Texas Two-Vote

Voting twice in Texas? It appears you can. The ever-intrepid Austin Chronicle reports:

We’ve all heard the ballot-stuffing joke: “Vote early; vote often.” Well, in this election, it’s no joke: You should vote twice. In fact, it’s legal, and it’s encouraged – at least if you’re a Democrat.

Oh, the Great State of Texas. Where Tony Romo dates Jessica Simpson and you get to vote twice everything makes sense.

What election officials and candidates want you to do – in fact, they’re pleading for it – is to show up at your precinct convention at 7:15pm on March 4, after the polls close (but in this high-turnout election, the convention can’t begin until the last voter in line has voted). That is where you will cast your “second vote.” If you don’t, you’re giving up part of your influence on the Democratic presidential nomination. And yes, you should report to your precinct that night, whether you voted early or on election day….

What It Means

Now, if you aren’t picky about whether the candidate is Obama or Clinton, there isn’t much need for you to attend your precinct convention. But if you’re fiercely committed to Barack or Hillary, then you need to represent – otherwise, the other candidate’s supporters might fill your precinct meeting and swing convention-selected delegates the other way. For example, let’s say you live in a heavily pro-Obama neighborhood. You’d want the delegates sent to the county convention from your precinct to reflect that, right? But if Clinton supporters mobilize and get to that caucus, and Obama supporters don’t, then Obama won’t come away with any representation from your precinct at the conventions that decide those 67 delegates.

In this year’s race, that could be crucial. Thus far – combining pledged delegates from the states that have already voted or caucused with superdelegates that have already committed – Obama has secured 1,319 national delegates, and Clinton is right behind with 1,250, according to CNN. The first to reach 2,025 wins the nomination.

That mixed system may sound kind of screwy, but Texas Democratic Party spokesman Hector Nieto defends it as empowering truly committed party activists: “It’s kind of putting an emphasis on your vote, or an exclamation mark on your vote, where you have the opportunity to be able to go vote in the primary, and then if you want to continue to support your candidate, you have the ability to go to the precinct convention. This is just another way to be part of the process and get involved in the grassroots level.” But might this process tip the nomination to a candidate that loses the popular vote? “No,” Nieto said, but then he backtracked and said: “Obviously that’s a possibility, but it forces campaigns to be more involved in Texas and forces them to communicate with Texans. That’s what we want – we want our candidates to communicate with all our voters and give an opportunity to our voters to hear directly from them.”


How It Works

So if you decide to go, here’s what to expect: First, you’ll sign in and indicate which candidate you support. This is not a secret ballot. Be on time! You won’t get a do-over if you’re late and miss it. You’ll all then elect a precinct chair and secretary. The chair will then announce the number of delegates that your precinct will send to the county convention, the percentage of people in the room who support each candidate, and, based on that, the number of delegates that the supporters of each candidate are entitled to elect. (You can, if you wish, sign for your candidate and leave – or stay and help select actual delegates.)

If your favorite candidate doesn’t meet the minimum “threshold” to warrant a delegate, then you may elect to caucus with supporters of your second-favorite candidate. (Most likely your precinct will simply break into a Clinton group and an Obama group, so you Kucinich die-hards will have to choose the lesser evil.) Once you’ve broken into groups – “candidate caucuses” – you’ll nominate and vote on people within your group to serve as delegates or alternates to the county convention. Those present can also propose and vote on resolutions to forward to the county convention for consideration in the party platform.

Similar processes will then be repeated at the county and state levels – if you’re willing to be a delegate and you make it through these steps, guess what: You could find yourself in Denver Aug. 25-28, at the Democratic National Convention.

That’s as much detail as I’m willing to go into in this space. If you need more, go to www.txdemocrats.org and click on the button labeled “Precinct Convention Information.”

Now get out there and vote. And vote.

Read the full story here.

And I’m left wringing my hands and wishing I’d never gotten on that plane back to New York after last year’s ACL.