Also, Dan Balz has a story up on Washington Post's page dealing with the 2012 nomination process tinkering that will likely appear in tomorrow's Post (Note the use of the word yesterday in reference to the meeting taking place today.). It is an interesting read. You can check it out here. Importantly, he notes that Elaine Kamarck, in her presentation on superdelegates, indicated that the time was right for their (the superdelegates) elimination.
Now, some graphics on delegate allocation from the meeting's agenda notes (These are from pdfs and that explains the graininess. However, they come to us courtesy of the Democratic National Committee, so let's grant credit where credit is due.)...
1976 Democratic Delegate Allocation
1980 Democratic Delegate Allocation
1984 Democratic Delegate Allocation
1988 Democratic Delegate Allocation
1992 Democratic Delegate Allocation
1996 Democratic Delegate Allocation
2000 Democratic Delegate Allocation
2004 Democratic Delegate Allocation
2008 Democratic Delegate Allocation
So, what do we see here? It isn't that unlike the maps I have in the left sidebar. But instead of being couched in terms of how early the contests are (and those changes over time), these graphs show how a process that had a relatively even distribution of delegates throughout the window period in 1976 shifted to what we witnessed in 2008. Mainly, we see that 60% of the delegates were allocated in the first week of February with no other week breaking the 15% barrier. Of course, those numbers would have been even more lopsided in 2008 if Florida and Michigan had been included in the data. Those states would have pushed the delegates having been allocated by February 6 (the day after Super Tuesday) to over two-thirds and close three-quarters. That, folks, is the impact of frontloading in a nutshell.
For other posts related to the Democratic Change Commission, click here. And here's the progress thus far on the GOP side.
Hat tip to Matt at DemConWatch for the tip on Leone's coverage.
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2 comments:
Interesting. It will be interesting to see what the 2012 diagram will look like.
Both parties seem committed to shifting things back a month, so my best guess is that 2012 will resemble that 2000 graphic (with a higher March peak and slightly lower April/May/June spikes).
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