January 02, 2008
The Flawed but Useful Iowa Caucuses
By
Michelle Malkin
This much is certain on the day after
the
Iowa caucuses: There will be plenty of kvetching and
moaning about the system. The winners will praise the
Hawkeye State's voters as the wisest voters in America
and celebrate the process as a shining example of
democracy in action. The losers will assail it as
unfair, exclusive, convoluted, unrepresentative, archaic
and in screaming need of reform.
One
Hillary Clinton supporter—much to the campaign's
chagrin—couldn't keep his lips buttoned before the votes
were cast. Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland
complained to the Columbus Dispatch that it
"makes no sense" to give Iowa the right to hold
the first presidential contest and lambasted the
caucuses as "hugely undemocratic" because the
process "excludes
so many people." USA Today spotlighted
the "goofy," "eccentric" ritual—quoting
Sen. Carl Levin attacking the system as "cockamamie."
[Politicians
love, loathe Iowa caucus system] The New York
Times chimed in the day before the Iowa caucuses
with a piece bemoaning the plight of Iowa voters who
won't be able to cast votes because work and family
conditions will prevent them from attending the lengthy
nighttime meetings.
Yes, the rules are bizarre—particularly
the Democrats' arcane setup eschewing paper ballots and
forcing nonviable candidates with less than 15 percent
of the vote from caucusgoers to throw their votes to one
of the frontrunners. Yes, the pandering to farmers and
ethanol interests is noxious. And yes, the spectacle of
Hillary Clinton lining up baby-sitters and Barack Obama
scheduling rides for Iowa caucusgoers smacks of a Nanny
State gone wild.
Still, the process does have its
benefits. Retail politics is a demanding business. It
punishes candidates who would rather sit back in their
East Coast comfort zones, tape slick ads and campaign on
autopilot. It requires discipline, focus and drive. It
requires a thick skin, stamina and an ability to
withstand enormous voter and media scrutiny. But there's
more:
Mitt Romney's managerial prowess and
large campaign chest should have guaranteed a huge, easy
win. But Mike Huckabee's surprise rise
over the past several weeks showed that money alone
isn't everything. The grassroots matter.
Celebrity appeal helps. But except for a
botched campaign event in which staffers dissed a local
supporter who had organized a campaign event at his farm
because he didn't meet the death tax threshold,
nationally prominent Rudy Giuliani was a nonentity in
Iowa. And Fred Thompson's failure to catch fire showed
that star power and Internet buzz aren't enough to cut
it, either.
The toss-up on the Democrat side
underscored those points. Neither the Clinton machine
nor Obama's Oprah factor nor John Edwards' moneybags
alone sealed the deal.
As The Economist put it in an
editorial offering praise for the American process:
"Money and organisation matter far less than stamina,
agility and that most unfakeable of all political
attributes, charisma. Anyone deficient will be found
out: anyone with the right stuff has a chance to shine."[In
praise of the primaries, December 19th
2007]
We may have grown sick and tired of the
endless debates and campaign circus, but the process
helpfully spotlighted fundamental character flaws.
Hillary's botched illegal alien driver's license answer
put her open-borders incoherence on full display. Her
dumpster-diving into rival
Obama's grade-school essays showed her utter
pettiness. Iowans—and the rest of us—got to see how she
and her operatives acted under pressure: by planting
questioners, slinging
underhanded cocaine references at Obama, and then
freezing out the press (including a poor 9-year-old girl
who wanted to interview Chelsea Clinton).
I may not agree with the outcomes of the
Iowa caucuses (and keep in mind that winning Iowa
doesn't guarantee a White House victory). But I much
prefer this system to a process that would anoint a
deep-pocketed frontrunner allergic to flyover country
who wishes he could just phone it in.
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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