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To Run or Not to Run: Estimates of a Black Contender's Delegate Strength at the 1984 Democratic Convention
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 November 2022
Extract
The possibility of a black contender for the Democratic presidential nomination has raised many interesting questions. Has the Democratic Party and its past nominees taken the black vote for granted? Can the black community reach a consensus on a black issue agenda? Can it agree on a candidate? Could a black candidate actually hurt black interests by dividing the liberal vote and throwing the nomination to a more conservative Democratic contender? Could the strategy seriously backfire in other less obvious ways? Do the presumed benefits, both symbolic and real, outweigh the potential costs? Could the threat of a candidacy be just as beneficial to black interests as the candidacy itself? Are there other strategies during the nomination process that could enhance black political power even more?
Although the debate has covered a wide range of questions, one crucial question has been ignored: how many delegates could a black presidential contender conceivably win in 1984? While few experts believe that a black contender could win a majority of delegates, many argue that, if the contest is close between two other contenders, blacks could be “kingmakers,” crowning the nominee in exchange for major policy concessions, patronage appointments, and, conceivably, the vice-presidency. If the nomination is not close, then a group of black delegates, at a minimum, would increase substantially black influence on important rules and platform decisions. Hopes based on these or any other convention scenario the mind can devise, however, depend on how well a black contender fares in the race for delegates. The larger his delegation, the more power he can potentially wield at the convention. Conversely, the smaller his delegation, the less power he will have.
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- Copyright © The American Political Science Association 1983
Footnotes
This paper is a revised version of a paper delivered at a symposium on the prospects and desirability of a black contender for the Democratic nomination sponsored by the Joint Center for Policy Studies, Washington, D.C., in May, 1983. The original version used 1978 congressional district data (pre-apportionment) and focused on heavily black districts only. This version uses recently published post-apportionment data and includes all 435 congressional districts in the analysis.