Choose President with Rock, Paper, Scissors
Monday, January 7, 2008
Dear Friends,
I’ve heard lots
of entertaining stories from this year’s
Iowa Caucuses, but none beat the
following.
In my caucus, a
handful of Kucinich supporters were not
viable. I laid out
my case why John
Edwards should be their second choice. A
young gal explained her rationale for
Obama.
After 20 minutes of haggling, a
flustered Kucinichite threw up her hands
and said their group would caucus for whichever
candidate’s representative won
a game of Rock, Paper, Scissors.
So, like two
gladiators, Obama’s champion and I strode
forward to battle, best out of three.
I’d done a lot to prepare for this
year’s caucus, but never imagined I’d
have to hone my Rock, Paper, Scissors
skills.
The alacrity of youth prevailed.
I lost, but our Edwards group remained
viable, and the delegates were
split evenly among Clinton, Obama and
Edwards.
Quirky stories
like this are the fun stuff caucus folklore
is made of. But the
important message
from this year’s event is the unprecedented
turnout: a record
239,000 Democrats, excited about the
prospects for substantive, long-overdue
change.
And the two candidates most perceived as
advocates for change – John
Edwards and Barack Obama – won 68% of the
delegates.
Both in
Iowa
and nationally, the status quo is in
trouble.
And it’s about time. Americans are
fed-up with lobbyists and corporations running
the show. They’re
tired of watching the elite get richer
while the rest of us struggle. They’re
dismayed at the growing ranks of the poor and
uninsured, and the lack of attention
to a host of looming environmental
disasters.
Like never
before, they’re pessimistic about the
future.
Yet, like never
before, they’re hopeful and
energized.
I’m energized,
too. I’ve
preached a progressive-populist message of
reform since my first campaign for
the Iowa Statehouse in 1992. For a long
time, it was a lonely place to be, as state and
national Democratic candidates
blabbed party-line pablum that was generic,
vacuous and as inspiring as
yesterday’s oatmeal.
But that’s
changing, and changing fast. Our challenge is
twofold. First, we
have to sort out the candidates who
actually mean “change” from those who are just
mouthing what pollsters tell
them the public wants to hear. Second,
regardless of which candidate we supported in
the Caucuses, we reformers have
to band together.
United, we will
be unstoppable!
Ed Fallon