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Ward politics

April 9th, 2009 12:25 pm
A map of Philadelphia's Wards

A map of Philadelphia's Wards

When Obama came to Philly for the Pennsylvania primary he ruffled some feathers by declaring that he would not dole out street money to the local Democratic political machine.

In a venerable city like Philadelphia, street money is one of those lubricants that keeps the system flowing. It pays for transportation expenses, food, buttons, literature and people to get out the vote on election day.

Committee people are the biggest recipients of street money on election day, receiving between $50 and $400 for working 14 hours getting people to the polls. These political workers are elected officials from Philadelphia’s smallest political unit: the division. Philly has over 1,600 divisions, each containing between 100 and 1,200 registered voters. Each division elects two four committee people, one two Democrats and one two Republicans. (Edit: thanks to Adam Lang for the correction)

In turn, these committee people elect the ward leaders who hand out the cash.

The Los Angeles Times reports that Rep. Bob Brady, also the head of Philadelphia’s Democratic Party, ripped a $50 bill in half and gave it to two workers. Whoever brought in the most votes would receive both halves.

There are 66 wards in Philadelphia, containing approximately 30,000 people and between 10 and 50 divisions. They are led by ward leaders elected by the committee people. Each ward has a Democratic and a Republican leader. (Note: some wards are split up into two. i.e. 39a and 39b)

So why are ward leaders important?

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