As we all now know from Alegre and other HRC bloggers' recent conference call, "popular vote" is a key part of HRC's appeal to the Supers.
But the problem is:
The current election, was not intended to render an accurate "popular vote" count, so using the "total raw votes" of the current election to to represent the "popular vote" is methodologically untenable, unfair and disenfranchises voters.
First, the primary was composed of three different kinds of elections, open primaries, closed primaries and caucuses. Adding these unlike terms requires a common denominator or common currency. In our pre-agreed to election system, that's the seated delegates.
Secondly, it's unfair. It penalizes caucus states and small states and disproportionately favors a few large states far beyond their relative population. This is a compromise that's written into the very fabric of our constitution--in the very form of our congressional system. You can't simply add the totals together and call it the "popular vote."
This election was never intended to do that. And it's not fair.
That's why the party agreed in advance on the system of seated delegates to accurately assess "the will of the people." Which is why HRC used to say repeatedly: "what matter is the seated delegates." It's fair.
So if you must calculate the "popular vote" using a different method from the one the party and all the candidates agreed to in advance, let me recommend another common term: "Popular vote quotient."
<C>Popular Vote Quotient</C>
I recommend using a formula to extrapolate a "popular vote quotient" from the caucus states that can be added to the "popular vote totals." This would be more fair to people living in caucus states by giving their vote equal weight to those living in other states.
Take Nebraska for instance, where excitement over the Dem primary caused record turn out. Obama scored a raw "popular vote" of 26,000 to Clinton's 12,000.
But if Nebraskans had had an open primary and had turned out at the rate states like Ohio and Wisconsin have been averaging, with Obama's percentage he would have gained about 272,000 votes for a smashing net of 172,000 votes. (Total Pop=1,700,000, tabulated for average Dem turn out per state. It should be noted that 1/10 residents seems a low outcome for Obama given his percentage, making this method a very conservative one.)
Continuing on in this fashion for the other caucus states (but not including Texas) my very conservative estimate is an additional 550,000 voters would have to added to Obama's current total for the "popular vote" number to be even remotely fair.
That's 550,000 voters who'd have their potential votes stolen by changing the rules after the game is over.
Of course, that doesn't account for closed primaries and open primaries. We'll need a different formula adapt those.
But because it's so complicated, I think that's something that the party should work out in advance and the candidates can agree to it.
You know, like the seated delegate count.
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