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- <text id=92TT0392>
- <title>
- Feb. 24, 1992: Will Someone Else Leap In?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Feb. 24, 1992 Holy Alliance
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 22
- Will Someone Else Leap In?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Instead of shrinking the Democratic field, the New Hampshire
- vote may expand it by tempting some newcomers to enter the race
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church--Reported by Laurence I. Barrett and Walter
- Shapiro/Manchester
- </p>
- <p> And so the big Democratic winner in the New Hampshire
- primary, the man who will use his victory there to roll his way
- to the nomination in July, turns out to be...er...uh...nobody. Or at least not any of the five principal
- candidates who were on the ballot. It could possibly be someone
- who still is not officially in the race but who may yet try to
- pull off a feat unthinkable even four years ago and just barely
- imaginable now: plunging into the contest in its late stages and
- emerging with the nomination.
- </p>
- <p> This scenario could be flawed. If there is one thing that
- the quadrennial slogging through New Hampshire has taught
- Americans, it is never to take anything for granted until the
- last votes there are counted. And the past few times around the
- track, the true shape of the race--who was the real front
- runner, who the principal challenger, who the also-rans--has
- not been visible until Super Tuesday in early March, or even
- some of the big industrial-state primaries in April.
- </p>
- <p> It is increasingly difficult, however, to visualize any of
- the starting five lifting his arms in the traditional V before
- an adoring convention come July--let alone graciously
- accepting George Bush's concession on Election Night. Bill
- Clinton for a time looked like a deflating balloon, the air
- hissing out of his candidacy through a new pinhole labeled Draft
- Avoidance, as well as the previous puncture made by Gennifer
- Flowers. He has enough money and organizational support,
- especially in his native South, to remain a force at least
- through Super Tuesday on March 10. But even if he could start
- a comeback, he would not soon--if ever--regain the aura of
- inevitability he enjoyed in January.
- </p>
- <p> Paul Tsongas had put on an amazing sprint to take the lead
- in New Hampshire polls. But he still seemed a regional New
- England candidate, and the more he is taken seriously, the
- harder questions about his health and stamina (he has recovered
- from lymphoma) will become. Bob Kerrey and Tom Harkin by all
- appearances had failed to strike any sparks among the voters,
- and Jerry Brown still looked to be in a private orbit somewhere.
- </p>
- <p> But the Democrats eventually have to nominate somebody. So
- the approach of actual voting paradoxically intensified the
- vulture watch--the speculation among party pros that another
- candidate, or possibly even several, could try a late swoopdown
- on the prize. California Democratic chairman Phil Angelides puts
- on the record a sentiment many others voice privately: "If one
- of these [present five] candidates proves big enough and
- strong enough, he will be the nominee. But if they cannot
- successfully make the case, then the party will look more
- broadly."
- </p>
- <p> Friends of House majority leader Richard Gephardt have
- already sounded out potential contributors. Talk is that the
- Missourian might enter the race as early as Thursday or Friday
- of this week, putting into effect a fairly detailed contingency
- plan he has developed to take advantage of a serious stumble by
- Clinton.
- </p>
- <p> New York Governor Mario Cuomo, continuing his Hamlet act
- well past what had been thought to be the last scene, had done
- nothing to discourage either a New Hampshire write-in campaign
- or efforts to start a national draft movement. Then there is
- serious talk about Texas Senator Lloyd Bentsen, the 1988
- vice-presidential nominee--who has passed word that he would
- accept a draft--and Tennessee Senator Al Gore, like Gephardt
- a 1988 also-ran, plus more wistful speculation about Senators
- Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia and Bill Bradley of New Jersey
- and Senate Democratic leader George Mitchell--almost
- everybody, it sometimes seems, who has ever said a regretful no.
- </p>
- <p> If any vulture decides to fly, he had better start fast.
