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Obama Team Seeks Changes in Primaries
Plan Reduces Role of Superdelegates
By Dan Balz
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, August 21, 2008; Page A03
Sen. Barack Obama's presidential campaign will call next week for the creation of a commission to revise the rules for selecting a presidential nominee in 2012, with a goal of reducing the power of superdelegates, whose role became a major point of contention during the long battle for the Democratic nomination between Obama and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.
The commission also will be urged to redraw the nominating calendar for 2012 to avoid starting the primaries and caucuses so early, and also to look specifically at ensuring more uniform rules and standards for those caucuses.
I actually think this is a great idea, but I'm old enough to know we've rewritten the rules before. 35 members is a big committee, I hope the DNC chooses well.
The other significant change is the call to redraw the primary and caucus calendar. The 2008 calendar received significant criticism both for the early starting dates for the Iowa caucuses and New Hampshire primary and also because so many states were crowded into the first month of what turned out to be a five-month battle.
Under the system envisioned by the Obama and Clinton campaigns, most contests could not be held before March, except for those in a handful of states authorized to go earlier -- presumably in February rather than January.
No comment on that by me, yet. Perhaps you have one.