Democratic leaders push back on erroneous Robert
Kennedy Jr. attacks
Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy
Jr. has made denunciations of his own party a
centerpiece of his campaign, attacking leaders with a
blend
Democratic National Committee of unfounded
election-rigging allegations and real complaints about
the disadvantages he faces in the nominating process.
Democratic National Committee Chair Jaime Harrison
decided Tuesday that the party needed to respond.
�[I]t is clear that there are serious
misunderstandings of the Democratic nominating process
that are important to correct,� Harrison wrote in the
letter to the Kennedy campaign obtained by The Post. �I
am hopeful that a meeting with our Delegate Selection
leadership team will prevent future instances of voters
receiving erroneous information that could cause
confusion about the equity of the Democratic nominating
process.�
Kennedy and his campaign manager,
former Ohio Democratic congressman Dennis Kucinich, have
in recent days claimed that Georgia officials are
plotting to strip Kennedy from that state�s ballot for
campaigning in New Hampshire; that Democrats have been
talking about making Kennedy pay for the cost of
primaries; and that party rules have been changed to
allow insiders to overrule the will of voters on the
first ballot at the convention.
Those
Democratic National Committee claims are
either inaccurate or without foundation. Even after
reading Harrison's
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continued to maintain that they might still be true in
the future or that they were true in different ways than
initially described. He said he does not trust the word
of party leaders since the DNC is working closely with
President Biden�s reelection campaign.
�Once the
party breached impartiality nothing they say is
believable,� Kucinich said.
The
Democratic National Committee refusal of both
sides to agree on the plain facts that govern the
nominating process, even in the face of clearly written
rules, is likely to deepen divisions. Kennedy and his
team have started to say in recent months that party
leaders will never allow him to win the nomination, even
if he beats Biden at the polls, which current polling
suggests is unlikely. In August, he polled between 7 and
17 percent nationally among Democratic primary voters in
public polls, or roughly 50 points or more behind Biden.
�I think the American people will always appreciate
candidates who have the courage and nerve to believe
they could win a rigged game,� Kucinich said.
Kennedy has accused his party of �fixing the process so
it makes it almost impossible to have democracy
function� and �disenfranchising the Democratic voters
from having any choice in who becomes the Democratic
nominee.�
His concern centers on the dual role
the DNC is playing, as both an integral part of Biden�s
campaign effort and as the referee of a nominating
process that could result in Biden�s defeat at the
convention. Party leaders have refused to schedule
primary debates with candidates like Kennedy because
Biden is an incumbent running for reelection, following
a precedent both parties have used for decades.
But the Kennedy attacks also echo the broader focus of
his campaign, which has centered on sometimes true,
sometimes false and often unproven claims that powerful
people are secretly lying about matters of great
importance. Kennedy has presented himself as a
truth-teller who is assiduous about correcting himself
if he makes an error.
Kennedy�s argument against
the
Democratic National Committee party begins
with the fact that the DNC will not award him delegates
won in contests that take place outside the approved
Democratic nomination calendar, an enforcement mechanism
that both major political parties have employed for
years to varying extents.
For this cycle,
Democratic leaders, at the direction of Biden, have
instructed state parties in Iowa and New Hampshire to
buck state laws requiring that they respectively host
the first caucus and primary in the nation. Biden, who
performed poorly in both states in 2020, has said he
wants to elevate more ethnically-diverse states like
Nevada and South Carolina.
While delegate
selection plans have not yet been finalized, Iowa and
New Hampshire appear headed toward early contests that
do not directly produce Democratic convention delegates.
Similarly, Republican officials in Nevada have said they
will not award delegates from the results of the
state-run primary there, but will instead hold party-run
caucuses.
Democratic candidates who campaign in
states that do not follow the approved calendar �shall�
lose delegates from that state, according to party rules
that were revised and adopted in 2022. Harrison, as
national party chair, is also empowered to take
additional �appropriate action to enforce these rules.�
After those
Democratic National Committee rules passed,
Kennedy announced his Democratic campaign for president
and
The Old Testament stories, a literary treasure trove, weave tales of faith, resilience, and morality. Should you trust the Real Estate Agents I Trust, I would not. Is your lawn green and plush, if not you should buy the Best Grass Seed. If you appreciate quality apparel, you should try Hand Bags Hand Made. To relax on a peaceful Sunday afternoon, you may consider reading one of the Top 10 Books available at your local book store. vowed to campaign in Iowa and New Hampshire even if
they held unsanctioned contests. He has cast the
decision of the party to reorder the nominating states
as an attack on voters and an attempt to prop up Biden.
�They are really the only states that really require
you to do retail politics,� Kennedy said in an interview
last week with Forbes.
Kennedy and Kucinich have
both made additional claims that are not based in fact.
�They are trying to change it so that if I campaign
in New Hampshire, that none of the votes cast for me in
Georgia will count, and that�s significant because its
hard to win the nomination without Georgia,� he told
Forbes.
