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- NATION, Page 31American NotesPOLITICSChanging the Rules -- Again
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- Expediency is often the father of contention. In a hurried
- effort to placate Jesse Jackson at last summer's Democratic
- Convention, Michael Dukakis and his forces ratified significant
- changes in the party's complex rules governing presidential
- nominating procedures. One alteration would drastically cut the
- number of superdelegates, party leaders who automatically become
- unpledged delegates. Another requires that all primaries and
- caucuses award delegates on the basis of proportional
- representation, as opposed to giving extra delegates to the
- winner in some state contests.
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- Democratic honchos fear that the new rules will make it even
- more difficult for a candidate to wrap up the nomination before
- convention time and give Jackson a definite leg up in the 1992
- race. Last week two white party strategists, Thomas Donilon and
- Robert Beckel, circulated a paper that argues for a return to
- the previous rules. In a thinly veiled reference to Jackson, the
- report says the new system "rewards those candidates who have
- goals other than the nomination." D.N.C. chief Ron Brown has
- said he does not want to "reopen that can of worms," but by
- supporting the new rules he risks appearing to be a tool for
- Jackson. One possible solution: keep the new procedures but
- move major primaries, like California's, to earlier dates to
- narrow the field of competitors by March.
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