Santa Fe New Mexican

Democrats weigh reducing superdeleg­ates’ influence

- By Astead W. Herndon

Democratic Party officials, desperate to present a unified front in advance of the all-important 2018 midterms, are working to revamp their presidenti­al nominating process and erase the final vestiges of the bitter 2016 presidenti­al primary battle between Hillary Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders.

The most significan­t, and divisive, step would involve reducing the role and power of superdeleg­ates — the unpledged party insiders who are free to back any candidate regardless of how the public votes — before the 2020 election. Their influence caused substantia­l tension two years ago when supporters of Sanders zeroed in on superdeleg­ates as “undemocrat­ic” and said they created an unfair and even rigged system favoring Clinton.

Now, party officials, including loyalists held over from both the Sanders and Clinton camps, are inching toward a compromise that would not only minimize the role of superdeleg­ates but change the party’s operationa­l structure as well.

The ideas on the table range from eliminatin­g superdeleg­ates altogether to reducing their numbers significan­tly — from more than 700 to about 280. Some officials said they preferred a proposal in which only elected government officials, and not party leaders, retain their superdeleg­ate status.

The final agreement could be completed in late August, as party officials try to get their house in order and suppress talk of an continuing ClintonSan­ders divide within the Democratic National Committee.

“People are getting to a decent place,” said David Pepper, a committee member and the chairman of the Ohio Democratic Party. “I think there’s an understand­ing that if we spend all our time in this internal discussion — so much so that it becomes our external message — then we’ve become off message with voters.”

“This conversati­on needed to happen but it’s internal politics, and we need to get it over with,” Pepper said. “We need to move on.”

Liberal reformers have already won crucial concession­s from DNC officials responsibl­e for leading the party’s overhaul, including higher accountabi­lity standards for state parties and likely new rules for state primaries and caucuses aimed at increasing voter participat­ion.

In the 2016 primary elections, “there was a lack of transparen­cy that led people to create some conspiracy theories, and it’s useful that will likely go away now,” said Charlie Baker, the former chief operating officer of Clinton’s campaign and a member of the party’s reform commission.”

Larry Cohen, the former union president and chairman of “Our Revolution,” Sanders’ political arm, praised party leaders for following through on their commitment­s to reforms. His stance suggested that even the often-critical party outsiders who supported Sanders in the 2016 election have, to this point, largely been kept at bay by the DNC chairman, Tom Perez, and the vice chairman, Keith Ellison.

“This isn’t a repeat of other stuff,” Cohen said. “They are truly pushing to adopt these reforms and they’re in lock step.”

Yet even as party leaders try to orient Democratic committee members around shared priorities, fissures remain on some key areas of reform, especially the fate of superdeleg­ates. Several DNC officials familiar with the negotiatio­ns said the Democrats most averse to change were state party officials and elected members of Congress who would stand to lose their coveted superdeleg­ate status and the exclusive level of candidate access that often accompanie­s it.

Donna Brazile, the former DNC chairwoman and a member of the party’s important Rules and Bylaws committee, said she would not support a proposal that fully eradicated the superdeleg­ate designatio­n.

“We have to make sure that we do this in the right way, in the most responsibl­e way, and superdeleg­ates should be a part of that process,” she said.

“The way we’re framing this conversati­on right now, we’re discussing removing people from the table who actually set the menu,” Brazile added. “There’s multiple ways to get at this issue without telling everybody to go to hell. That’s unacceptab­le.”

Perez has also encouraged the DNC commission­s that are drafting reforms to recommend changes that would streamline the process of registerin­g to vote in primaries.

Of particular interest to Democratic leaders are state caucuses, which may now be required to accommodat­e absentee voting, incorporat­e paper ballots and publicly report statewide voter counts. States that use the traditiona­l primary system may soon be forced to allow same-day registrati­on for voters to register as Democrats.

 ?? JIM WILSON/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Supporters during a campaign event for Sen. Bernie Sanders, a Democratic presidenti­al hopeful, in 2016 in Modesto, Calif. The party is looking at changes to superdeleg­ates, a point of contention during the last presidenti­al campaign.
JIM WILSON/NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Supporters during a campaign event for Sen. Bernie Sanders, a Democratic presidenti­al hopeful, in 2016 in Modesto, Calif. The party is looking at changes to superdeleg­ates, a point of contention during the last presidenti­al campaign.

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