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Trouble for Bennett

Utah Republicans held their caucus tonight. If the turnout at other precincts was anything like the one I attended, then Republican Senator Bob Bennett has cause to worry - but that depends on whether Bennett's opposition is better organized than the ones who showed up at my precinct. Mick fills you in on the details of Bennett's problems here.

At my precinct, we had nearly four times as many people show up than in 2008 - and that was a presidental election year. The extra folks showed up to vote against Bob Bennett - or vote for delegates that will vote against Bob Bennett. They were not organized, however, and ironically they managed to dilute their votes so that the two delegates we did elect will be Bennett supporters. This happened because our precinct chose to elect the two nominees that came in first and second in vote count out of a slate of nominees voted on simultaneously. About eight candidates were nominated - only two were supporters of Bob Bennett. If you supported Bob Bennett (I did for the same reasons Mick noted), you only had two choices. The opposition had six choices and thus they managed to get Bob Bennett two delegates.

Bennett opponents could have easily insisted on majority rule but they didn't. Thus these anti-Bennett folks became a case study for Mick's point about operating on anger:

...there are plenty of places on the Internet, cable television and radio that you can go to hear people rant and rave about this. I don't want to--I want to win. Winning takes a clear strategy, extensive planning and a disciplined execution.

At this precinct, none of the anti-Bennett nominees for delegate knew anything about the other candidates running against Bennett. Not one could name an alternative candidate who they would vote for instead of Bennett. With the exception of Merrill Cook, who doesn't have a snowball's chance in Hades of being taken seriously again, all of the other declared candidates are political novices. That shouldn't necessarily be a disqualifier but it should give one pause considering how the novices at my precinct managed to elect delegates opposed to their view.

Bob Bennett got lucky in my precinct but the numbers were against him. If his oppostion in other precincts was not as disarrayed, he may be sitting out the primary.

UPDATE:
More bad news for Bennett from Dave Kirkham:

My Tea Party buddies texted me all night from their own precincts as Bennett supporters fell. EVERYWHERE, Bennett was toxic. In our straw poll, Bennett came in 3rd. Maybe there is hope after all.

I attended the Tea Party rally Kirkham organized last April at the Salt Lake Federal Building. Bennett was loudly boo'ed then - almost a year ago. Something to consider for those politicians who think that dissatisfaction was a one time flash in the pan.

Comments (3)

AC Chickadee:

I wonder if people will still be upset eight months from now? I'm becoming disheartened. Obama spelled it out during his campaign. What the hell did people hear? Were they that enthralled by his voice that they didn't hear him say that he wants to "spread the wealth" and "transform our country"? How did they rationlize the radicals he ran around with or listened to in church? I'm no Sharpton fan but he's right: the people in this country voted for socialism when they voted for Obama.

Dave:

Instead of disheartenment, I see a lot of reason for optimism. A year ago, after the "Stimulus" bill was rammed into law I too was disheartened thinking "Is this really where Americans want to go?" When I heard rumblings about a tea party protest I decided to attend just to give voice that at least I disagreed with the direction of congress. The night before the SLC tea party it was raining - that turned into sleet the next morning. I honestly thought we would be lucky if 200 people showed up. Over 2000 did. This was repeated all over the U.S. It let people like me know I wasn't the only one who felt this way.

Yes, healthcare finally passed - but it took eight months longer than the proponents anticipated - this was directly due to popular resentment. During that process the Democrats were exposed as willing to use illegitimate means to enable their plans (this demonstrates real weakness by the way). People got to see what Obamacare would really do to them - a majority does not think it should have been passed. The seeds are sown for its overturn - though I'm not saying this will be easy.

Anyway some things for you to think optimistically:
- Scott Brown replaces Kennedy. Overturning Obamacare is do-able
- ACORN finally exposed and discredited. Democrat election cheating, this cycle will be hampered.
- Millions of angry center-right to conservative voters have been emboldened and are enterinng politics (yours truly was elected a county delegate)
- People are becoming informed outside of the legacy media.

Complacency is still a danger, but there is lots of room for optimism

AC Chickadee:

Well, maybe there's a light at the end of the tunnel and it isn't a locomotive. Congrats on becoming a county delegate. The Tea Partiers, hopefully, will be a factor in November. The media must be afraid of them because they're doing everything they can to malign them.

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