Holla at Them!
Here’s what most of us seem to know: Obama has 260 superdelegates, and Hillary has 273.
A lot of us have been throwing those numbers around like we really know what we’re talking about. I’ll only speak for myself when I say I’ve never been as involved in an election as I have been in this one. And I’ve certainly never had as many conversations about the whole election process as I’ve had about this election. I’m sure that I must have taken a political science course in college and some civics or social studies classes in high school, but I don’t remember them.
Like many of you, this primary election season has given me a crash course in politics. And I’m trying to keep up.
For example, as much as we talk about superdelegates, do most of us really know who they are or what they do? According to the 2008 Democratic Convention Watch website, there are 795 (not including Michigan and Florida) total Democratic superdelegates that the nominees are trying to be endorsed by.
Superdelegates are made up of Democratic governors and members of Congress, former presidents, including Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter; former vice president Al Gore, retired congressional leaders, and all Democratic National Committee members, such as my girl Donna Brazile, and Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick. Superdelegates automatically get to cast a vote at the convention this summer to decide who the party’s nominee will be. They can come out any time before their state’s primary and pledge to support either Obama or Clinton. That support is actually a vote that moves the candidate closer to the number of delegates needed to secure the nomination.
Before the superdelegate system was put into place, party bosses that were usually white men had way too much power and influence in the way candidates were nominated. So, in the 70s the party’s rules were changed to open the process to more grassroots activists, women and ethnic minorities.
Usually, by the end of the primary season, it’s clear who the presidential nominee will be. Of course, this is not a usual election, and it looks like the battle between Obama and Clinton will not only go beyond the primary season but all the way up to the convention. If this is the case, the role of the superdelegates will be huge.
So, I
thought it would be a good idea to let you
know who some of these superdelegates are
and how you can get in touch with them to
let them know how you would like them to
vote. We know it’s ultimately up to
the individuals, but I don’t see how
letting them know how we feel can hurt.
Even though this is radio
advocacy, it isn’t a case where
we’re contacting a person to yell at
them or make a demand. It’s more like
a “let me holler at you” kind of
thing.
Here’s the first list of uncommitted super delegates and their e-mail addresses. Holla at them.
Rep. Chris
Carney (PA)
h
ttp://carney.house.gov/contact.shtm
Joyce
Beatty, DNC (Ohio)
Dist
rict27@ohr.state.oh.us
Gilda Cobb-Hunter
gch@schouse.org
Rep. Jim
Clyburn (S.C.)
http://clyburn.house.gov/zip_code_veri
fy.cfm
Akaka, Daniel K.-
(HI)
http://akaka.senate.gov/public/inde
x.cfm ?FuseAction=Contact.Home
Baucus, Max- (MT)
http://baucus.senate.gov/contact/em
ailFo rm.cfm?subj=issue
Biden,
Joseph R., Jr.- (DE)
http://biden.senate.gov/services/contact/
Brown,
Sherrod- (OH)
http:
//brown.senate.gov/contact/
Byrd, Robert
C.- (WV)
http://byrd.senate.gov/byrd_email.html
Cardin,
Benjamin L.- (MD)
http
://cardin.senate.gov/contact/
Carper,
Thomas R.- (DE)
http
://carper.senate.gov/contact/
Representative Tom Allen (Maine)
info@tomallen
.org (e-mail)
Representative Jason Altmire
(Pennsylvania)
http://altmire.house.gov/IMA/iss
ue_subscribe.shtml
Representative Howard Berman
(California)
h
ttp://www.house.gov/berman/contact/
Governor Steve Beshear
(Kentucky)
htt
p://governor.ky.gov/contact.htm
Anita Bonds (Washington, DC)
http://www.faxz
ero.com
PastorBlack, on Yesterday, 08:52 AM | Flag as InappropriateGovernor Kathleen Sebelius, for the State of Kansas, she would be a great VP as she has been, and will continue to be a great Governor.
alby, on Yesterday, 08:41 AM | Flag as InappropriateI have always liked a Obama -Powell ticket as your listener just said. I thik Obama needs an experienced military person who has good sense.
Nika, on Yesterday, 07:54 AM | Flag as InappropriateI think Senator Obama should choose Kathleen Sebelius, the governor of Kansas as his running mate.
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