Follow-up: Texas Primaries

So the race is over and the result are in for the primary portion of the Democratic election here in Texas. Election leaders are still counting the votes from the caucuses, which could take a while given that the voting process was entirely on paper with hand-written candidate preferences. Still, we can we learn a lot from this process:

The Vote

Hillary Clinton won the popular vote in Texas, but because of the way the state allocates its delegates she only picked up a net of four. That’s because Texas does not assign delegates by state-wide popular vote, but rather by state Senate district. Electoral-Vote has the breakdown, where it’s pretty easy to see the problem for both candidates: you can’t divide people into parts.

Take the Senate district from where I grew up: SD-1. Senator Clinton won by 17%, but there are an even number of delegates for that district (4 delegates). Because you can’t divide one of them into a fractional delegate, Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama both received two delegates for their troubles. The situation happened in reverse in my current home district: SD-25. Senator Obama won by 9%, but the district’s six delegates were once again divided by two giving each candidate three delegates. In fact, the only places where either candidate picked up anything were where there were odd numbers of delegates or where one candidate truly defeated the other (ex: SD-20 and SD-23).

Barack Obama has performed much better in the caucuses, however the results from these are arriving slowly. Slate has a nice article explaining why the caucus results are taking so long to total, but the upshot is that Texas has a ridiculous snail-mail based system that takes forever for any kind of communication to get done. Slate compares Texas to Iowa where the results are known right away because Iowa is used to having important primaries where people actually care.

Still, early indications suggest that Senator Obama will likely pick up three to four delegates from the caucuses, possibly giving him a delegate advantage over Senator Clinton by the time the counting is finished. This will undoubtedly unhinge someone, although whether it will be the Clinton campaign, the Texas Democratic Party, or the American media, I’m not sure.

Oh yeah, and John McCain won the Republican primary or something. There was huge excitement here for that contest. Yeah.

The Campaign

Of course, the campaign in Texas was completely unusual compared to most elections. Candidates actually visited and campaigned, although no serious attention was paid to issues important to the state. Both of the Democratic candidates were circumspect about NAFTA while visiting Texas, but openly blasted it in Ohio. Why? Because NAFTA makes Texas a heck of a lot of money. We like it, thank you very much. Ohio can suck it.

Much was made of Obama’s ground organization, but the reality was curiously not what I expected. If the media was to be believed, I thought we would see armies of Obama supporters flooding across the state carrying his message of “Change” everywhere they went. However, no such mass ever materialized. Instead, I saw exactly the opposite: Hillary supporters out in droves with signs, buttons, and stickers everywhere they went.

Case in point, at my precinct’s polling place, there were several Hillary supporters out front who were well dressed, had nicely printed flyers, and carried large signs. On the other hand, there were only two Obama supporters, both of whom were more poorly dressed, and neither carried a large Obama sign. I had to see the stickers on their jackets to realize they weren’t actually part of the Hillary group.

Much has been said about Howards Dean’s 50 state strategy and how Obama has more deftly executed on it than Clinton, however Texas was almost the reverse. Take this graphic from the New York Times which shows where the Obamas and Clintons campaigned and opened offices. Both candidates paid attention to the major metropolitan areas, but only the Clintons branched out to other smaller cities. Meanwhile, both candidates had offices all over the state, but the Obama campaign chose to open multiple (redundant?) offices in the more major population centers while ignoring smaller rural cities, especially in West Texas. What baffles me is why there was not an Obama office in Lubbock, home of Texas Tech University and a source of much of the college student enthusiasm that has supported his campaign.

Many have wondered if the Clinton campaign did well in Texas because of Rush Limbaugh who told Republicans to vote for her to stretch out the Democratic campaign process. And it’s true, the most Republican districts favored Hillary Clinton. However, as I pointed out in my earlier post, many Republicans were voting against her as well, leading me to believe the Limbaugh effect probably didn’t materialize.

I actually believe that Obama lost the Texas vote because of sloppy campaigning. Hillary Clinton kicked his ass in the polls because she got her act together at the last minute, built a real ground organization, and at least conveyed the appearance of a successful campaign. Obama won the caucuses because of the raw enthusiasm he can create from thin air, but to continue his success against the Clinton campaign he needs to get his act together before the next primaries or else he’s a loser for the rest of the campaign.

Links: Texas Primaries Edition

So rather than make this all political with my opinions and such, I thought I would just throw out some good links on the upcoming Democratic primaries in Texas. As big a state as this is, it tends to stay under the national radar when it’s not having its vast ranch lands cleared by a vacationing George Bush. Yet when something does happen, the inevitable deluge of articles begins trying to reason out just how this state manages to exist when everything is so…big.

New York Times

The New York Times is first up with its article titled Pieces of Texas Turn Primary Into a Puzzle - an article that’s amusing enough simply for betraying Northerners’ utter confusion about the Lone Star State. The rest of the world seems to be coming to terms with what locals have known for quite some time: Texas is weird. Quote:

In a 1968 essay, Larry McMurtry wrote that Texas was divided but “not yet fragmented to a degree that would raise difficulties for the novelist.” Forty years later, you could sympathize with the writer, but you should feel really sorry for the presidential candidate, trying to make sense of a state as large as New England, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and North Carolina combined, and probably even more diverse.

Electoral-Vote.com

Next up is a great article from everyone’s favorite computer-scientist-turned-pundit election website, Electoral-Vote.com. In the news posting from today, Mr. Tanenbaum makes a few good points on the Texas primary system and how absolutely confusing it really is. He starts by writing that because of the way Texas divides its delegates for the voting portion of its election, it’s unlikely either candidate will pick up a substantial lead. He thinks we will see at most a 15 delegate spread.

Beyond his concerns about the delegate spread, he also thinks that very few people will actually attend the caucus portion of the election. I think his point about the caucuses is the most interesting, in large part because so few Texans understand their own primary system. This may have much to do with the fact that Texas has voted mostly Republican for so long that people have simply forgotten about how the Democratic primaries work. Most likely, however, only the die-hard voters will attend the caucuses on the evening of the 4th. For those who do attend, 90% of them will be attending for the first and almost certainly the last time for quite a few elections to come.

Houston Chronicle

Last up is an article from the Houston Chronicle titled In Democratic primary, expect a GOP turnout that confirms what a lot of people from around here already know but what for some reason seems to be a complete surprise to people elsewhere: Republicans really hate Hillary Clinton. What’s more, a good chunk of them may be voting for Obama in the Democratic primary simply because they absolutely don’t want Hillary to even possibly think about winning the election. How many Republicans? As many as 15 percent of them! That’s an awful lot of Republican voters, and a good chunk of them will vote for McCain in November.