New Hampshire, new hope, sir?
I have never before in my 4+ decades of life been this engrossed in — and nervewracked by — political caucuses and primaries like today’s in New Hampshire. I have never before given significant sums of money to any political candidate (mine’s going to Dr. Dean). I have never before felt that the soul of our country is at stake.
This, my friends, is turning-point time, a time you’ll remember to your grandkids.
Let discernment abound. Let deliverance begin. Yeeeeeeaaarrrrrgh!
2004-01-28 update: Final results, according to CNN —
Kerry, won 39 percent of the New Hampshire vote, compared to 26 percent for former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, 12 percent each for Retired Army Gen. Wesley Clark and Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina and 9 percent for Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut.
My #1 practical reason why declaring Kerry the nominee is premature:
Hardly any of my African American brothers and sisters — many of whom like to vote Democratic, as I do — have had a say in choosing the Democratic nominee. (Only two states have participated so far, and neither has many “Black or African American persons” according to the U.S. Census Bureau (2000): Iowa, 2.1% and New Hampshire, 0.7%.)
My #1 personal reason why declaring Kerry the nominee is premature:
I still want a candidate I can vote for with knowledge and enthusiasm (for Dean), not one for whom my vote — while still a certainty — is really a vote against someone else (for Kerry against Bush).
The biggest and best news from New Hampshire? — The record turnout (“estimated at about 200,000, compared to the previous high of 168,000 in 1992”). This level of voter participation is a good sign, an early data point in what I hope becomes a trend: the more we citizens participate, the more vital and representative is our democracy, no matter which candidate we elect to the White House.