geoviki: (viki)
geoviki ([personal profile] geoviki) wrote2008-02-05 08:58 pm

Democracy in action

Can I just tell you how unique-and-speshul-snowflaky the Colorado caucus system is?

Colorado gets nostalgic for holding caucuses from time to time, and this was one of the times. So instead of going to a nice voting booth sometime during the day or evening and flipping a switch, we have to assemble as a group of like-minded neighbors and do it all together, publicly. In our precinct, 64 people showed up (a record, but I don't know how many are in the precinct all told), and we were crowded into a public school library. Then we got read a bunch of rules, had a straw man vote, and a final vote for our candidate of choice. Next, a subset of each candidate's supporters - by relative percentage - gets elected to the county level, where they'll do the same thing, then on to the state. We also were presented with three positions to support or not - one was whether or not to encourage impeachment of GWB and Cheney. That one actually caused a lot of debate but was voted down (not that we didn't have fantasies of it happening for a moment or two, but the pragmatists among the group held sway).

It took us about 2 hours start to finish, including trying to find a parking spot in the mass of humanity. There were other precincts having caucuses there, as well as the other party's precincts.

If our area is any indication, a lot of people came to their local caucuses tonight, most of them for the first time ever. The election itself is going to be a madhouse at this rate, but luckily Colorado has unlimited absentee ballots, so I'll vote at my dining room table, thank you very much. (We need extra time because we always have a fuckton of ballot initiatives and constitutional amendments to decide, too).

So my take: interesting. I'd rather flip the switch in private, though.

[identity profile] geoviki.livejournal.com 2008-02-07 02:55 am (UTC)(link)
Everyone is divvied up into precincts - even you, I suspect (check your registration card). We couldn't quite work out the total precinct size - maybe 200 registered Dems? You need to be registered within a party (i.e., not independent) in order to vote in a caucus. So you check out ahead of time where you're supposed to go. And everyone supporting any Democrat shows up at the Democratic precinct caucus, and all the voting is done by raising your hand in front of all your neighbors as they announce the candidate. The whole notion of a secret ballot is out the window - in fact, the rules state that there cannot be any voting done in secret.