LOUISIANA COULD HAVE THE FIRST PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY!
Baton Rouge, Louisiana
PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY!
Louisiana
is scheduled to have its presidential primary on March 5th of next year, but
there is one little problem. The state
is broke and the Jindal administration has allocated no money for the legally
required election. So what happens next?
Does Governor Jindal really want a primary? And is there a way to hold an
election for free and get huge national coverage in the process?
Some cynics around the state capitol think Jindal purposely gutted
funding for a primary so he would not have to be on the ballot in his home
state. The governor’s popularity has
plummeted to an all time low at 27%, with few signs that it will improve before
the spring election date. Calling off
the election would be a way for Jindal not to be humiliated by Louisiana
voters.
Actually, there is no national requirement that a state has to hold
a presidential primary. A few states,
including Colorado, Iowa and Nevada, hold caucuses where each party conducts
regional meetings to discuss and vote on delegates who are pledged to a
specific candidate. A similar system was in place in Louisiana for a number of
years.
So how can Louisiana still have a presidential primary without spending
any money? Just look at the election cycles.
The first selection of presidential delegates is set for January 5th
with the holding of the Iowa caucuses.
In fact, the national election season kicks off even earlier on August 8th
of this year when Iowa holds a non binding straw poll. So why should Louisiana wait until March 5th
of next year?
Louisiana is the only state in the nation to have a statewide
election close to the presidential primary elections. The gubernatorial runoff date in Louisiana is
set for November 31st. Why not kick off the presidential election
campaign right here in the Bayou State on this election date? Along with the various state and local races,
Louisiana should consider including on the ballot the nation’s first presidential
primary.
Since the state is holding its regular election anyway, there will
be no additional cost involved to the taxpayers. In fact, there would be the
savings of $3.5 million. Pretty good chump change for a state that is facing
major financial challenges. All major
candidates for president would certainly be expected to flock to Louisiana,
spending a good deal of money trying to garner national attention at the
state’s first presidential primary. And Louisiana voters would have a chance to
highlight Louisiana issues. It would seem to be a win, win for the State.
Can you imagine the massive some of money that would be spent in
Louisiana, as candidates run major media campaigns with the hopes of building
momentum for the early spring round of elections? It would be the nation’s
first indication of what voters were thinking, what issues were important, and
what candidates were emerging as favorites. Finish sixth in Louisiana, and it
undercuts any candidate’s effectiveness in raising campaign dollars and
building major support as the next election primaries approach.
To prevent legal challenges by both national parties, the election
would have to be non—binding. Party caucuses could take place later in the
spring, at no cost to the state, to select delegates who will attend the
national convention next summer. And even though the results would be
non—binding, Louisiana would jump from the irrelevancy it is now, to the leader
of the pack in selecting the next president.
The legislature, that begins meeting in a few weeks, could alleviate
the cost of the required primary and put Louisiana front and center of the national
presidential campaign by merely allow candidates for president to appear on
this coming November’s election ballot. That’s
all it would take.
We’ve stood by for years and watch our Governor travel the nation in
his quixotic quest for national office. Now’s the time to bring Jindal and the
nation’s focus back home to the deepest of the deep southern states, where it
should have been all along.
********
“Presidential
primary debates are an important part of our political process. But the media
has wrested complete control from the parties and candidates over everything,
including the number, the format, the qualifications, and the moderators. And
they've become a circus.”
Peace and Justice
Jim Brown
Jim
Brown’s syndicated column appears each week in numerous newspapers throughout
the nation and on websites worldwide. You can read all his past columns
and see continuing updates at http://www.jimbrownusa.com. You can also
hear Jim’s nationally syndicated radio show each Sunday morning from 9 am till
11:00 am, central time, on the Genesis Radio Network, with a live stream at http://www.jimbrownusa.com.
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