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Susan Estrich
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Primary Purposes

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If the goal of the primary process is simply to nominate a candidate, essentially to nominate the man or woman most likely to win in the end, then this primary season should be declared over. Clear the stage, and give it to Mitt Romney. Newt Gingrich's promise to go the next 46 notwithstanding, you couldn't find anyone in Vegas to give you ballpark odds on his winning. And forget about Ron Paul or Rick Santorum. They never had a chance.

But that's not the only thing this process is about. If elections were only about picking winners, there would never be more than two people on a ballot — and sometimes, in "safe" districts, not even that. Independents would be limited to Vermont. Third parties would be told to take their message somewhere else.

Now, I can certainly make the argument that in general-election contests voters shouldn't "waste" their votes on candidates with no chance of winning. I still remember the fights I had with Ralph Nader supporters back in 2000, trying to convince them that the message they wanted to send would elect George Bush.

And I can certainly make the case that the two-party system, whatever the flaws of the two particular parties, ensures that a candidate will not be elected based on the support of an ideologically extreme minority (as everyone's favorite example Hitler was), and that a fractured result would effectively give such power to a small minority (as everyone's other favorite example the ultra-orthodox have sometimes wielded in Israel).

But the Constitution protects the rights of losers to run and voters to support them. Ballot access must be afforded to every candidate who can show enough support not to win but to be counted. Elections are about electing people, but that's not all they are about.

And nowhere is this clearer than in the selection of party nominees for president.

Political parties are nowhere mentioned in the Constitution, but in a series of landmark decisions, the Supreme Court has upheld their power to control the nominating process, even against a majority will expressed by state legislatures. The party can limit participants to registered party members, even where the state demands that it be open to all. The party can deem that delegates be bound to vote for the candidate whose slate they ran on, even when state law provides that they should be free to cast their vote to nominate whomever they please. The purpose of these contests, the Court has recognized, is not simply to nominate delegates or choose a candidate, but to build the party and shape its platform.

That, win or lose, is exactly what Gingrich is likely to accomplish in these next few months if he stays the course. Under the rules of the Democratic Party, much debated, states are prohibited from holding winner-take-all contests, making it more difficult for the winner to win and far easier for a loser to hold sway. While the Republican Party does not enforce that rule across the board, most of the states that will be holding caucuses and primaries do. So even if he loses, Gingrich will pick up significant representation. And even putting aside the numbers, if he does stay in the race, it all but assures that his more conservative ideology will influence where both Romney and the party end up.

Maybe that will help the Democratic president in the end. Selfishly, I hope so. But there certainly have been cycles in which the Republicans benefited from long races. It doesn't matter. I may not agree with Gingrich about much, but he is absolutely right in saying the media have no business declaring this process over.

And it's not just Gingrich and me saying it. Blame the Founding Fathers.

To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM


Comments

6 Comments | Post Comment
The Constitution likewise says nothing about a right to murder the preborn in the womb nor does it give a power to federal government to usurp the powers reserved for the States, nor does it provide for the making of laws to be delegated from Congress to unelected administrators and beaurocrats and czars by way of regulation, but all of these matters have come to pass by way of the activism of progressive self absorbed Democrat party partisan Supreme Court judges. Do not blame the Founding Fathers but blame an increasingly anti American, anti Constitution Supreme Court bench recently made all the more so by the addition of the two sisters in ugliness and constitutional ignorance, to wit, Kagan and Sotomeyor.
Comment: #1
Posted by: joseph wright
Thu Feb 2, 2012 12:41 PM
Dear Ms. Estrich,

I believe the American people who don't vote in the primaries deserve the sorry gov't we are saddled with. My problem is I do vote in the primaries [thus why I'm a registered Democrat and not a registered Independent], and I don't deserve this sorry lot from both sides!

Nuff Said...Dennis
Comment: #2
Posted by: Dennis
Fri Feb 3, 2012 1:55 AM
Ms Estrich, I think I would enjoy taking your constitutional law course.
Comment: #3
Posted by: Motley Wisdom
Fri Feb 3, 2012 4:55 AM
Re: Dennis
So you'll be voting for ....
Comment: #4
Posted by: Early
Fri Feb 3, 2012 5:50 AM
Re: Motley Wisdom

To attend Estrich's constitutional law course one would have to enrol in The Three Stooges School of Law.
Comment: #5
Posted by: joseph wright
Fri Feb 3, 2012 12:28 PM
One of the wonderful things about the CONSTITUTION is that it was designed to be flexible to all things new. Air travel was a new thing to our forefathers. In fact, only a few of them had even seen a hot air balloon but such contraptions did indeed exist during their lifetimes. The concept of an airplane is found in the drawings of Leonardo Da Vinci as are parachutes to escape a failed aircraft. I point this out because the Founding Fathers were aware that a few decades hence, many new inventions would alter how Americans would live and these new inventions and indeed institutions that would be required,would be provided for in the law.
Our present day Supreme Court is certainly an outgrowth of the minds of our Founders. They did understand that the Court would be a check on the other two branchs or our government. They could not have imagined that Justices would act with as much partisan vigor as the current Ro0berts Court with it's many 5-4 decisions that have all leaned toward a Conservative bent. Against that backdrop, we now must chose a president to lead our executive branch. With Conservatives currently solidly in control of the Judicial branch and in control of half of our Congress, the balance is razor thin. It is a God-send that we have a primary process that will vet each of the candidates on the Republican side. The president will be vetted by a rational and fair judgment of his performance in office by the general public. If past history is any predictor of who will be president, they will choose a person who can be trusted. The public tends to stick with presidents they are comfortable with as opposed to changing horses in the middle of the stream.
Comment: #6
Posted by: stephen
Fri Feb 3, 2012 6:43 PM
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