|
Edited on Sun Apr-30-06 04:34 PM by The Magistrate
And to be precise, my objection is more to the idealizing of primaries as an absolute good in and of themselves than to the reality of the process in many instances. It would hardly alter, for example, my party affiliation if the Democratic Party ceased to use this device altogether; it would still seem to me to have considerable point to be an adherent of the Party.
Primaries certainly do not exhaust attacks or render them old news. Here in Illinois, to name both an old and a current example, the attacks some years ago in the Democratic gubernatorial primary against Rep. Poshard were echoed, and effectively so, by Ryan in his run for the office, and today, attack lines exploited by Oberweiss against Topinka are being echoed effectively by Gov. Blagojevitch's campaign.
The claim that the most committed party members should select the candidate has a superficial appeal as rhetoric, but often does fail of success in the general election, and on both sides of the divide. The Illinois state Republican Party has on several occassions doomed itself in statewide races by selecting candidates who had great appeal in primaries to its extreme conservative membership but offended the sensibilities of most votyers in the state, and our Democratic Party has managed the same trick on occassion. What makes for popularity among the most convinced odeologues is by no means necessarily what makes for popularity among the general voting public.
Whether a candidate funds raising funds easy or difficult does not effect the general principle that there is a limit to the suppl of funds, and that expenditures not aimed directly at the defeat of the foe in the general election amount to a species of wasted effort.
It is worth remembering that persons rise to leadership positions in a political party by display of axcumen at the trade of politics, by winning, or master-minding the winning, of political campaigns, and by turning out voters to support the Party's candidates. They may be fairly said, therefore, to represent the membership of the Party, and to have established their skill at the tasks that the Party must succeed at to place its representatives in office in government.
|