<x-flowed>11 states had to change their law to accommodate the September New York City
convention, right?
From: "Cooper, James" <jpcooper3@yahoo.com>
To: jeff_hauser95@post.harvard.edu, election-law
<election-law@majordomo.lls.edu>
Subject: Re: Convention Timing
Date: Tue, 25 May 2004 05:15:45 -0700 (PDT)
"historically... anomalous"?
The 2004 GOP Convention will be held a whopping 4 days later than the 1996
DNC Convention.
That aside, with the 2004 Democratic Convention being held later than any
other convention of the Party out of power since 1968, let's examine how
else the 2004 GOP Convention could have been "historically anomalous:"
1) The GOP could have held the first convention during the Olympics since
1952
2) The GOP could have held their convention a week after the Democratic
Convention --the closest 2 conventions since 1956.
3) The GOP could have held their convention before the Democratic
Convention --the first time the Party in power has done that since 1908.
On the other hand:
The GOP could have held a convention that was "historically discourteous"
by holding it August 2-5, four days after the Democratic candidate accepts
the nomination.
Or
The GOP could have held a convention that was "historically stupid" by
holding it August 9-12, with the President accepting the nomination the
night before the lighting of the Olympic torch in Athens.
Jeffrey MA Hauser <jmh248@nyu.edu> wrote:
(1) Of course Kerry can direct monies to the DNC; he has been doing that
(each candidate has fundraisers with both the campaign and party as
beneficiaries), and would have done that post-convention regardless of
timing. So, how is that a response to the timing problem?
(2) The bigger issue is that Kerry's non-advertising expenses for those
five weeks -- which will be quite considerable (HQ and field staff, travel
(including Veep), surrogates, polling/focus groups, literature, rent on
various HQs, electronics, insurance, phone banks, other voter ID efforts,
and any experiments with direct mail or robo-calling -- come from the
finite pool of financial monies. As a result, Kerry inevitably will be
well behind Bush financially on 9/2. This used to be a trade-off, as with
less divisive incumbents, most challengers were gasping for funds after the
primaries and couldn't wait to get the infusion, even if it left them with
less money after the incumbent's convention. But....
(3) The Kerry campaign's currently clunky communications team has failed
completely to get out the message that the Bush team has chosen a
convention date that is historically... anomalous. And you can cite the
Olympics all you like, but there were alternatives to hosting the
convention a week before 9/11 and 3 miles from Ground Zero in the Bluest
City in America. The Kerry team ought to be putting the GOP on the
defensive here, rather than falling victim to a poorly constructed statute.
(4) Moveon.org's Statute of Liberty ad... does go to show how 527s are not
a perfect substitute for coordination, and the historically greater
unruliness of Dems makes their implicit coordination less effective than
that between the GOP and the "501(c)(??)s."
> ATTACHMENT part 2 message/rfc822
Date: Mon, 24 May 2004 07:49:26 -0700
From: Rick Hasen
Subject: news of the day 5/24/04
To: election-law
"Gov. Converts Celebrity into Cash; Schwarzenegger's fund-raisers prove a
windfall for GOP"
The San Francisco Chronicle offers this report.
FBI Probe of Redistricting continues in Mass.
See here.
"Revisiting Redistricting"
William Rasberry offers this Washington Post column.
"Lawyers Fill Candidate's Coffers"
Legal Times offers this report. Thanks to Steven Sholk for the pointer.
More on Potential Kerry Nomination Delay
The Boston Globe offers this report. The Kerry campaign floated this trial
balloon on Friday afternoon. Given how the reaction is decidedly mixed
(does it make Kerry look like someone who is out to bend the rules even if
there is no "controlling legal authority" on the question? will it affect
network coverage of what is in essence a four-day-long infomercial for the
Democratic Party?), would it not be in Kerry's interest to instead borrow
from the George Bush playbook for "super rangers?" Kerry need not borrow
Bush's bundling strategy, but can simply allow the Democratic Party to push
donors (especially those donors with somewhat larger incomes) to give to
the Democratic Party (in larger amounts than they may give to Kerry
directly by the way). Though Kerry would not have the same direct control
over the money for the five week period after his primary season ends but
Bush's does, the Democrats can (like the unconnected 527s) follow Kerry's
lead in advertising. Surely the D!
emocrats
can figure out how to spend their money in ways that help Kerry.
"Bipartisan Bill Aims to Restructure the FEC"
The Washington Times offers this report.
Mutch on Corporations
At the 2003 American Political Science Association annual meeting, Robert
Mutch presented a very interesting paper, Corporations and Elections: A
Century of Debate. The paper for some reason is no longer accessible on
APSA's website, so with Bob's permission I am posting a copy here.
"Wall St. Firms Funnel Millions to Bush"
The Washington Post offers this report.
"U.S. Churches Cautious on Politics to Keep Tax Exemptions"
NPR offers this audio report.
"Reassurance for Florida Voters Made Wary by Chaos of 2000"
The New York Times offers this report.
"Demand Grows to Require Paper Trails for Electronic Votes"The New York
Times offers this report. Thanks to David Ettinger for the pointer.
-- Rick HasenProfessor of Law and William M. Rains FellowLoyola Law
School919 South Albany StreetLos Angeles, CA
90015-1211(213)736-1466(213)380-3769 -
faxrick.hasen@lls.eduhttp://www.lls.edu/academics/faculty/hasen.htmlhttp://electionlawblog.org
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