geonuc wrote:vendic wrote:Manipulating elections is called electoral fraud. In this case because they are a private group, it is legal.
So in the interests of not getting caught up in semantics, what can we agree on to refer to the process of legalized electoral fraud?
Suggestions?
All political parties are private groups.
'Electoral fraud', which I'm not sure is an actual legal term but we'll use it anyway, would be someone changing votes that have been cast, voting more than once, voting when not legally allowed to vote, votes deliberately not being counted. That sort of thing. Their are financial aspects that might be fraud as well. A political party choosing a nominee that they prefer over another and doing more to ensure that candidate gets more support in the primary election is not fraud. It's just a political party exercising their constitutional rights.
Agreed. I'll get back to this later in this post however.
geonuc']
We're not going to agree on this. Correct me if I misunderstand, but you apparently believe that US primary elections should be run under the same rules and laws as the federal general election. I don't. I believe people have a right to assemble, discuss their political views and then put forward a candidate for the general election in any manner they choose. Open, secretive, unbiased, biased - doesn't matter. They can invite someone to run in the primary under their party's label and then work against him in favor of another, secretly or openly. If I were that candidate or that candidate's supporter, I'd certainly be pissed but no laws were broken. The recourse is to choose another party or start your own. As Fisher mentioned, someone might have a case for civil fraud if they were materially harmed by deceptive practices, but that's a money issue.
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That's not my position.
[quote="geonuc wrote:As I said, we're not going to agree and that's fine. There are certainly aspects about the whole electoral process that I'd like to see changed, too.
After reading your post it seems we are debating two different things.
Going by what you seem to think is happening, I'd agree with you fully.
I'll state again, I don't have a problem with the DNC making their rules any way they want. I'm not even particularly fussed about them preferring a particular candidate, that's what super delegates do by design. They give more preference to the party favorite. I don't particularly like the idea but it's their party.
I don't even care that they allow and disallow independents to vote in their elections. My personal belief is that the current system where there is no state consistency is more of a problem than if they go one way or the other but either other option has it's flaws.
Here's where my view differs from yours. I don't believe that the DNC just did those things alone.
Now, lets assume that the data I have is factual and correct, r.e. actual fiddling with votes, not counting votes etc . Would you consider this electoral fraud or still within their rights?
I call it electoral fraud. Some won't because the DNC can drop people off their records or cancel membership any time, it is a private organisation. That however is no longer a simple case of supporting their candidate. That is now messing with their members rights to vote as members of that private party and tampering with the natural flow of an election. One that will have repercussions on the federal level.
Now I know you don't want private organisations to be held to the same standards as a public election.
This is where it gets messy. Because membership to the Democrats excludes you from membership to the Republicans or any other party should it come along, they by virtue of dismissing your registration have effectively stopped you from joining another party. Now their actions are affecting the political direction of the country directly.
So while I don't believe that they should be held to the same standards as an official government election, I do believe that they have to be held accountable for holding fair and unbiased elections themselves because it does affect the country.
Now you might disagree and say that there was none of that tampering going on. That we can address separately.
If you believe as a private party they can do anything with cast votes and stop people voting even though they are members, we can't go any further.
If you however believe that they should hold legitimate fair elections among it's members, then we can explore it one example at a time instead of making it a convoluted mess like I've been doing so far.
Thanks for all the fish.