Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Super Doppler Tuesday







By Rhodes Cook


Ready or not, here it comes... Super-Duper Tuesday, Tsunami Tuesday, Monster Tuesday, or whatever name one chooses to call it. The huge, historic nationwide vote Feb. 5 is at last at hand. Two dozen states from Massachusetts to California will vote next Tuesday, electing more than 40 percent of all Democratic and Republican delegates in 2008.

The only other single-day event that has ever come close to this size during the presidential nominating process came on March 8, 1988, when the first full-blown Super Tuesday featured 16 primaries, actually one more than is scheduled next Tuesday. But that one-day votefest 20 years ago was a Southern-oriented event, rounded out by a handful of primaries in the Northeast and a smattering of low-visibility caucuses in the West.

This year's Super Tuesday, by contrast, is truly a nationwide event, the largest in scope ever held outside the November general election. It is vast and varied in virtually every way. Each region of the country is well represented. Red and blue states abound. Racial diversity is accented. Voter enthusiasm has rarely been higher, and turnout should be huge.
The half of the country that will vote Feb. 5 includes nearly 80 million registered voters. Most will have the opportunity to participate in primary elections, where turnout records have already been broken this year in a number of states. Lower-turnout caucuses will be held in a few small to medium-sized states west of the Mississippi River.



Figure 1. Super Tuesday: One Huge Delegate Harvest
More than 40 percent of all Democratic and Republican delegates will be elected to reflect the results of primaries and caucuses held on Super Tuesday (Feb. 5)--more to be selected in one day than the total elected in either the weeks before or the months afterward. Altogether, Democrats require 2,025 delegates to nominate; the Republicans, 1,191.
Delegates at Stake

ELECTED DELEGATES
Pre-Super Tuesday
Dems 137 3%
Reps 238 10%

Super Tuesday (Feb. 5)
Dems 1,681 42%
Reps 1,009 42%




Post-Super Tuesday
Dems 1,435 35%
Reps 980 41%

UNELECTED DELEGATES
Superdelegates
Dems 796 20%
Reps 153 6%




TOTAL DELEGATES
Dems 4,049
Reps 2,380





Source: Democratic National Committee's Office of Party Affairs and Delegate Selection (Jan. 5, 2008); Call for the 2008 Republican National Convention (Nov. 9, 2007).


Unlike 1988, no one part of the country will dominate next week's vote. Each region will have a say, with the West (with one-third of the Democratic and Republican delegates) and the Northeast (with roughly one-quarter) leading the way. Altogether, Super Tuesday will include at least five states from each region, anchored by the nation's first, third and fifth most populous states--California, New York, and Illinois, respectively.

The monster vote will require candidates to dip into both Red and Blue America in their hunt for delegates. The quintet of Southern primary states all voted decisively for President Bush in 2004. The five primary states in the Northeast were clear-cut in their support for John Kerry.
In the heartland, candidates will be tested in a collection of battleground states which nowadays are being described as purple, rather than red or blue. It is a group that on Super Tuesday will include Minnesota and Missouri in the Midwest and Arizona, Colorado and New Mexico in the Mountain West.


In the process, candidates will come face to face with the rich mosaic of racial and ethnic diversity that comprises the American electorate. Seven states voting Feb. 5 have populations at least 15 percent African American--four in the South, three in the industrial Frost Belt (including Hillary Clinton's home base of New York and Barack Obama's Illinois). Five states next Tuesday have populations 15 percent or more Hispanic--New York plus four Western states (California, Arizona, Colorado and New Mexico).


The sprawling nature of the Feb. 5 event will test the candidates' ability to draw votes under an array of different systems of voter participation, ranging from closed contests limited to party members only, to wide open primaries and caucuses where any registered voter of any political persuasion can participate. There are conspicuous examples of each that should show in stark form whether Obama and John McCain truly need the support of independents to successfully challenge Clinton and Mitt Romney, respectively, for their party's nominations.


In the South and Midwest, virtually all the primaries and caucuses on Super Tuesday will feature open voting. On the two coasts, though, there will be a greater emphasis on closed contests, which will be the case in New York, Connecticut, Arizona and for the Republicans, California. Conspicuously, California Democrats will allow independents (roughly 3 million) to participate in their primary, as will both parties in Massachusetts and New Jersey.


