3bluedudes

Politics out of the blue

Super Tracker for June 2

BARACK OBAMA: 2 HILLARY CLINTON: 1

Obama Lands …

Nancy DiNardo, Chair, Conn State Democratic Party

DNC member Jerome Wiley Segovia, Virginia

Clinton Lands …

Chris Whittington, Louisiana Democratic Party

June 2, 2008 Posted by 3bluedudes | Uncategorized | | No Comments Yet

Race Winding Down, Party Uniting

The race for the Democratic nomination is all but over, and will likely be effectively over by Wednesday morning.  On NBC Today, Andrea Mitchell reported that ‘top’ US Senators (likely Majority Leader Harry Reid, Max Baucus, Joe Biden, Tom Harkin, Jake Reed)  will endorse Barrack Obama tomorrow, likely after polls close.  In addition, NBC also reported that Obama staffers have begun reaching out to Clinton staffers.

Further — Tim Russert commented on Today ;this race will be over Wednesday morning”.  We tend to believe that, but Russert’s predictions this campaign have been less than accurate.

Finally, former Iowa Governor Tom Vilsack, a Clinton co-Chair, has effectively expressed the end.

Tom Vilsack, the former Iowa governor and a national co-chairman of Clinton’s campaign, said Sunday: “It does appear to be pretty clear that Senator Obama is going to be the nominee. After Tuesday’s contests, she needs to acknowledge that he’s going to be the nominee and quickly get behind him.”

June 2, 2008 Posted by 3bluedudes | Uncategorized | | No Comments Yet

The Democratic Math

Ok, taking a look at the numbers, this is what we see. The new magic number, following the DNC Bylaws Committee decision yesterday is 2,118 need to clinch the Democratic nominations. Assuming that the Puerto Rico split is 34-14 in favor of Clinton, here is what the current math likely looks like.

Barrack Obama: 2069 (1738.5 Pledged, 330.5 Super)

Hillary Clinton: 1912 (1622.5 Pledged, 290 Super)

That puts Obama just 49 delegates from clinching the Democratic nomination. Montana has 24 delegates and South Dakota has 23. Even if they divide those in half, which i snot expected because Obama is expected to win Montana and the last poll had him ahead in South Dakota, he would need somewhere between 25 and 30 Supers Delegates to declare buy Tuesday to claim the nomination.

That’s the best we can do with fuzzy math right now.

June 1, 2008 Posted by 3bluedudes | Uncategorized | | No Comments Yet

Clinton wins Puerto Rico

As expected, Hillary Clinton received a decisive victory in today’s primary voting in the US Commonwealth, Puerto Rico.  Clinton took 68% of the vote to Barack Obama’s 32%.  The win in Puerto Rico really means nothing more than symbolism for a Clinton candidacy on the verge of ending.

June 1, 2008 Posted by 3bluedudes | Uncategorized | | No Comments Yet

Much Ado About Nothing

So the Rules and Bylaws committee has said that delegates from Florida and Michigan would be counted as a half vote for each delegate, including Supers.  Of course this was expected and a reasonable and appropriate response.  So why did it take so long?  And why is there seemingly so much anger over the ruling from certain parts of the party?

For sure the people most to blame are the DNC themselves.  Long before Florida and Michigan moved there elections up the standard automatic penalty in place was dividing the delegate totals in half.  But instead of following through on the rules in place the DNC decided to not only try and take away all the votes from these states, but also pressure the candidates to take their names off the ballots in Michigan.  Let’s be clear the DNC created this mess and though it looks like they made the right decision yesterday, certain heads should roll because of it. 

Yet there is some rancor over the 1/2 delegate rulings.  The first, why Supers are only being counted as 1/2 delegates, is easy enough to answer.  After all the flack the Democratic party has taken for the very existence of Super delegates, no way would they have given them more votes weight then the elected delegates in the home state.  It would be one of the worst PR moves ever, and I guess we can thank our lucky stars they found some common sense throughout this process.

The Michigan allocation is a little different though.  The Clinton Campaign is upset that the allocation of votes were determined as part of a compromise and not in accordance to the election results.  And as a theoretical political discussion I guess it merits some consideration.  But at the end of the day we are talking about a difference 5-10 votes, period. 

Without a flood of Super Delegates swinging into Clinton’’s favor, the election will most likely wrap up by the end of next week as Obama gets the new magic number of 2117.   Currently he is 65 delegates away.

June 1, 2008 Posted by cnydonkey | Uncategorized | | No Comments Yet

Super Tracker (6/1)

Barack Obama 2 Hillary Clinton 0

Obama picks up a DNC Super from Nevada, Yvonne Woods. Woods was participant in th DNC Bylaws Committee meeting yesterday.

Obama picks up Maine add on.

Barack Obama picked up a national delegate from Maine on Sunday as the Democratic State Convention closed. Delegates ratified the party chairman’s nomination of Gwethalyn Phillips of Bangor, a former state party official, as an “unpledged add-on” delegate as specified in party rules. But Maine Democratic Party Executive Director Arden Manning said Phillips was recognized as an active Obama supporter.

