DNC Chairman Howard Dean recently argued that, instead of waiting until the convention, superdelegates should announce their candidate preferences by July 1, which is well after every voter will have participated in every primary and caucus. Yesterday, Dean’s plan picked up some high-profile support on the Hill.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) on Tuesday threw his weight behind a plan to have superdelegates in the Democratic presidential primary make their votes public by July 1.
“I like that — July 1 or before,” Reid said of a plan floated last week by Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean for superdelegates to show their hands between the end of primary season on June 3 and July 1.
Asked what he was going to do to encourage such a plan, Reid told Roll Call, “I just did it.”
For those who don’t want to see the nominating race continue until late August, this sounds vaguely encouraging. Sure, we’d still have three full months of campaigning left, but three is preferable to five. For that matter, whichever way the superdelegates break, having a nominee two months before the convention will give him or her time — to vet potential running mates, to put a ground game together, to try to bring the party together, etc.
Clinton supporters, who accurately believe their candidate has the best shot at winning if the race goes to the convention, are pushing back, rejecting the idea of timeline altogether. “Superdelegates should be afforded the same courtesy as regular delegates,” said Rep. Shelley Berkley (D-Nev.), a Clinton supporter. “They shouldn’t have to make up their mind according to the timetable of Howard Dean.”
And therein lies the problem with the July 1 deadline: everyone can ignore it without consequence.
The NYT’s Adam Nagourney noted what happened when Dean first raised the deadline subject.
…24 hours after he made his remarks, Mrs. Clinton said she intended to keep fighting for the nomination through the summer, if necessary. It was an unmistakable rebuke to Mr. Dean, who has never had good relations with the Clintons.
What can Dean (or Reid, or anyone else) do to compel the superdelegates to endorse a candidate by July 1? As far as I can tell, nothing. In this sense, Dean isn’t setting a deadline so much as he’s making a request.
But it’s easily ignored, and there’s nothing to stop hundreds of superdelegates — especially Clinton backers who see the benefit of waiting until Denver — from simply ignoring the deadline altogether. It’s not as if Dean can punish them for their obstinacy; the rules say superdelegates vote at the convention.
In other words, the July 1 deadline is interesting, and I’m glad it’s drawing support from leaders like Harry Reid, but it’s probably best not to assume that the matter will be resolved by then.