Donate to DU!
Democratic Underground Latest Threads
Latest
Greatest Threads
Greatest
Lobby
Lobby
Journals
Journals
Search
Search
Options
Options
Help
Help
Login
Login
Google

How to Vote in Primaries and Not Be an Idiot [View All]

Printer-friendly format Printer-friendly format
Printer-friendly format Email this thread to a friend
Printer-friendly format Bookmark this thread
This topic is archived.
First thread | Last thread
Home » Discuss » Archives » General Discussion: Presidential (Through Nov 2009) Donate to DU
davidswanson Donating Member (1000+ posts)  Journal Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list Click to add this author to your Ignore list Sun Dec-09-07 02:15 PM
Original message
How to Vote in Primaries and Not Be an Idiot
Advertisements [?]
Edited on Sun Dec-09-07 02:17 PM by davidswanson
A Short Instructions Manual
By David Swanson

1. Virtually nobody votes in primaries (or caucuses) compared to general elections. Therefore, each individual primary vote is worth many times what it is in the general election. And, it's more likely to be counted, since there's typically less fraud and abuse of the system in primaries. So, if you vote in general elections, you pretty much have to vote in primaries in order to not be an idiot. Bring a few friends to vote too, and you're practically a genius.

2. If you have to join a party that you don't support in order to vote in a primary, you can always unjoin again immediately after the primary. In the meantime, maybe you'll have helped to create a party you can support. You can even vote in a primary without planning to vote in the general election. If the 50% of Americans who don't vote at all (or even a small fraction of them) voted in primaries, they would determine the candidates in the general elections, in which they might then choose to vote as well.

3. If there's no candidate you like in a primary, you can write one in. A relatively very small amount of organizing can even lead to a victory for that candidate. (Or some signature gathering could place your candidate's name on the ballot.)

4. If there is a good candidate on the ballot, then an extremely small amount of organizing can lead to a victory for that candidate. And something short of a victory can still mean some number of delegates for your candidate going to the party's convention from your state, or momentum for your candidate in future states. Primaries, unlike general elections, are not winner-take-all. (You can even become a delegate for your candidate and get a trip to a convention out of this.)

5. In most presidential elections, the party's nominee is decided before many states hold their primaries. So, for most people, the point of voting is not to choose the nominee. (And therefore almost nobody votes, opening the door to effective action by non-idiots.) The point is also not to "show support and loyalty" for a nominee already chosen (democracies have no need for such displays, which are best suited to another type of regime). Rather, the point is to elect as many delegates as possible for the candidate whose positions you most favor, so that those delegates can influence the party's platform and the nominee's positions at the convention, or even make your candidate the vice presidential nominee.

6. In early states, surprise underdog candidates can build momentum, and voting for such a candidate does not entail spoiling the primary for a mediocre candidate who you believe has a better chance of defeating the worst candidate. This is because it takes several states over a period of days or weeks for one candidate to lock down a victory. A surprising showing for an underdog candidate with dramatically distinct positions can put that candidate into the running in the minds of future voters, and can very quickly move the mediocre candidates to become better than mediocre, and therefore better able to compete in future states.

7. Swing voters almost do not exist. Fewer than 4% of voters in 2004 ever planned to vote for Kerry and switched to Bush or vice versa. So, appealing to one's own base and turning those people out to vote is key to winning the general election. Therefore, Democrats who want to win the general election, for example, should nominate the most Democratic, not the most Republican, candidate in the primaries. (Republicans already know this.)

8. Pre-primary corporate polls that purport to tell us who is most "viable" and "electable" are primarily a product of corporate media coverage and spin, much of which is "coverage" of the previous polls. The way to determine which candidate is most viable begins by canceling your newspaper subscriptions and recycling your television.

9. In a democracy, the most electable candidate is the candidate whom the most people actually like. The most reliable gauge available to any of us of whom people will like is whom we ourselves personally and honestly most like. Therefore, there can be no distinction between whom you like and whom you consider "viable." The candidate you most like, honestly, in your own considered private opinion, is the most viable candidate. And you can make that even more so if you lead by example. Don't just vote, but campaign, promote, and contribute, as much and as early as you can. "To believe your own thought, to believe that what is true for you in your private heart is true for all men , -- that is genius." - Ralph Waldo Emerson.

