Senator Evan Bayh Screwed Indiana Democrats, Sidestepped Democracy

I wouldn't be surprised if Bayh coordinated the exact day he made his announcement so it was impossible for free agents, for people who were not "the chosen" to get on the primary ballot.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

Crossposted from OpEdNEws.com, a technorati top 100 overall blog.

Evan Bayh's last minute decision not to run for the senate again was intentional and appeared to be aimed at side-stepping democracy.

Indiana's citizens were screwed by Bayh. By waiting until the last minute, he made impossible for a real candidate to decide to run, get petitions signed and get on the ballot. That handed the decision over to state Democratic party leaders, who will undoubtedly be instructed who to appoint to run by DSCC leaders. I don't think this was an accident. It was planned -- a conspiracy to take the Democratic process away from Indiana Democrats.

Bayh image from his senate site, thanking
Constituents-- for what, taking it with a smile?

Sadly, it's not that big a deal. In most states, a few powerful Democrats decide, with input and influence from DSCC leaders, who will be the chosen and endorsed candidate.

This is bad for Democracy, bad for the Democratic party and bad for America. In the senate, Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), Hillary Clinton and Harry Reid (D-Nev.) had a major say in these decision in previous election cycles.

This time around, I'm sure Sen. Bob Menendez, (D-N.J.) head of the DSCC will play a major role. As head, the buck stops with him... and Obama, the party leader. They sure blew it in Massachusetts, with Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.). There's not much reason to have higher hopes in Indiana. But maybe they'll have learned. Menendez is a smart guy.

I wouldn't be surprised if Bayh coordinated the exact day he made his announcement so it was impossible for free agents, for people who were not "the chosen" to get on the primary ballot.

Shame on Bayh and the Democratic leaders he worked with to circumvent the voice and decision of the people of Indiana.

My guess is, based on the bad decisions the Democratic leadership has been making lately, they candidate they chose will not succeed. Primaries are good for candidates. They prepare them, toughen them, challenge them. Instead, the Democrats will have someone who has not been through the mill -- one more mistake among an infinity of errors.

There ought to be a way to prevent this kind of thing from happening. Primaries are for voting, not appointing.

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot