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Dealmaker: Nelson has been working with GOP Gov. Charlie Crist to resolve the primary crisis
CAMPAIGN 2008

Deja Vu

A plan to raise soft money to pay for a second Florida Democratic primary--this one by mail--seems close to approval, according to Sen. Bill Nelson.

 
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A solution to the growing controversy over Florida's disputed Democratic primary may now be in the works. Florida Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson tells NEWSWEEK he has spoken to the Florida Democratic Party about launching a soft-money fund-raising campaign for the benefit of a new mail-in primary, which would supercede the controversial Jan. 29 vote.

Nelson, who spoke on the phone Friday afternoon as he was boarding a plane from Washington, D.C., to Jacksonville, Fla., for the weekend, was not forthcoming with specifics in terms of who will be approached for donations (as a senator, he is specifically forbidden from raising soft-money donations), or the timing of the new primary. The senator was, however, clearly frustrated over waiting for other people to fix the problem. "My job is clear," Nelson says. "It's to stand up for the right of Floridians to vote as intended."

The disputed Democratic primaries in both Florida and Michigan have taken on increased importance as the close contest between Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama drags on. Both states held their votes in January against the wishes of the national Democratic Party, which decided to strip their delegates as punishment for breaking party rules and voting prior to Super Tuesday. Nonetheless, 1.75 million Florida Democrats went to the polls--delivering victory to Clinton. As Obama took the lead in the delegate count, Clinton supporters put on pressure for Florida's and Michigan's primaries to count, while Obama's campaign decried the prospect of changing the rules "in the middle of the game." A third option has always been to revote, but there's been a dispute over who would pay for the multi-million-dollar do-over. Florida Gov. Charlie Crist has said there's no room in the state budget for a revote, and Democratic National Committee chairman Howard Dean also pleads poverty, saying he needs to stow away party funds for the general election.

Dan McLaughlin, a spokesman for Senator Nelson, tells NEWSWEEK that the beginning of a new model for Florida's primary vote came into focus earlier this week with a conversation between Nelson and Crist in which they agreed on three common points. First, that a revote was in order. Second, that the second primary should be conducted via mail-in balloting. Finally, both agreed that Floridians should not pay the tab. As Crist went out to praise these three common principles in public, McLaughlin says Nelson approached Dean, who in turn sought counsel from the DNC's lawyers as to how soft money might be raised for the mail-in primary. McLaughlin says Dean responded to Nelson's camp Friday with news that the DNC's legal counsel had determined that the state party in Florida could raise soft money. "There is some form, some shape coming into the cross-hairs, so to speak," McLaughlin says. "Now there's consensus on a revote, on mail-in balloting and on fund-raising."

But obstacles remain. McLaughlin notes what he calls "tiny" provisions in Florida law that prohibit a mail-in election to determine a nominee. But Florida's legislature is currently in session, and could weigh in on such procedural hurdles. Timing is also an unresolved question--precisely how long it would take to mail out ballots and allow a sufficient amount of time for them to be returned. Even then, election supervisors who are currently hip-deep in the process of changing over to optical-scanning machines for the general election may be resistant to processing an entirely new primary election by mail. Still, despite these potential problems, it's clear there's movement, and a determination on the part of Senator Nelson to have Floridians participate in a second primary--one that will be recognized at the party's convention this summer.

Crucially, there's no indication whether either Obama or Clinton would consent to this plan, with all of its remaining parts yet to fall into place. But solving the critical threshold issue of how to fund a do-over in Florida--whatever its contours--is itself gaining momentum (that watchword of the campaign season).

 
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Member Comments
  • Posted By: kenno78 @ 03/24/2008 7:44:02 PM

    Comment: What we need is a suit by the voters who participated in the Florida Primary election on January 29, 2008. We are the injured parties. We had our votes stolen by the DNC and Howard Dean. I want mine to count!. I had nothing to do with the decision to set the primary date earlier than the DNC rules it should be. Whoever allowed this travesty to happen is the guilty party. Why not fine that party or parties? Don't punish me for somebody else's mistake. We had a valid election on !/29. Voters came out in unprecedented numbers. We made our choices for our presidential preferences. We do not need a "redo" election. We do not need a "mail-in" election which is prohibited by Fla. Stat. 101.6192 anyway. But we do need enough voters to join together and bring an action to compel the DNC to count our votes and seat our delegates!

  • Posted By: Cantabrigian @ 03/21/2008 9:05:02 PM

    Comment: Absolutely, the Democratic Party has a responsibility to respond positively to democratic principles. For God's sake! the troops are fighting in Iraq at a cost of one trillion dollars to bring democracy to the country. Remember - that was what Bush said the last time he gave a rationale for the war - no more looking for WMD. However, although Barak Obama claims he will create change, he is directly undermining all existing structures with his subversive behavior of the residents of Florida and Michigan. Obama carves a hole into democracy and the Democratic Party, in pursuit of personal gain and power. It begs the question if the Democratic Party can afford to lose the Presidential election and the respect of the American people due to Obama's presidential campaign effort to win at all costs.

  • Posted By: LDJ Alabama @ 03/13/2008 8:23:54 PM

    Comment: Talk about Deja Vu ... yet another Florida mess. This nonsense of a mail-in scheme is ludicrous. I really don't think the GOOD PEOPLE of these states are the ones asking for these so-called DO-OVERS. It sounds like it's the "Political Elitists" that are pulling all the strings. Sheesh. News excerpt:
    ___________________________________________________________________

    "....Karen Thurman, chairwoman of the Florida Democratic Party, offered a mail-in/in person proposal for voting and urged state leaders, the national party and the presidential candidates to sign on.

    Asked if the plan will be implemented, Thurman said, "I have a feeling that this is probably closer to not, than yes."

    Members of Florida's congressional delegation reiterated their opposition to the plan, saying, "We do not believe that this is a realistic option at this time and remain opposed to a mail-in ballot election or any new primary election in Florida of any kind...."
    ____________________________________________________________________

    GOOD FOR YOU members of Florida's congressional delegation! If it DOESN'T pass the smell test---DON'T DO IT! Talk about another 2000 fiasco! YES! Deja Vu

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