10. The following are majority positions among Americans, and overwhelmingly majority positions among Democrats: end the occupation of Iraq, impeach the vice president, create single-payer not-for-profit universal health coverage, withdraw from corporate trade agreements like NAFTA, and slash the Pentagon budget in order to invest in diplomacy, foreign aid, education, jobs, and green energy. Only one candidate supports this platform. He came in third in MoveOn.org's poll, and then second in Democrats.com's, then first in Democracy for America's, and most recently first in Progressive Democrats of America's poll. These are polls done outside the corporate media, polls of progressive activists. His campaign is where the energy is, but it is energy that must resist the influence of the corporate media. Our country and our planet are in peril, and we have no viable alternative. Nobody else comes close. His name is Dennis Kucinich.
Printer Friendly | Permalink |  | Top
 
  How to Vote in Primaries and Not Be an Idiot davidswanson  Dec-09-07 02:15 PM   #0 
   Great post  JeffR   Dec-09-07 02:26 PM   #1 
   D K he is our man.  Vincardog   Dec-09-07 02:54 PM   #2 
   Great post, David.  gristy   Dec-09-07 03:10 PM   #3 
   good points  Mabus   Dec-09-07 03:21 PM   #4 
   KICK n/t  LWolf   Dec-09-07 03:43 PM   #5 
   Good points generally, but  liberalhistorian   Dec-09-07 04:31 PM   #6 
   Great Post  mrone2   Dec-09-07 05:47 PM   #7 
   Agree  nonny   Dec-09-07 06:14 PM   #8 
   11. Don't look for Oprah's name on the ballot  itsrobert   Dec-09-07 06:17 PM   #9 
   Kucinich has my vote, David!  proud2Blib   Dec-09-07 06:48 PM   #10 
   Excellent post, and great information!  Tresalisa   Dec-10-07 01:34 AM   #11 
   I forgot to add  Tresalisa   Dec-10-07 01:36 AM   #12 
   This post is merely the simple truth  Kucinich4America   Dec-10-07 01:38 AM   #13 
   It's not the simple truth for me. My primary is in March  cali   Dec-10-07 04:59 AM   #17 
      meaningless . . . . as is mine in Florida . . . .  DrDan   Dec-10-07 09:20 AM   #22 
      it's like the class is going on the year's big field trip and we're not allowed near the bus.  nashville_brook   Dec-10-07 10:00 AM   #23 
      Point 5 Again  davidswanson   Dec-10-07 12:13 PM   #26 
      ack, forget the DNC, vote for the dem candidate to avoid  cali   Dec-10-07 02:49 PM   #35 
         if the DNC wants to disenfranchise me . . . why should I support  DrDan   Dec-11-07 06:56 AM   #36 
      Point 5  davidswanson   Dec-10-07 12:13 PM   #24 
   Delegates pledged to specific candidates can form coalitions.  cyclezealot   Dec-10-07 02:35 AM   #14 
   right  davidswanson   Dec-10-07 12:14 PM   #27 
   Wonderful post, David. I'm so relieved that it wasn't one of those  sofedupwithbush   Dec-10-07 03:02 AM   #15 
   My first, last and only choice.....DK ALL THE WAY!  Faux pas   Dec-10-07 04:16 AM   #16 
   But but but... to look around here you'd think everyones a Shillery supporter!  rAVES   Dec-10-07 05:11 AM   #18 
   an excellent civics primer, thanks!  stlsaxman   Dec-10-07 07:12 AM   #19 
   this is why I vote in primaries  ayeshahaqqiqa   Dec-10-07 07:32 AM   #20 
   sorry  davidswanson   Dec-10-07 12:15 PM   #28 
   You can't write in names in Tennessee either  Clark2008   Dec-10-07 12:24 PM   #29 
   k+r  Progs Rock   Dec-10-07 08:29 AM   #21 
   Pre-primary corporate polls = corporate media spin EXACTLY!  mod mom   Dec-10-07 12:13 PM   #25 
   Any suggestions for states like Florida where the democratic primary will not count?  whistle   Dec-10-07 01:09 PM   #30 
   Florida??  kimjamey69   Dec-10-07 01:24 PM   #31 
   Note the underlying assumption that everyone but David Swanson is an idiot.  Perry Logan   Dec-10-07 01:38 PM   #32 
   Thats typical Swanson Perry...  hayu_lol   Dec-10-07 02:19 PM   #33 
   Most presidential primaries require candidates to get their name on the ballot  LiberalFighter   Dec-10-07 02:46 PM   #34 
 

Home » Discuss » Archives » General Discussion: Presidential (Through Nov 2009) Donate to DU

Powered by DCForum+ Version 1.1 Copyright 1997-2002 DCScripts.com
Software has been extensively modified by the DU administrators


Important Notices: By participating on this discussion board, visitors agree to abide by the rules outlined on our Rules page. Messages posted on the Democratic Underground Discussion Forums are the opinions of the individuals who post them, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Democratic Underground, LLC.

Home  |  Discussion Forums  |  Journals  |  Links  |  Store  |  Donate

About DU  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy

Got a message for Democratic Underground? Click here to send us a message.

© 2001 - 2009 Democratic Underground, LLC