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Super Tuesday Approaches.
John Edwards is out of the race.
Rudy Giuliani is out of the race (and we hardly
even got to see him run!).
It’s down to two candidates on the Democratic
side, who even now are squaring off in possibly
their last debate, and four on the Republican
side, though John McCain and Mitt Romney are far
in the lead—it wouldn’t be impossible
for them to get caught, but it’d be hard.
Will we know who the nominees are after Tuesday?
Oh, my earlier article about the primary process
seems so naïve. Still, there is a chance
that one candidate will make a sweep of Super
Tuesday (Tsunami Tuesday, Super Duper Tuesday,
whatever dumb name the pundits use this week—my
favorite is “Ballot Bowl” on CNN for
its pure desperate attempt to make voting sound
enough like football to get the majority of Americans
to care).
It could happen. Or it could stretch on into
April and even May—even to the conventions.
The endorsements are racking up, particularly
behind Barack Obama and John McCain. When Giuliani
dropped out, he immediately backed McCain, and
Arnold Schwarzenegger endorsed McCain today as
well. (It is still very odd to me that Arnold
Schwarzenegger somehow has political clout, let
alone governs a huge state.)
Behind Obama now stands Ted Kennedy, younger
brother of Bobby and John and member of the Senate
for so long that he’s forgotten what it
was like not to be. In addition, he got the support
of rising star Kathleen Sebelius, governor of
Kansas and the person chosen by the Democratic
Party to give its response to the State of the
Union address.
Of course, the other candidates have plenty of
endorsements, supporters, and money, but Obama
came out ahead in the money race as well, announcing
that his campaign raised $32 million in the month
of January. Clearly, whatever happens in the Democratic
race, Obama is now the certified rock star of
the party.
I almost hope it’s over after Super Tuesday,
even though I bemoan the disenfranchisement of
millions of Americans whose states vote later,
because I’m sick and tired of listening
to pundits make sweeping generalizations about
the categories of people who make up the Democratic
Party (and sometimes the Republican Party as well),
and I am especially tired of hearing the question
“Who are the white men going to vote for?”
We here at Kaffeine Buzz do not believe that
you choose your candidate by race, gender, ethnicity,
religion, sexual orientation or any other pigeonhole
you could stick them into.
That said, part of me really enjoys the fact that
right now, a woman and a black man are vying to
become the nominee of a major political party
for the first time. We are ready. No more excuses.
We encourage you to get involved by caucusing
this Tuesday, February 5. If you have
not experienced this before, check out our article
“What
the Hell is a Caucus Anyway?”
The Obama website also has a really helpful caucus
page for each state, and for Colorado
it is http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/cocaucuscenter.
It helps you to find your caucus location, learn
how the caucus process works, get a ride to your
caucus, get help with Caucus-Night childcare,
and more. More than anything, you need to know
to GET THERE ON TIME at 6:30pm.
Reader mail can go to sarah.jaffe-at-gmail.com.
Please include “Political Buzz” in
the subject line or it may go to junk mail!
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