| About Us | Contact | Donate | User Blogs | Login |
Hey RPV, Where's My AB Chase?
Here's a real life example of how choosing candidates at a convention instead of through primaries hurts GOTV efforts.
Next Tuesday, Fairfax County, Virginia will hold a special election to replace new Rep. Gerry Connolly as chairman of the Fairfax County Board of Supervisors. The Republican candidate is Pat Herrity.
I'll be out of town, so I requested an absentee ballot, which came in the mail yesterday. That same day, I got a hand addressed piece of AB Chase mail from the Fairfax County Democrats, along with one anti-Herrity mailer from the DPV and mail from a third party candidate running on a platform of low taxes.

What's wrong with this picture? Two mail pieces from Democrats, one a hand-addressed AB chase piece. One from an independent low-tax candidate, who for all I know, could be a Republican (we don't have party listed on our ballots for county offices -- causing confusion if you don't have a sample ballot from your county committee).
Why do I get more Democratic mail than Republican mail? On a couple of occasions, I have availed myself of the opportunity to help select the Democratic nominee when we had no contested primary. But I have also voted in Republican primaries, including the extremely low-turnout VA-8 primary last year.
The bottom line: There is no reason that as a past primary voter who is a supervoter in both primaries and generals should not be getting Republican mail. I also got very little GOTV mail from Republicans in the general election last year -- though I did get robocalls from John McCain in the primary.
A big part of the problem: here in Virginia we select many of our nominees by conventions, instead of primaries, lowering our potential GOTV universe -- especially in critical situations like a special general election in the middle of February when a good turnout operation could flip the executive office in a Democratic-leaning county.



Comments
wth is a supervoter?
term not in my lexicon, thx
Someone who votes in every single election including specials
n/a
thanks muchly! n/t
n/t
But Patrick's point is special elections create opportunities--
Republicans in a Dem +32 state house seat in the Peoples Republic of Alexandria, VA (vacated by a gubinatorial candidate) came within 16 votes of a titanic upset 2 weeks ago.
By selecting candidates by convention, we are telling the grassroots to f*ck themselves.
harumph. always thought VA
was a commonwealth.
Competence
I was skeptical of Ruffini's belief in technology, but now I'm starting to see his point. It's not technology per se, but competence. The same incompetence that didn't lift a finger after Katrina and bungled the Iraq invasion can't build web sites or send out mailings.
If Republicans show that they can run their own affairs competently, maybe the public eventually will trust them to run the country again.
The trouble is, valuing competence above ideology would be a change of heart for Republicans. You've read the stories of people applying for routine jobs in Iraq being judged on whether they support abortion. The justice department bulked up on graduates of Bob Jones University Law School, which has a four digit ranking among law schools. Sarah Palin, `nuf said.
Virginia GOP
Patrick, you are so correct in your point about the Virginia GOP using conventions to select candidates rather than primaries. This has been a leading cause of the near demise of the GOP in Virginia, especially in northern Virginia (I live in Arlington). So, why does the state party insist on the convention system? I have probed and ask this question a number of times over the last few years. The answer always comes back to "control of the Party and the nomination process" by the more extreme religious/so-con activists who had rather lose general elections than lose control of their little sand box---which is getting littler with each election cycle.
I was skeptical of Ruffini's
I was skeptical of Ruffini's belief in technology, but now I'm starting to see his point. It's not technology per se, but competence. AS Level Coursework The same incompetence that didn't lift a finger after Katrina and bungled the Iraq invasion can't build web sites or send out mailings.
A2 Level Coursework | A Level Coursework
Wowzers!
Being in the greatest internet movement, why didn't the states just move to an absentee ballot on the internet? You can read more about my opinions about kitchen designs for vacation rentals over at my blogs. Also I have a blog about dating.
If Republicans show that they
If Republicans show that they can run their own affairs competently, maybe the single professionals eventually will trust them to run the country again. I have probed and ask this question a number of times over the last few years.