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Rep. Hastings, of Miramar, FL, is not happy with the results of today’s DNC Rules and Bylaws Committee meeting:
It is with reluctance and disappointment that I accept the DNC’s decision today. I do so not because I agree with the decision but because it is time for us to move on and focus on winning in November.
I applaud Karen Thurman and the Florida Democratic Party, Robert Wexler, Bill Nelson and others who represented our state and the candidates for doing the best they could with a bad situation.
Florida Democrats have been serially abused and the DNC is the latest of offenders. How the DNC has the authority to ignore the votes of ‘Jack and Jane Lunch Bucket’ is beyond my understanding. The insiders who actively sought to disillusion and disenfranchise the more than 1.75 million Florida Democrats who voted on January 29 give new meaning to collective arrogance.
The DNC’s decision today ignores the core principle of our great democracy: the right to vote. I know that the 1.75 million Democrats who voted on January 29 count and don’t give a damn what the DNC rules pronounce.
Going to a party’s convention is a privilege. Courts have said that political parties have a right to make their rules. In this case, the DNC has chosen to take away that privilege from people who I believe have earned the right to participate in the National Convention in Denver with a full vote. As Americans, we should never insinuate or give vent to taking away the constitutional, time honored, died for, and cherished rights of voters from any state. Yet that is what today’s decision has done to the people of
Florida and Michigan.I suppose the DNC has the right to block Democrats in Florida from attending the National Convention. They also have the right to be stupid, and stupid they are.
At the beginning of our great country’s history my ancestors were counted as only 2/3 of a person. Until passage of the 15th Amendment in 1870, they weren’t allowed to vote. During that same time and until 1920, women could not vote. White men who did not own property could not vote at one point in our history as well.
Now, on May 31, 2008, a group of elitist insiders of the DNC have effectively said that some of my ancestors’ progeny equal only 1/2 and that men and women in Florida who voted on January 29th are 1/2 also. For a Party which will crown its historic nominee on the 45th anniversary of Dr. King’s ‘I Have a Dream’ speech, the DNC’s decision today is tragically ironic.
As a matter of protest, I do not intend to attend the Democratic National Convention in Denver.
Despite all of this, too much is at stake this November. I refuse to allow those who have done me and my constituents wrong to stop us from taking back our country. Together, we will do whatever it takes to increase our majority in the House and Senate and win the Presidency.
While I cannot speak for others, I do not intend to take any further legal action against the DNC. If I believed that we could win, believe me, I would act and so would others. But based on case history, it is an uphill battle screaming for a change in federal law.
I will, however, spend enormous energy on convincing my colleagues in Congress that we must create a rotating regional Presidential primary system. 30 political insiders – nearly all of whom ain’t ever been elected to a damn thing in their lives – must never again have the ability to reject the will of and unilaterally disenfranchise 1.75 million voters.
This election is bigger than Barak Obama and Hillary Clinton. It is certainly bigger than the DNC. There are over 46 million Americans who are uninsured, gas and energy costs are spiraling out of control, America’s economy is faltering, and U.S. troops are dying nearly every day in Iraq and Afghanistan. It will take the energy and resources of all of us to fix these problems and the others facing our nation.
As Florida voters have demonstrated time and time again, we will rise above those who have sought to silence our voices and vote big and win in November.
This isn’t the first time that Hastings, a superdelegate who is the national co-chair for Senator Clinton’s campaign, has lashed out at the DNC:
U.S. Rep. Alcee Hastings, a Hillary supporter and superdelegate, said he’s sick of hearing DNC member Donna Brazile lament the potential power of superdelegates to tip the nomination one way or another. When Gore’s former campaign manager pushed hard to strip Florida of all its delegates “I recall her very vividly saying, “the rules are the rules.” Well, the rules arer the rules when it pertains to superdelegates,” said Hastings,. “I will excercise my judgement accordingly.”
Unity, schmunity.
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Alcee Hastings has less credibility than Joe Izusu.
I am surprised that you would applaud Robert Wexler. He was advocating to only award half of Florida’s delegates. When pressed how he would react if all of the delegates were seated, he replied that this should not be done as it would violate the rules. What a jerk! This creep has forgotten the master that he serves — the voters of Florida. I will volunteer for a candidate that runs against him.
“His colleagues in Congress”? Why does he need to talk to them? Why not just convince the DNC to do it. It’s a sad symptom of our time that our elected representatives can’t even conceive of getting something done without involving the federal government.
P.S. If anyone disenfranchised the Florida voters, it was the Florida Democratic Party leadership, who decided to hold the primary when they did, knowing the rules.
Half a vote? I thought they’d at least give them 3/5ths of a vote.
To Paraphrase Michael Keaton in “Mr. Mom”: One half… three fiths whatever it takes.
– Lorica
Annoying Old Guy has it right. It is so typical of the strange times we live in that people break the rules, and then bray on, as Hastings does, that they should be rewarded, not punished, for breaking them.
Nonsense!
If people like Mary want satisfaction, they should, at the next opportunity they have, turn out of office the Florida legislators that got them into this pickle in the first place.
Leslie, Holy Scripture is very clear in the endtimes evil is called good and good is called evil. – Lorica