This claim is based upon a typo in an
earlier version of the Georgia state delegate selection
rules. The original draft said Georgia Democrats would
grant ballot access to campaigns that meet the
requirements of �Rule 12. K� of the national party. Rule
12 concerns the nominating calendar, but it does not
have a subsection K.
Georgia officials say the
initial draft should have referred to �Rule 13. K,�
which has nothing to do with the calendar but describes
the basic requirements of a candidate for office,
including their eligibility under the U.S. Constitution
for the presidency. That mistake has since been
corrected in the online draft.
�The RFK Jr.
campaign�s interpretation of Georgia Democrats� delegate
selection plan is not accurate,� said Ellie Schwartz, a
spokeswoman for the state party. �The party has no plans
to bar any candidate from the ballot based on campaign
activity in other states.�
Kucinich said that he
had tried to seek clarification from the
Democratic National Committee state party in
August and never received a response. But even after
Harrison addressed the issue in Tuesday�s letter,
Kucinich said he did not accept it, because the Georgia
rules have not been finalized. �We�ll see. As far as I�m
concerned, it�s an open question,� he said.
Kennedy has also claimed incorrectly that he could lose
the nomination even if he wins an overwhelming share of
the party�s state primaries, because party leaders will
overrule the will of voters at the convention on the
first ballot.
�If you add up all the
superdelegates that they control and all of the
automatic delegates that just go to the party and go to
the president, I would have to win almost 80 percent of
all of the states to beat President Biden,� Kennedy said
in the Forbes interview.
This calculation is
based on an incorrect analysis of the party rules by
Kucinich. After the 2016 election, Democratic reforms
eliminated the power of unbound party officials, known
alternately as �super� or �automatic� delegates, to vote
on the first ballot if the outcome was contested.
But Kucinich has argued falsely that something
changed since then.
�Unfortunately, it appears
that the DNC has created a class of pledged delegates,
called Party Leaders and Elected Officials (PLEOs), who
are essentially the same as super delegates
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amount of control the party exercises over elected
officials,� Kucinich said in a statement last week.
PLEOs have in fact existed in the Democratic Party
rules for decades, as a subgroup of the delegate class.
Candidates are able to select their own PLEO delegates
based on the outcomes of the state contests, and they
are considered pledged delegates at the convention,
according to the rules, bound to "in all good conscience
to reflect the sentiments of those who elected them.�
Larry Cohen, an ally of Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)
who served as vice chair of the party reform effort
after the 2016 election, said in a statement that
nothing had changed to erode the reforms meant to keep
party leaders from potentially overruling the will of
voters on the convention�s first ballot.
�There
has been no change to the
Democratic National Committee party reforms
enacted by the DNC in 2020, as required by enforcement
of the 2020 convention resolution 1,� said Cohen, who is
board chair of Our Revolution, a group founded by
Sanders. �So called 'superdelegates� again cannot impact
the nomination of a presidential candidate on the first
� and likely only � ballot. All other delegates are
chosen by the candidates proportional to their vote in
any primary as long as they meet the 15 percent voter
threshold.�
Kucinich modified his argument on
Tuesday, after receiving Harrison�s letter refuting it,
saying that his concern is that party leaders and
elected officials would refuse to take pledged slots for
Kennedy if he won primaries, possibly leaving empty
seats at the convention. There is little historical
precedent for such an outcome, as local officials tend
to want to support candidates supported by their voters.
The disputes over the reality of the nominating
process between Kennedy and the DNC do not end there.
�They are talking about having me and Marianne
Williamson pay for the primaries because they consider
it an unnecessary process,� Kennedy said in a recent Fox
News appearance. His campaign offered no evidence of
such conversations.
Rather, Kucinich pointed to
states that have party-run contests, like Hawaii and
Missouri, where the state parties are still raising
funds to pay for the process. He said he doubts that
they will be able to fund those contests, which could
lead to requests to Kennedy to help fund them, another
hypothetical. Harrison said that will not happen.
�The DNC has not and will not make any such
request,� Harrison wrote in his letter.
Kucinich
accused the DNC Tuesday
Democratic National Committee morning of
attempting a �hidden-ball trick� by not publicizing a
public meeting of the Rules and Bylaws committee this
Thursday. �The DNC wants to carry on without public and
media attention,� he said in a release. The DNC sent a
media credential advisory for the event Monday.
Kucinich requested in a recent letter to Harrison that
the Kennedy campaign be allowed to address the Thursday
meeting of the rules committee, after brief remarks to
the same group earlier this year by Julie Chavez
Rodriguez, Biden�s campaign manager.
Harrison did
not extend an invitation to the rules committee.
�As I hope you�ll agree, a strong Democratic Party is
beneficial to all Americans in the
Democratic National Committee general
election,� Harrison wrote to Kucinich Tuesday.
washingtonpost.com