The plan has widespread party
support, but corporate lobbyists who "think their vote is more
important" are desperately working to undermine it
"Many prioritize
corporate interests over those of everyday people and thus automatically
support the less progressive candidate."
—Alex Kotch, investigative reporter
—Alex Kotch, investigative reporter
In the face of fervent
opposition from Democratic elites who "think their
vote is more important" than the will of the party's base, the
Democratic National Committee's (DNC) Rules and Bylaws arm cleared
a major hurdle in the fight to curtail the power of superdelegates on
Wednesday by approving a plan that would end their ability to cast votes for
the presidential candidate on the first ballot at the party's convention.
"The activists that have
been concerned that superdelegates will overturn the will of the voters should
feel good about this," DNC member Elaine Kamarck said in a statement.
While the plan to gut the
influence of superdelegates—who have been free since 1984 to put their weight
behind any candidate no matter how the public voted—has received broad support
from Democrats and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) as an important first step
toward making the party's process more "open
and transparent," establishment figures who stand to lose power if the
plan is implemented are staging a last-minute "revolt"
to block the rule change.
As investigative reporter Alex
Kotch noted
in a Twitter thread on Wednesday, at least two of the Democratic
insiders who are clinging desperately to their undue influence as
superdelegates happen to be corporate lobbyists—a fact that Politico neglected
to mention in its reporting on the party elites' "longshot bid to block
the measure."
"They don't realize it
but they're proving the point of Sanders and everyone else who's opposed to
superdelegates," Kotch writes. "Many prioritize corporate interests
over those of everyday people and thus automatically support the less
progressive candidate."
Responding to Politico's
story on the superdelegates' last-ditch attempt to undermine the push to
curtail their power, The Humanist Report offered an alternative headline:
Wednesday's vote in favor of
the plan to ensure superdelegates cannot overturn the will of voters on the
first ballot of the presidential nomination process was the final step before
the proposal heads to a vote before the full DNC next month.
"Any attempt to derail
the rules changes at the summer convention is thought to be a long-shot,"
concluded Astead Herndon of the New York Times.
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