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Sunday, March 16, 2008
Salena Zito :: Townhall.com Columnist
Crunch Time for Ex-Officios
by Salena Zito
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Who won Tuesday's presidential debate?


Rep. Jason Altmire figured 2008 was going to be a tough year. After all, it is the first time he will have to defend the congressional seat he won in the 2006 midterm elections.

Altmire, a Democrat, took out Republican Melissa Hart in what was considered a “safe” House seat, and he faces a rematch this fall.

Yet he has another issue weighing on his mind right now -- his role as a Democratic National Convention superdelegate from Pennsylvania, a commonwealth that has become the center of the universe for the Democratic Party and its primary season.

“It is pretty regrettable that the race may come down to a decision by superdelegates,” says Altmire, who has yet to come out in support of Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton. “And it’s a tough call. Both candidates are extremely exciting and, in their own ways, perfect for the party. I can see an argument for supporting either one.”

How tough is it?

“Very,” answers Mark Siegel, a former executive director of the Democratic National Committee who helped to devise the political algebra now baffling everyone. “In a lot of ways, superdelegates are creating the position that has never had to play a deciding role in the nomination process.”

"Ex officios" (that’s the correct title; "superdelegate" is a media creation) want to do the right thing. The question is, the right thing for whom -- for their constituents, who have voted in a primary or caucus for a candidate, or for ex officios themselves?

Siegel says ex officios may need a political psychologist after this is all over: “Someone like Altmire has to think about where his constituents may vote, his own political future and the governor that helped get him elected.”

Altmire says he will decide whom to support before the Keystone State’s April 22 primary; he’s just not there yet.

“I am leaning one way,” he says, without revealing which way. “But I will say this: My decision will not come out of a phone call from either candidate. It will come from my constituents. I do not represent just Democrats in my district; I have to think of who would be best for everyone.”

Ex officios, in their purest sense, are trusted by people to use their judgment to do the right thing. But is that right thing empirical?

If it is, then the ex officio has to take into consideration which candidate will run the strongest race against Republican John McCain. If the right thing is anecdotal, then the ex officio has to weigh the problems of a non-vetted candidate who may look strongest today but may not remain so in the fall. Continued...

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About The Author
Salena Zito is a political analyst, reporter and columnist.
 
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Subject: You two are right on!
What goes around comes around. The Dims have got themselves "boxed in"! The convention should be a hoot. Remember 1968? Yes the entertainment value could be astromonical.

Race or Gender?
For decades, the Democrats have put everyone in little boxes dependent upon race, gender, ethnicity and sexual proclivity. Civil liberties for all but for all as a group.

While it should be the issues and everyone should be an American, that's not the case. The party is being divided into the groups they created. It is all coming back to bite them. They have reaped what they have sown.

This is just so entertaining to watch.

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