Your Vote Means Nothing
Joe Concha A few weeks ago, Hobokenites went to the polls in record numbers for the New
Jersey Democratic and Republican Presidential primaries. All told, over 10,000 voters went
to polling centers around the city. Amazingly, more residents voted in this primary than
the last Mayoral election in 2005.

A Hoboken resident
votes at the Elks Club
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Hillary Clinton (remember, this is before the Omaba surge)
won in Hoboken with 4397 to 3981 on the Democratic side, while John McCain beat
then-candidate Mitt Romney by a 3-to-1 margin.
But unfortunately for all of you who voted Democrat, your
vote, regardless of who you supported, apparently won't mean a thing.
Here's why: Barack Obama has won eight straight
primaries by landslide margins over the past two weeks, and will likely make it an easy
ten when the Wisconsin and Hawaii primaries are held this Tuesday. Clinton, already seeing
the momentum that Obama has and understanding that it will continue to grow, knows that
she'll finish with far less of the popular vote and fewer delegates among Democrats. 2025
delegates are needed to win, but neither Clinton or Obama will get to that number due to
the party agreeing (for now) t o not count delegates from Florida
and Michigan as penalty for moving up their primaries in January.
Way back when, Obama and Clinton agreed to not campaign in
Florida or Michigan. But Clinton kept her name on the ballot on both. However, after she
won Michigan (she beat "uncommitted" on the ballot 58-37 percent, but lost to
pesky uncommitted among 18-29 year-olds, 48-43 percent), she threw a raucous victory
party. And when she won Florida despite neither candidate setting foot in the state before
the "election", she gave a victory speech that resembled an event that is
normally seen sometime in early November.
Both spectacles were deplorable. But nothing compares to Clinton now
boldly implying that the popular vote of millions of citizens won't decide the nomination.
Rather, as she and her campaign aides claim, the race will come down to a select few
hundred members of the party called "superdelegates".
What is a superdelegate? In short, they are party
activists, lawmakers, and former presidents (like Bill Clinton) who all get a vote at the
Democratic convention in August. With both candidates likely to fall short of the number
of regular delegates needed to win the nomination, superdelegates--many of them old-guard
Democrats supporting the Clintons--may render everybody and everything else meaningless.
So in other words, Obama could receive several million more
votes, win twice as many states, and most importantly for Democrats, present a true
challenge to John McCain in November (almost all polls indicate that Obama would win a
head-to-head matchup with the Arizona Senator, while Clinton loses in most). But those
facts won't matter if Clinton--who will do anything to win the nomination, including
severely fracturing her own party and disenfranchising Obama voters--gets her way in what
she truly believes is her entitlement of the Oval Office.
Obama Campaign Manager David Plouffe tore into Clinton for
the strategy over the weekend.
"The
Clinton campaign just said they have two options for trying to win the nomination
attempting to have superdelegates overturn the will of the Democratic voters or change the
rules they agreed to at the eleventh hour in order to seat non-existent delegates from
Florida and Michigan," he said in a statement.
"The Clinton campaign should focus on winning pledged
delegates as a result of elections, not these say-or-do-anything-to-win tactics that could
undermine Democrats ability to win the general election."
A Clinton Presidency (which will never happen for several
reasons, but that's for another column) would be so polarizing to Washington, it would
make the Bush Administration look like the inventors of the olive
branch. No politician has higher negatives than Hillary, and if she ends up stealing the
nomination through backroom deals with superdelegates and loopholes in a Democratic party
system that is anything but Democratic, her caricature as a power-driven politican willing
to do or say anything will be complete.
Whether Hillary wins pivotal states such as Ohio or Texas
primaries on March 4 is irrelevant. Hillary Clinton isn't about heeding to the will of the
people (unless a policy decision is involved). Hillary is about Hillary. And power. And
ego. And comeuppance.
Does Hoboken and the country deserve better?
Absolutely.
But don't count on her doing the right thing if it means
her simply being a Senator again come November.
Joe Concha is Realhoboken.com's Senior Writer and is a
registered Republican. Email questions and comments to joeconcha@yahoo.com or use the
message board on the homepage. |