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An
Anarchist at the Caucus
by
Doug French
by Doug French
DIGG THIS
Saturday was
caucus day in Nevada for the first time ever, and despite not choosing
to participate in this foolish sport, this anarchist couldn’t resist
a front row seat to watch democracy in action. Republicans were
to report to a government high school by 9am sharp, and as it turned
out, be off the premises by 10:30 to allow Democrats their turn.
Like most high schools in fast growing Las Vegas, this one in the
southwest area of town is relatively new, built in 1993, and almost
prison-like in design with a center concrete yard surrounded by
iron gates so that the facility can be "locked-down" easily.
No one knew
what was going on as people streamed into the check-in area located
in the lunchroom. But after a little investigation we determined
that we must look at a map to determine the number of our precinct
and go to the classroom designated as the meeting place for those
who lived in that area.
Twenty-three
average looking folks assembled in a classroom whose day-to-day
occupying teacher is not likely a Republican type. Just a guess,
but the large Amnesty USA and Ten Indian Commandments posters provided
a clue. It turned out that 21 of the 23 were registered Republican
participants while two of us just observed.
There were
no instructions in the room, which left the assembled, to chat amongst
themselves while waiting to learn what to do. The subject of Ron
Paul was raised across the room, and the most vociferous of the
caucusers said, "Ron Paul is a joke." "The Constitution
was a fine document," he went on, "but this isn’t 1776.
The Constitution isn’t relevant anymore. You can’t run the country
based upon it anymore."
The mouthy
caucuser said that he had high hopes for Fred Thompson, but Thompson
just "doesn’t have the desire." When the conversation
turned to illegal immigrants, the gravelly-voiced know-it-all said:
"I have no sympathy for homebuilders going through this crunch at
all. They had illegals working seven days a week for only
$7 per hour during the boom. These guys were roofing with no safety
harnesses and just tennis shoes at 7:30am on Sunday mornings next
to my house."
This thoughtful
discussion was thankfully interrupted when directions arrived. Unfortunately,
these instructions were confusing enough that the Dudley Do-Right
Mormon gentleman who reluctantly became precinct captain read them
aloud at least three times trying to figure out what they meant.
The work that needed to be done was to select six delegates to the
Clark County Republican convention from the 21 registered Republicans
present. Those who aspired to be delegates were to give a one-minute
speech and if more than six wished to run for one of the six spots,
there would be an election. Mercifully, only six sought to be delegates,
with another four wanting to be alternates.
The precinct
captain proved that he has clearly fallen for the government-sponsored
baloney explaining that he wanted to be a delegate because: "We
are the government. Politics runs our lives. We must participate
to have a voice." Another delegate’s motivation is to "stop
the Clinton machine." Another grew up in a political family
and feels she must get involved, while another said she "wants
to be a voice for my country."
One of the
delegates just got out of high school and mumbled that he "wanted
to get involved." The group was unanimous in its praise for
a young person that had the desire to participate in the process.
And finally a certain lawyer told the group she wished to be a delegate
to make sure Republicans would be elected so employers would not
be saddled with the job-killing employment policies that the Democrats
were proposing.
After the speechifying
was complete, the group of 21 unanimously approved the delegates
and alternates. Finally, the ballots arrived to provide for a presidential
straw poll. However, the delegates will do the real voting in March
or April at the county convention and later at the state convention,
and contrary to what most in the room thought, the elected delegates
are not required to vote at the convention the way their particular
precinct voted.
When the votes
were counted, Romney came away with 15, Ron Paul tallied 3 votes,
while Fred Thompson, Duncan Hunter and Mike Huckabee each received
a vote. Of course, the lone vote for Hunter came from the Paul hater
quoted above. He must have been crushed when his man decided to
throw in the towel by dinnertime that same day.
The countywide
vote was similar to our precinct: Romney received approximately
70% of the vote, 14% went to Paul and 13% for McCain.
But, what looks
like a landslide for Romney may be deceiving. Our just-out-of-high
school delegate is a Ron Paul supporter (if the Romney folks had
known that, they might not have been as excited about his participation),
as is that certain attorney delegate. So, come county convention
time, for this particular precinct, 33 per cent will casting votes
for Ron Paul.
Across town
at another caucus with 36 voters, the results were: Romney 17, Paul
6, Huckabee 6, McCain 3, Thompson 3, and Giuliani 1, according to
my inside source. But more importantly, of the nine delegates, five
were Romney supporters, three were for Paul and one was for Thompson.
The results in a precinct near downtown were even better: Ron Paul
received 10 of 19 votes, and both delegates and two alternate delegates
are all for Paul.
And
these results are from Clark County, which might as well be a suburb
of Los Angeles politically. Paul won the straw vote in Nye County,
and was very close to Romney in Esmeralda, Storey and Eureka counties.
Statewide, Romney received 51% of the vote, while 14% went to Paul
and 13% to McCain. If not for the population centers of Clark and
Washoe counties voting 70% for Romney, the vote would have been
much closer.
But the real
voting begins at the county and state conventions, and the anecdotal
evidence is that Ron Paul has much more delegate support than the
caucus results reflect.
January
21, 2008
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor
for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies.
Copyright
© 2008 Doug French
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French Archives
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