In short, Super Tuesday will test the candidates' organizational ability, campaign skills, and most importantly, their vote-getting appeal, in far-flung settings unique in their scope and variety.




The one area where the Democrats and Republicans operate on quite different playing fields is in the realm of awarding delegates. Democrats require that delegates be elected to proportionally reflect the primary or caucus vote, with 15 percent statewide or in a congressional district needed to qualify for a share. Republicans allow for a variety of delegate allocation methods, from proportional representation to winner-take-all. And next Tuesday, most states on the Republican side will be using some variation of winner-take-all.



Yet ultimately, the big question is whether either party will have a decisive outcome on Feb. 5 as the Republicans did on Super Tuesday 1988? Then, Vice President George H.W. Bush swept every primary and all but one caucus state, essentially wrapping up the GOP nomination right there.



Or might one or both parties next Tuesday have a fragmented outcome like the Democrats did in early March two decades ago? Michael Dukakis, Jesse Jackson and Al Gore each won five primary states that day and divided the delegates--an inconclusive result that sent the Democratic contest hurdling on for weeks to come.



Results will trickle in next Tuesday night much like they will do in November. Polls in Georgia are scheduled to close at 7 p.m. An hour later every primary state east of the Mississippi River except New York will begin reporting their results. Polls in the Empire State will close at 9 p.m. Arizona will begin reporting its results the same hour. Utah will follow at 10 p.m. Eastern time, California at 11.



Yet it will be not be in a primary or caucus where the first delegates of the day are chosen. It will be at a convention of West Virginia Republicans in Charleston, where roughly 1,500 delegates from around the state will convene at 9 a.m. in a setting resembling a national convention. Much like their counterparts at the national level, delegates will sit under their county signs, with a roll call vote of the state's 55 counties taking place in alphabetical order. It could take one, two or three ballots for one of the presidential candidates to win the majority of the vote that is necessary to capture the 18 national convention delegates at stake. State GOP officials hope to have a result to announce by early afternoon.



At the least, the West Virginia Republican convention will be the "Dixville Notch" of Super Tuesday, reporting its tally of delegates several hours before the rest of the country. But just maybe, the event could be something more--the precursor of the first multi-ballot national convention in more than a half century. Does the chance still exist for the Republicans to have such a protracted convention this summer, or even the Democrats? The full results from this largest of all primary and caucus days Feb. 5 could tell the tale.

5 comments:

KatherineGollahon_2ndperiod said...

Oh My Goodness! first of all the democratic race is so close they think that the delegates and super delegates will have to come in and choose the nominee. for mike huckabee he got a lot of support in quite a few state, but john mccane is still the leader of the Republican race, mit Romney is disappointed and hoping for something to help him along. Geez i sound like a fricken news anchor.

Unknown said...

So Super Tuesday has come and gone, and we still don't know much more. Or that's how I feel anyway.


I like Ron Paul.


We need a bold and straightforward authoritative figure. Maybe not for president, but something, at least. ahh. I feel like I can't really support anyone until the final nominations come out. It just doesn't feel real yet. Does anyone else feel that way?

sorry, I'm rambling - I'm exhausted, but am making myself do this. haha.

Tara Viswanathan
2nd Period

Unknown said...

So Super Tuesday has come and gone, and we still don't know much more. Or that's how I feel anyway.


I like Ron Paul.


We need a bold and straightforward authoritative figure. Maybe not for president, but something, at least. ahh. I feel like I can't really support anyone until the final nominations come out. It just doesn't feel real yet. Does anyone else feel that way?

sorry, I'm rambling - I'm exhausted, but am making myself do this. haha.

Tara Viswanathan
2nd Period

Jessica Kaskie said...

That's cool. I have heard about it on the radio, but I never knew what Monster Tuesday meant. I can see now why all the canidates ared immensley big in the news right now; spending all thier money on commercializing. However I'm not suprised that this will be the the largest amount of americans voting since 1988 because there are minorities running in the election.
Jessica Kaskie

Samantha Gunaratna-Foley said...

In hindsight, it seems as though Super Tuesday didn't really live up to all the hype ultimately.
It was almost like the American media spent an amazing amount of time talking about the day, and how great it was going to be, and then once it came around, it turned out not to be as outstanding as previously promised.

Samantha Gunaratna
APGov 3rd