I miss January. It seems like quite a while ago, but after the Iowa caucuses, there was general agreement about the metrics for the Democratic presidential race. The Obama campaign said it was a race for delegates; the Clinton campaign said it was a race for delegates. The Obama campaign said Florida and Michigan shouldn’t count; the Clinton campaign said Florida and Michigan shouldn’t count. Merriment and joy swept over the land.
It’s grown considerably more complicated since then. Hoping to find a scenario that makes Hillary Clinton’s nomination more likely, her campaign has floated a series of competing and ever-evolving metrics. We should count delegates, but caucuses aren’t as important as primaries. And delegates aren’t as important as the popular vote. And red states aren’t as important as blue states. And small states aren’t as important as big states.
Over the weekend, we heard a brand new one from a campaign surrogate and possible Clinton running mate: let’s count by electoral votes.
Senator Evan Bayh of Indiana, who backs Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton for president, proposed another gauge Sunday by which superdelegates might judge whether to support Mrs. Clinton or Senator Barack Obama.
He suggested that they consider the electoral votes of the states that each of them has won.
“So who carried the states with the most Electoral College votes is an important factor to consider because ultimately, that’s how we choose the president of the United States,” Mr. Bayh said on CNN’s “Late Edition.”
In a primary, of course, electoral votes are not relevant, but the Clinton campaign is trying to use them as an unofficial measure of strength.
Bayh’s comment may not have been a stray remark. Clinton communications director Howard Wolfson followed up by telling the NYT, “Presidential elections are decided on electoral votes,” suggesting this is a new argument being pushed by the campaign.
I wish it weren’t.
The NYT added this:
Mr. Obama, of Illinois, is ahead of Mrs. Clinton, of New York, in most other leading indicators: popular vote (by 700,000 votes out of 26 million cast, excluding caucuses and the disputed Florida and Michigan results, a difference of about 3 percent); delegates (1,622.5 compared with 1,472.5 for her, according to The New York Times’s count); and number of states (27 compared with 14 for her, excluding Florida and Michigan). The opinion polls are mixed but give Mr. Obama a slight edge.
Sure, Obama’s leading in all of these traditional ways of picking a nominee, but what about Bayh’s proposed way of counting? It’d be close, but if we count by electoral votes, Clinton would enjoy an edge: “Mrs. Clinton has won states with a total of 219 Electoral College votes, not counting Florida and Michigan, while Mr. Obama has won states with a total of 202 electoral votes.”
The problem, of course, is that it’s just not credible to keep searching for new ways to juggle the results to get the conclusion one wants. If the Clinton campaign had recommended this metric tally in, say, December, it’d be easier to take it seriously now. As it stands, though, it starts to look like the campaign will keep looking for new counting methods until it’s pleased with the one that shows its candidate ahead.
Bill Burton, a spokesman for Mr. Obama, said that the idea of using the Electoral College as a metric was specious because the Democratic nominee, regardless of whom it was, would almost certainly win California and New York.
True.
So, maybe we can just stick to the usual way of measuring the results?