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California Latino Super Delegate Remains Uncommitted

Steven-Ybarra.jpg By Steven J. Ybarra, JD

A few weeks ago, when Patty Solis Doyle was dumped to make way for the new effort to save the dying Hillary campaign, I said that to do that was dumb. At that time, it was clear to me and many folks that the Clinton campaign was losing its grip. Texas was supposed to be in the Clinton column and suddenly it came into play. On Tuesday March 4, 2008, the campaign magically revived itself with a slim margin of victory. Not quite the thirty points we had all been promised but hey, it was on the plus side.

I have always said that early voting does nothing for turnout. Early voters are those with time on their hands. Moreover, it appears that while I was right about Texas being within the margin of error (that means 4 points either direction) I remain right about early voting. In the early voting numbers, Obama led in Houston two to one. Nevertheless, by the time the paper storm had cleared. Obama’s lead went from two to one, to 56.15%. He ended with very few votes on Election Day as compared to the early vote. He closed the day with 227,886 votes to Clinton’s 176,724 votes.

On Election Day, Clinton picked up 100,000 votes due to the efforts of her 300 paid staffers that she put in the field the last seven days. The clear win on Election Day was due to a real effort by a bunch of scared people - not the least of who were the candidate and her husband. In the Ohio primary, at the end of the day only 229,905 votes separated first from second place.

However, on the absentee side of the ledger, the number will not be in proportion to the previous elections because Ohio, like California, has made absentee voting available on demand. Ohio elections officials estimate that the number will be between 25% and 30% of the total number of all voters. [Keep in mind the turnout in the Ohio primary for all voters was only 42.8%. In the general election in 2004, 71% of all Ohio voters voted.]

So here is the question of the day - what does a “Super Latino” (i.e., super delegate to the Democratic National Convention) like me do when it comes convention time? (Mind you, I got the title “Super Latino” from the New York Post; it’s not just an ego thing.)

I am opposed to the primary caucus system. They are by their very nature unfair to working class people and discriminatory. This is why they were set up in the first place. One of the questions that I constantly ask is why is it that 200,000 white folks in Iowa get to choose my presidential nominee? Oh, we are told, but you got Nevada, and there are a lot of colored folks in Nevada. My response is of course yes for those who could get off work or had the time. They got to participate.

The reality is that the nomination process for the Democratic Party sucks big time.

I am happy to get to go to the convention. It is a lot of fun and I get cool stuff. However, for the first time the vote of this Super Latino may matter.

As we get ready to go the convention, I need to know, what are the candidates willing to do for the Latino community -Americans who serve our country, work in the fields, are doctors, lawyers, teachers, and mechanics? What are they willing to do to help us get registered to vote, to educate us in the voting process, and to help us turn out to cast the ballot by mail or in person? What are you willing to spend in our communities’ not just radio and television or robo calls to make the media vampires rich, but on the streets and in the neighborhood?

Or is loyalty a one-way street?

What is the budget and where is your plan to share political power with those from whom you so desperately want to have a vote?

Until, I hear the answer I remain uncommitted to those who are uncommitted to us.

Steven Ybarra is a retired civil rights attorney who operates a consultant company in California. He is a member of the Democratic National Committee and a long time political activist. For more information about Ybarra, visit Consultants Associated.

Posted on March 06, 2008

Comments

Why does the democratic party have "super delegates"?

Isn't the popular vote good enough for the democratic party to choose their candidates from? Look, Gore vs Bush in 2000 was lost but WON in the popular vote column, and the democrats raised hell about that...

But here the dems have elitist super-delegates who are NOT responsible to the majority-popular vote but insider politics. Seems quite hypocritical after Gore vs Bush...and not in line with true democracy either.

Posted by: Jay Gould at March 9, 2008 09:52 PM

MR. LATINO
I WISH I HAD THE MAGIC WORDS TO CONVINCE YOU TO SUPPORT HILLARY. I HAVE SUCH A FEAR FOR "OUR" AMERICA, AND I'M JUST ASKING FOR A FEW MINUTES OF YOUR TIME TO HEAR ME. OUR NATION IS CRUMBLING!! PEOPLE ARE HURTING!! MANY HAVE LOST THEIR HOMES, AND WONDER WHERE THE NEXT MEAL WILL COME FROM!! SURELY, SURELY YOU AND MANY OTHERS WHO ARE MUCH SMARTER THAN I MUST ADMIT THAT OBAMA HAS NOT THE KNOWLEDGE TO CARRY THIS NATION FORWARD. WE'RE TALKING ABOUT "OUR" NATION, AND IT'S FUTURE. THE LAST EIGHT YEARS HAS TORN A NATION OF WHAT WE KNOW TO BE PROSPEROUS, TO ONE OF DEGRADATION AND FEAR. IT'S NOT TOO LATE FOR US TO PICK UP OUR ARMOUR, SHAKE THE DUST FROM OUR FEET, AND RALLY TOWARD SUCCESS AND FREEDOM FROM THIS NATION'S DROUGHT OF OPPRESSION. DOES AMERICA WANT A PRESIDENT WHO TOOK HIS OATH OF OFFICE FOR THE ILLINOIS SENATE ON THE QURAN???THIS NATION IS HURTING!!!WE NEED YOUR HELP!! PLEASE DO THE RIGHT THING FOR US

Posted by: Rosella Bush at May 19, 2008 02:00 PM

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