Wednesday, April 10, 2013

The Incumbent Protection Act of 2010


It's hard not to revel in Schadenfreude when a politician whose policies you don't much like gets hoisted on his own petard. Such was the struggle against sinful glee we all had when Dr. Kieschnick got the majority of his incumbent protecting restructuring plan through the Synod only to be summarily defeated by Fr. Harrison. The sad spectacle of the president emeritus trying for a Nixonian comeback a few weeks ago was, well, sad.

The nominees for Synod President 2013 are out, and as many have been speculating, under the new three-man race rules, only one challenger is allowed to rise to the top. No more dark horses, possible voting bloc splits, etc. It's all nice and clean: the incumbent, the incumbent's 1st VP, and one challenger pushed by the opposition. Yet under the Incumbent Protection Act of 2010, the challenger is even more hampered than under the old system. In years past the challenger had around 1200 delegates to contact – a group of people with no previous existence. He and the incumbent would be reaching out to this group in the same way – mailings, and in these latter days, videos, emails, etc.

But now things have changed. There are ten times the delegates and the incumbent gets face time with them at district conventions for the year preceding the election. The challenger will never get to give a speech to all the delegates of any one district, let alone the dozens of such speeches the incumbent has given. How can this gap ever be closed?  Amazing things can be done with technology these days, but nothing beats pressing the flesh in politics, ecclesiastical or otherwise. The cost of direct mailing has increased by an order of magnitude.

DayStar did the smart thing, the only thing, under this new system: they suggested that folks of their persuasion nominate a DP from a big and diverse district who stands roughly in the middle of the road that is Missouri. He is probably not DayStar’s ideal candidate, but what can you do? The idea is that in our 53-47 Synod you only need to flip a small number of votes. The floor for each side's support is 47ish percent. How to flip those few other needed votes your way? On the issues? That's tricky. How do you know - especially in the new voting system - what the issues really are? We have ten times the electors now. Do you know what they think? Do you know how many of them will vote? Uncharted waters.

So you pick a DP from a big district and hope that some of the non-theological delegates from this big district who might have gravitated toward the incumbent will instead vote for the hometown kid. It might just be enough....

Will it work? And what will Dr. Maier's strategy be? Well, that assumes that he really wants to be a candidate. He may well just be doing his Synodical duty and letting his name stand to fill out the three spots. He may not want to lift a finger in any sort of campaign. If he does, it’s hard to imagine that he would follow Dr. K's lead and try to make hay out of Newtown.  Why not play it safe with standard MO boilerplate and maybe win it by running up the score in Michigan? But again, he may do nothing more than answer the official questions asked of him for the Synodical publications. DayStar will say what they want to say and spend what they want to spend without him, be assured. (And will JesusFirst reappear?)

Our prediction: President Harrison wins handily and we all see the proof that the Incumbent Protection Act of 2010 was very, very well designed by Team Kieschnick.

The Editors

6 comments:

  1. Yup. And, this will come back around and bite us too. TW

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  2. Good thoughts. One minor correction- it was Daystar pushing Maier, not JesusFirst. JF has essentially disappeared since the 2010 convention. That's not to say that some of the folks who supported JF in the past were not also those nominating Maier, but it was not JF per se.

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  3. Of course, this all convincingly establishes that a defining difference between the Lutherans and the decision-enthralled Arminian rabble, is that those of the former community wear a bracelet emblazoned with "What Would Rove Do?"

    This is very wearying. Come, Lord Jesus!
    But if we're entertaining You (Ps 2:2,4), well, I suppose there's no need to rush.

    Your (unworthy) servant,
    Herr Doktor

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  4. >>DayStar will say what they want to say and spend what they want to spend without him, be assured. (And will JesusFirst reappear?)

    It seems rather late in the process for either group to do much lobbying with regard to the election for president since under the new schedule the vote is only about two months away. And I'm not sure that a mailing list of those 8,200 pastors and laity who will be voting has even been released, like in past years with the 1,200 some delegates to the convention. I know I'm a voting delegate in both instances and have received nothing except official communications. I've been either a voting or advisory delegate three times before and by this time in years past I already had a pretty good size pile!

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    Replies
    1. I just don't think that there is much of an organized opposition to President Harrison. If there were, it's just 35 phone calls that are required to get the delegates from each district. I, too, am waiting for the delegate mail to start piling up. . .

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