless, both campaigns declared 
victory. Clinton field organizer Michael Trujillo said preliminary 
results showed a likely two-delegate shift toward Clinton, thanks to 
successful challenges in southern and rural Texas. The Obama campaign 
said Saturday's conventions confirmed that Obama still had the 
overall lead in the Texas delegation.

During the day, supporters of both candidates said they were 
disturbed by what they considered intimidation and cheap tricks from 
the other side.

Valerie Zavala, 38, said that as soon as she identified herself as a 
Clinton supporter, Obama backers demanded to know why she had even 
bothered showing up. "There's a lot of hostility," she said. "I see a 
lot of tension."

Adib Faafir, an Obama supporter, suspected that trickery by Clinton 
backers had blocked his chance of participating. He held up his 
cellphone to show a text message telling him to show up for the 
convention at a local school miles from the actual location. By the 
time he arrived at the correct address, he was out of luck.

"Only two of the people from my precinct have showed up, and they 
wouldn't let me register," he said.

The Clinton campaign had announced last week that it would not be 
officially challenging delegates. But behind the scenes, Clinton 
staff encouraged and counseled individuals in the challenge process.

Each side accused the other of gaming the system to its advantage.

Trujillo didn't bother with diplomatic niceties, charging that 
the "abundance of pure cheating from the Obama side escapes the 
imagination."

Obama's top field organizer, Temo Figueroa, said it was Clinton who 
had created the prospect of a nominating fight lasting to the 
convention, a nightmare for party leaders.

"The new rules are that she is not going to quit," he said. "She is 
going to fight over every single delegate, and the fight may go to 
the last vote and the last delegate."







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