June 1, 2008 Posted by 3bluedudes | Uncategorized | | No Comments Yet

Michigan and Florida decided today. Unless it is not.

Today the DNC Rules and Bylaws committee is meeting today to decide Florida and Michigan’s delegate status. There are many different scenarios out there but really the committee will decide one of three main choices on what to do with Florida and Michigan:

1.) Do Nothing. The committee could chose to do absolutely nothing and refuse to seat and delegates from Michigan and Florida. I doubt this choice is actually going to happen. Both Obama and Clinton campaigns have said that some delegation from these states, and since both states are toss ups in the National Election according to recent polling. This option would likely leave the Clinton camp with an excuse to take this fight ot the convention floor, and no one wants that.

2.) Count them Fully. If there is anything less likely then not counting them at all, it’s counting them fully. With Obama not on the ballot in Michigan it makes it impossible to actually count those states totals. Florida has a better chance of being counted fully (more on that later) but it is doubtful there either.

3.) Some kind of compromise. This is the most likely Scenario but the devil is in the details here. First off the committee must decide what kind of penalty, if any, they will enact against both states for moving their primary ahead of the DNC early date of February 3rd. More then likely the penalty will be a 1/2 delegate seating. Florida though has a long shot but interesting argument that it was the GOP state legislature and GOP governor who moved their election up and penalizing the Democrats of the state for the actions of the GOP has some weight with the members of the committee who remember the debacle of 2000. And once the normal delegate penalty is decided the committee will then have to decide what to do with eh Super delegates. More then likely these votes will be counted in full with no penalty.

After the penalty is decided then it has to be decided on what ratio the elected delegates will be seated. In Florida more then likely the votes will be seated according to the election results. Boith candidates were on the ballot and there was historic turnout in the primary. The Obama argument that their candidate was not allowed to campaign there will not hold much water as most committee members know that the national tv ads were running in the state and both campaigns had “volunteer” organizations up and running. Florida will be seated as the elections happened.

Michigan is another matter. The Clinton argument is the one that won’t hold water here. Obama’s name was not on the ballot and it wasn’t there because the DNC urged all candidates to take their name off the ballot, and Hillary was the only one who did not do so. So the committee would likely decide how to proportionally split the delegates. Clinton wants 70/30, Obama wants 50/50…look for the committee to decide a 60/40 split.

Later tonight I will write a reaction to the final decision. But let me be clear there are plenty of people to blame for this mess. The state governments of both states should never have moved their votes in front of the deadline. The DNC should never have over reacted by threatening to take away all votes form 2 swing states (the GOP enacted a reasonable 1/2 penalty and allowed the candidates to campaign there). And lastly BOTH campaigns are at fault as well. If Hillary wanted these votes to count the whole time, she should have never signed the pledge not to campaign in either. The Obama camp scuttled serious attempts in both states to have re-votes after the deadline as well. Everyone is to blame and the DNC and us Democrats must take a look at how we chose our Presidential candidate….again.

UPDATE: Although details are still being worked out, an apparent agreement has been reached on Florida. Half the delegates will be seated. It is also reported that the Florida super delegates will be counted as half as well. Looks like details just need meshed here, but Michigan is the outstanding problem.

May 31, 2008 Posted by cnydonkey | Uncategorized | | No Comments Yet

Super Delegates (May 30)

Barack Obama gets a husband and wife DNC combo from Texas.

Hillary Clinton gets none.

Obama 2-0

May 30, 2008 Posted by 3bluedudes | Uncategorized | | No Comments Yet

VA Senate: Warner looking good

A new Virginia Commonwealth poll has some good news for Virginia Democrat Mark Warner, who is seeking to replace the retiring Republican John Warner in the U.S. Senate. 47% of Virginians approve of Mark Warner and only 10% do not approve of him. Those are good numbers, even for a former [and popular] state governor. Warner’s GOP opponent this fall, former governor Jim Gilmore has the approval of only 23% of Virginians, while 15% disapprove of him. Stick this race in the Strongly Lean Democratic category and keep it there until further notice.

May 30, 2008 Posted by 3bluedudes | Uncategorized | , | No Comments Yet

3 Blue Dudes Arrival

Welcome to 3BlueDudes.  This WordPress based address is a temporary stop as we build the blog.

Remember these guys?  Let me be clear about something, at this point, we aren’t actually blue.  That is not US! But 4 more years of Republican screw ups, we may very well be.

We are a political blog, and don’t be doubtful at all, we are completely Democratic slanted, period.  That’s who we are.  Democrats!

All three of us are active Democratic volunteers, contributors, and have worked on numerous campaigns from New York to Pennsylvania to Maryland.  We’re three DEMS who work hard for DEMS.  We’re three DEMS with semi-open minds.

We will provide commentary on the Presidential race, the Senate races, some House races, polls, we will likely be a clearinghouse for Bush bashing, and we’ll call out McCain when necessary.

Enjoy 3 Blue Dudes!

May 30, 2008 Posted by 3bluedudes | Uncategorized | | No Comments Yet