"I never did give anybody hell. I just told the truth and they thought it was hell." Harry S. Truman
Thursday, March 06, 2008
'I have to be referee:' Dean urges do-over voting in Fla., Mich.
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Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean urged Florida and Michigan party officials to come up with plans to repeat their presidential nominating contests so that their delegates can be counted.
"All they have to do is come before us with rules that fit into what they agreed to a year and a half ago, and then they'll be seated," Dean said during a round of interviews Thursday on network and cable TV news programs.
The two state parties will have to find the funds to pay for new contests without help from the national party, Dean said.
"We can't afford to do that. That's not our problem. We need our money to win the presidential race," he said.
Officials in Michigan and Florida are showing renewed interest in holding repeat presidential nominating contests so that their votes will count in the epic Democratic campaign.
The Michigan governor, top officials in Hillary Rodham Clinton's campaign, and Florida's state party chair all are now saying they would consider holding a sort of do-over contest by June. That's a change from the previous insistence from officials in both states that the primaries they held in January should determine how their delegates are allocated.
Clinton won both contests, but the results were meaningless because the elections violated national party rules.
The Democratic National Committee stripped both states of all delegates for holding the primaries too early, and all Democratic candidates — including Clinton and rival Barack Obama — agreed not to campaign in either state. Obama's name wasn't even on the Michigan ballot.
Florida and Michigan moved up their dates to protest the party's decision to allow Iowa and New Hampshire to go first, followed by South Carolina and Nevada, giving them a disproportionate influence on the presidential selection process.
But no one predicted the race would still be very close at this point in the year.
"The rules were set a year and a half ago," Dean said. "Florida and Michigan voted for them, then decided that they didn't need to abide by the rules. Well, when you are in a contest you do need to abide by the rules. Everybody has to play by the rules out of respect for both campaigns and the other 48 states."
CNN's John Roberts asked Dean if he thought that Florida's Republican governor was trying to influence the Democratic race.
"When you look at the players involved here, Governor Crist is a Republican," Roberts asked Dean. "It may be in his interest to have Hillary Clinton be the nominee because Republicans would like to run against her. Hillary Clinton got the most number of votes in the primary in Michigan. Are there any honest brokers involved in this discussion?"
Roberts didn't mention that nearly all polls indicate that Clinton would probably have a better chance at winning Florida in the general election than Obama.
"You put your finger on exactly the problem," Dean told Roberts. "If you argue this after the fact, then you are arguing to advantage one campaign or the other. I have to be the referee and the honest broker and say we'll stick to the rules. It's the only way that you can maintain the integrity of the process. The rules may be wrong. Maybe Florida and Michigan wish they hadn't done that now. I suppose they thought they would do it and come and bush us into violating the rules."
This video is from CNN's American Morning, broadcast March 6, 2008
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