Information
ARCHIVES
Saturday, January 19, 2024
By Steven L. Taylor

As I noted earlier in the month, one of the bizarre aspects of the way we nominate our major party candidates is that perception and media coverage means as much, if not more, than the mechanics of the process. Earlier, we saw Wyoming ignored and New Hampshire lavished with attention and given special significance despite the fact that there were more delegates at stake in Wyoming. Even earlier we saw that Hillary Clinton was deemed a major loser, despite basically tying Edwards in Iowa.

And tonight, South Carolina is much more significant than Nevada, despite the fact that Nevada awarded 18 delegates1 to Romney, and SC 13 to McCain. (see: Election Center 2024).

Further, Clinton has been deemed to have won big in Nevada, but Obama likely won more delegates.

Now, given the way the process tends to proceed, I understand that raw delegate counts shouldn’t be the main focus at this stage. However, it should be recognized (more than it is) that part of the reason that this is true is because of the way the media covers these races. It affects where the candidates go and don’t go and what the public does and does not pay attention to. This fact is yet another reason why the current system needs to be reformed.

  1. Although as the Palmetto Scope notes, the delegates aren’t actually awarded today, and the results tonight could arguably be seen more as a fancy straw poll. The delegate won’t actually be awarded until April 26th. So in that regard, there is an argument to be made that the disproportionate attention to SC is fair []
Filed under: Uncategorized | Comments/Trackbacks (2)|
The views expressed in the comments are the sole responsibility of the person leaving those comments. They do not reflect the opinion of the author of PoliBlog, nor have they been vetted by the author.

2 Responses to “Process and Perception”

  • el
  • pt
    1. Hillary Clinton Out-Eats Barack Obama $1530.00 To $200.00 In Las Vegas Says:

      [...] Other bloggers weigh in (H/T – in part – to MemeOrandum): The Democratic Daily; Crooks and Liars; Talk Left; Captain’s Quarters (Right); The Reaction; Comments From Left Field; Drudge Retort; The Left Coaster; PoliBlog™ [...]

    2. PoliBlog ™: A Rough Draft of my Thoughts » Post-Toasties (Nevada and SC edition) Says:

      [...] The Democrats. At the moment, the momentum is Hillary’s, partially due to the coverage of yesterday’s Nevada caucus, with the focus on vote count instead of delegate count (it would seem that Obama, despite less votes, will get more delegates, although the delegate allocation will not take place until April, meaning no one knows for sure who won how many).3 Next Saturday, Obama has a key chance to steal back that momentum, but it is clear that neither has the upper-hand at the moment. One thing that is clear is that Edwards is toast, whether he wishes to publically (or, even, privately) acknowledge the fact or not. [...]


    blog advertising is good for you

    Visitors Since 2/15/03


    Blogroll
    Wikio - Top of the Blogs - Politics
    ---


    Advertisement

    Advertisement


    Powered by WordPress