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Edited on Fri Nov-24-06 09:14 AM by PATRICK
The KINDEST benefit is if a fine Democrat is secure enough to "fearlessly" speak out on progressive or daring issues- while the rest sit back and more quietly admire. The WORST is when the majority party members locally find an anointed hack subservient to outside interests, princely in arrogance, stupid in crony-ship that even mass defections to the other party's candidate can't help and primary challenges are like scaling Mt. Everest.
So detrimental and dangerous is the attractiveness of "safe" seats that it is like having a mountain of gold or pool of honey in the neighborhood. Dominance will happen naturally so the issue of abuse being regulated against is a better, imperfect solution than "gerrymandering them back". Splitting or lumping of strong constituencies shows the ongoing regulation of the people BY the pols.
Just some initial musings. Isn't it time it was the other way around? Better the regulation of politicians and candidates and the process than carving up "communities" to tampen down democratic lumps. term limits. Town hall process of choosing candidates. Wide open primaries. Runoffs. Especially runoffs to prevent a truly unpopular politician from sneaking in with less than 50% of his/her own massively dominant party registration. Regulations against undue outside interference in candidate choice starting most from the federal sticky fingers down to the state special interests. Term limits ACCORDING to one's dominance factors.
Dumb, tricky, inadequate, no guarantee of success. The same is true of gerrymandering and intended cheating. Dynamism and insecurity will create better heroes and more competent weasels.
In NY Walsh(R) beats Mattei(D) whose strong challenge eats up the GOP registration advantage like ice cream left melting on the table. The grateful Dems(Dead) who were wont to doff their caps to receive some meager favors from the invincible lord voted for change. So did some Republicans. Walsh sniffs bitterly that this is the thanks he gets for all the work he has done for the citizens. He is "disappointed" in the voters and the victory has left a "hole in his heart", presumably not so large as the one would be in his head were he a credible politician to be actually held accountable for insulting his electorate. Oh these little pampered princelings, the proud, the few, the protected. The lifetime careerists who "deserve" our admiration for having fenced in the sheepfolds and slaughterhouses to their complete satisfaction. Do we want even the more moral, more progressive, more effective officials to enjoy these privileges at democracy's expense and fall prey to the moral decay such separation inevitably creates?
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