Washington Post Outlook: Proportional representation a big success in Democratic nomination process
May 11th, 2008
Rob Richie
Rob Richie is director of FairVote. See his page at fairvote.org for more information.
This is a theme to which we’ll be returning, as debate is rising about whether Democrats or Republicans have had a better nomination process, with a focus on the winner-take-all rules for allocating delegates that gave John McCain such a big boost to the Republican nomination compared to the proportional representation allocation rules that have extended the Democratic nomination.
FairVote is firmly on the side of proportional allocation of delegates, although there are ways it could be improved. For one, it has ensured that the delegate results more accurately reflect the popular vote in contests, making the Democratic race more like a national primary unfolding state by state. If winner-take-all had been used and and the popular vote had been the same in every state, Hillary Clinton would be far ahead despite trailing Barack Obama in the overall popular vote and being swamped in number of states won — a questionable result no matter what one might think about the relative merits of Clinton and Obama.
Echoing and amplifying arguments (such as here and here) Imade on this blog, see Alan Wolfe’s ode to the Democratic nomination process in today’s Washington Post Outlook. Included in his piece is this quote:
Other posts by Rob Richie
- Why Blagojevich scandal on Senate vacancy can push us to elections, not selections - December 10th, 2008
- Ten Surprises about Election 2008 - November 6th, 2008
- National Popular Vote projection nearly spot on - November 5th, 2008
- (updated) Voter turnout could be highest since 1908 - November 5th, 2008
- Electoral reform ballot measure round-up - November 5th, 2008
- Landslide win for instant runoff voting in Memphis, Tennessee - November 5th, 2008
- A win for instant runoff voting in Telluride (CO) looking likely - November 4th, 2008
- Big wins for pro-democracy ballot measures in Connecticut and Maryland - November 4th, 2008
- Projection for Obama - 52.5% of national popular vote in a red-blue nation - November 4th, 2008
- Former instant runoff program director takes state legislative seat - November 4th, 2008


January 6th, 2009 at 6:48 pm
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