- By the time New Hampshire's votes are counted Tuesday night,
- filing deadlines will have passed for primaries in 28 states
- that will elect about half of all the 4,287 pledged convention
- delegates. If Cuomo decided right now to jump into the race
- after all, he could no longer get on the ballot in his own
- state; the filing deadline for New York's April 7 primary passed
- last week. If he, Gephardt or any other potential candidate
- tarries even past Thursday, he would also be shut out of the
- important May 5 primary in Ohio. Even if a new candidate were
- to file 30 seconds after the polls close in New Hampshire, he
- would have to win almost every last delegate from the states
- where he could still run to gain an outright majority. As a
- practical matter, he would have to collect large blocs of
- uncommitted delegates and those pledged to one of the five
- present candidates.
- </p>
- <p> But victory for a latecomer cannot be called flatly
- impossible. Two changes in delegate-selection rules since 1988
- make it at least thinkable. The Democrats have got rid of the
- "bonus" rules under which, for instance, Michael Dukakis in 1988
- won 66% of Florida's delegates with only 41% of the state's
- primary votes. All primaries this year will be conducted under
- a system of rough proportional representation. That decreases
- the chances that any candidate can lock up a majority of
- delegates early.
- </p>
- <p> Also, there will be more delegates than ever selected not
- in primaries or caucuses but by virtue of their positions as
- elected officials or party bigwigs. These so-called
- superdelegates will cast 770 votes at the convention: 18% of the
- total and 37% of the majority needed to nominate. Officially,
- all must be uncommitted; they may declare a preference but can
- change it at any time.
- </p>
- <p> Thus it is possible to write a basic, though speculative,
- script: the vote in the early primaries is distributed so widely
- that no candidate is in sight of a majority. A late entrant
- sweeps the last batch of primaries, notably the final ones on
- June 2 in California, New Jersey, Alabama, New Mexico and
- Montana, the closest approach to a nationwide one-day sampling
- that the season offers. The superdelegates flock to his banner.
- Finally, one of the early candidates who obviously is not going
- to make it--or who has already dropped out--swings a deal.
- In return, perhaps, for the vice presidential nomination, he
- urges delegates still pledged to him to vote for the late
- starter. There already are rumors of just such a budding deal
- between Cuomo and Kerrey.
- </p>
- <p> There are some variations on this scenario. One calls for
- kick starting a late entry by jumping into caucus states, which
- have no filing deadlines. Thus Gephardt, if he goes, could
- demonstrate early foot by scoring in the March 3 caucuses in
- Washington State, where he would have the powerful support of
- House Speaker Thomas Foley, and then bagging most of the 77
- delegates to be chosen a week later in Missouri. The party
- faithful now favor Clinton, but if he seems to be limping badly
- by March 10, they could switch to native son Gephardt. Some of
- Gephardt's House colleagues who are likely to be superdelegates
- have told him they too endorse him in March, creating an
- impression of rapidly gathering momentum.
- </p>
- <p> There are also stratagems for a late starter to use in
- picking up delegates from states where he is not on the ballot.
- One is to win over delegates who are officially running as
- uncommitted. Cuomo's admirers have already entered a technically
- uncommitted but actually pro-Cuomo slate in the Illinois primary
- March 17. The most far-out scenario is a postprimary draft; it
- seems so reminiscent of the boss-ridden days as to be almost
- unimaginable.
- </p>
- <p> The other scenarios face obstacles that seem only
- marginally more surmountable. Most political consultants, media
- advisers, pollsters and other experts qualified to help craft
- a winning campaign have already signed up with one of the
- present candidates. A late starter consequently would be
- hard-pressed to throw together an effective organization. That
- goes double for fund raising, which has become critical in an
- era when the winning candidate is often the one who can afford
- to buy the most TV time. Proportional representation cuts two
- ways: it could keep a late starter from winning the lion's share
- of the delegates in California, New Jersey and other states,
- even though he might well have to do so to prevail. Most
- important, perhaps, late starters would face the insistent
- question: If the party needs you because only you can beat
- George Bush, why didn't you jump in at the start? The veiled--or unveiled--implication would be that the answer is political
- cowardice.
- </p>
- <p> Much of the discussion of vulture scenarios is being
- prompted by sheer panic among officeholders who fear that a weak
- presidential candidate will drag down the whole ticket. Like
- opening-night stage fright, that panic could dissipate as voting
- begins and, perhaps, one of the present candidates proves
- stronger than anyone expected.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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