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As most of you probably know, Dick Morris has decided that the early pre-red-shift exit polls that showed Kerry winning by a comfortable margin were the result of a vast left-wing conspiracy led by the pollsters themselves and, of all things, the mainstream corporate media, to suppress GOP voter turnout in the western states. See:
Now, I don't know about you, but any time I see my candidate's chances for victory going down the crapper, I try to get as many people to vote for him or her as I possibly can without getting arrested or getting my face broken in the process. Not exactly voter suppression.
So here's another spin on Morris's conspiracy theory, which at least I as a relative newbie here haven't heard yet:
Suppose the leakage of the early exit polls was a GOP maneuver?
Let's look at this from Karl Rove's point of view:
No one seriously thought that G. W. Bush would win a second term by a large margin, so there were only two possibilities before the election: a Bush loss or a narrow Bush victory.
Let's say Bush lost. The early exit polls would have been correct -- maybe not perfect -- but probably within their margin of error. So a leaked bogus poll, arranged somehow by the Bush campaign, would have faded into history like yesterday's weather forecast. A week after the election, few would remember it at all, much less question its authenticity, or that of the actual election.
But say Bush actually won. Now we have an exit poll that smacks of election fraud! But so far (and the night is still young), who has benefited from this anomaly?
Well, the Greens and Libertarian parties have garnered a lot of attention and respect for their recount efforts in Ohio, and deservedly so. That's good if you believe in a pluralistic democracy. It would be even better if we had some form of proportional representation in which even the losing parties can gain some representatives in the legislature. Unfortunately for the Glibs, as some have called them (no offense intended), in our republic we do not.
But unless the election is overturned or some massive fraud is uncovered, the clear beneficiary of a bogus early exit poll favoring John Kerry is the Republican party itself and here's why: We now have a situation where we Democrats are between a rock and a hard place and I hope we know it. If our leaders too vigorously pursue the charges of fraud, they would be seen as sore losers and relentlessly attacked by the right-wing media. But if they stand by and do nothing, they alienate their constituency, particularly the grassroots and progressives among us who, unlike our corporate donors looking for favors, actually do care which party is in power.
Disaffected progressive Democrats may flock to the Greens, and those who have gotten so fed up with everything having to do with the government may become Libertarians.
We cannot afford to lose these people who actually may have won us this election, or will have a pretty good chance (assuming the absence of future election fraud) of winning us the next one, given the results of four more years of the worst president in our history.
My point is that if the early exit polls were wrong, as Morris suggests, and it turns out there is no out and out election fraud, the bogus polls are more likely to be a Rovian move to cause an implosion of our party than anything else. And who puts the finishing touch on the scam by directing our attention and that of the mainstream media away from the possibility that the GOP has manipulated the exit polls by immediately suggesting that we did so? Dick Morris.
Fortunately though, we have Ohio, which by any reasonable measure was a national disgrace. Even if there is no actual fraud uncovered, the tactics of voter suppression, misdirection and disinformation employed there warrant a full investigation. Our party can avoid the implosion by vigorously supporting these efforts in solidarity with the Glibs and more importantly, with ourselves.
So what do the rest of you think?
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