June 17, 2016
Exclusive: Democratic “super-delegates”
– hundreds of party insiders – tilted the presidential race to Hillary
Clinton though not chosen by voters, an undemocratic idea that was never
intended, says Spencer Oliver who was there at the creation.
By Spencer Oliver
The issue of the Democratic
Party’s “super-delegates” threatens to divide the Democratic Party at the
Philadelphia convention as Sen. Bernie Sanders argues that the automatic vote
given these party leaders made the race undemocratic because they did not
compete in the primaries and caucuses and broke heavily and early in favor of
Hillary Clinton.
And Sanders has a point. I was
there at the creation of this party feature and I can attest that the idea of
“super-delegates” making up around 15 percent of the voting delegates – and
thus holding a powerful influence over the selection process – was never
what was intended.
The original thinking was that
a relative handful of state party chairs who had to remain neutral while
setting up the primaries and caucuses would still get to go to the conventions.
However, the numbers of “super-delegates” kept expanding and expanding as other
party leaders lobbied to be included among those not having to compete in the
delegate-selection process.
The “super-delegate” system
was born in the wake of Democratic Party efforts after the 1968 convention to
make the presidential selection process more open and democratic. I was
involved in the work of all the reform commissions as the administrative
assistant to Democratic National Committee Chair in 1966, later as President of
the national Young Democrats, and subsequently as the founding Executive
Director of the Association of State Democratic Chairs.
Named for their various
leaders, these reform efforts were called the Wagner, McGovern, Fraser, O’Hara
and Sanford Commissions, which made their reform recommendations to the DNC.
All were tasked with making our party more open, more transparent, more
inclusive, more democratic, and ultimately more successful in attracting the
broad support of America’s diverse population. In other words, the idea was to
put more power in the hands of rank-and-file Democrats.
This represented a major
reform from the 1960s when party bosses like Carmine DeSapio in New York,
powerful Governors like David Lawrence in Pennsylvania and Mike DiSalle in
Ohio, and legendary Mayors like Richard Daley in Chicago dominated the
Democratic conventions and had an outsized role in picking the Democratic
presidential nominee.
The reform commissions were a
response to that unpopular and highly criticized system. The Mississippi
Freedom Party at the Atlantic City convention in 1964 and the anti-war
protesters in Chicago in 1968 made the reform inevitable and certainly
necessary.
Reforms and Consequence
The reforms brought American
citizens much more extensively into the process of choosing the Democratic
Party’s standard-bearer. The reforms also required State Democratic Chairs to
be neutral as they organized their states’ primary and caucus systems. However,
that meant the state chairs could not be elected to attend the party
conventions as delegates committed to one candidate or the other.
So, the State Democratic
Chairs proposed the idea of so-called “super-delegates” in the early 1970s,
arguing that they should be automatic delegates because the reforms called for
by the Wagner Commission and the DNC would otherwise exclude them from
participation in the conventions. The DNC bought that argument. After all, they
would be a relatively small number of delegates.
But then the governors wanted
the same privilege, followed by congressional leaders and then the DNC members
themselves. This expanding group now constitutes nearly 30 percent of the 2,383
delegates needed for nomination, significantly diluting the strength of the
pledged delegates elected in primaries and caucuses.
Along the way, the
“super-delegates” seem to have forgotten why they are there — and how they got
there — in the first place.
On Feb. 12, 2016, when DNC
chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz was asked on CNN whether the existence of
“super-delegates” might give the impression to regular voters that the process
was rigged, she answered: “Unpledged delegates exist really to make sure that
party leaders and elected officials don’t have to be in a position where they
are running against grass-roots activists. We … want to give every opportunity
to grass-roots activists and diverse committed Democrats to be able to
participate, attend and be a delegate at the convention. And so we separate out
those unpledged delegates to make sure that there isn’t competition between
them.”
But “super-delegates” really
were an unintended outgrowth of the reform process and indeed fly in the face
of the reform goals, which were to extend to the average voter the power to
select the party’s nominee. By contrast, the “super-delegates” are given the
power to vote for the nominee simply because they occupy – or in some cases
occupied years ago – positions that entitle them to vote without having to earn
that privilege by participating in the primaries or caucuses. Is this fair? Is
this democratic?
What’s Good for Kazakhstan…
I am reminded of my past
experience as secretary general of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe’s parliamentary assembly in organizing the election
observation mission to the first elections in Kazakhstan in 1994 when we were
trying to encourage the former Soviet republics to transition toward democracy.
The Kazakhs were trying to
move in that direction, but they adopted an election law that allowed the
President to appoint 25 percent of the parliament. For that reason, we declared
that the election was clearly unfair. The Kazakhs were mortified and
internationally embarrassed. They later changed the law and – although
democracy has not yet blossomed in that part of the world – such non-electoral
legislative appointments have disappeared throughout the area. Yet, a similar
rule exists in the Democratic Party of the United States of America.
I am not arguing that our
party leaders should not attend the Philadelphia convention. They should be on
the floor, entitled to speak, to lobby, to advocate and to impart their wisdom
and experience to their fellow delegates. They have certainly earned that
right. But they should not have the right to vote for the Democratic Party’s
choice for president and vice president.
That “super-delegates” would
hold such power over the selection process was never the intent of the party’s
reforms and indeed goes against the goals of those reforms, which have largely
succeeded in drawing citizens more directly into the process while also
broadening the Democratic Party’s tent to include minorities, women, unions,
young people, LGBT – just about every component needed for electoral victory.
This divisive issue of
“super-delegates” can be easily resolved. The party leaders, i.e., the
“super-delegates” themselves and – most importantly – our members of Congress
and governors, should make the “super-delegates” non-voting delegates,
with all the convention privileges and honors they deserve, except the right to
vote on the nomination. The DNC could even do this by meeting the day before
the convention and amending the party’s rules to correct this democratic
deficit in our system.
Spencer Oliver recently
retired as Secretary General of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly. He previously
served for eight years as a senior official at the DNC. And for more than
twenty years on Capitol Hill, concluding as Chief Counsel of the House Foreign
Affairs Committee.
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