4
0

Hillary failed to secure the nomination. Super dels will decide at convention


               
2016 Jun 8, 7:29am   16,751 views  64 comments

by Dan8267   follow (4)  

For all practical purposes, it's a tie. It's all up to the super delegates now. We won't know who they pick until July 25-28 when the Democratic convention is held and the super delegates finally vote.

From this point on, both candidates will have to make their case to the party leaders Given that Hillary could not defeat Bernie in the primaries despite the massive amounts of money, political connections, and universal backing of all major media outlets, what makes anyone confident that she can defeat Trump, who won his primaries in a landslide despite having gone against a dozen candidates to Hillary's two competitors?

Bernie Sanders still slaughters Trump in the general election according to every poll. Hillary Clinton does not. In fact, in some papers including the liberal Miami Herald state that Trump will unequivocally win the general election against Hillary. And when a liberal rag says this, you should take it seriously.

Donald Trump will win the 2016 presidential election.

Not "might” win. Not "could win under the following circumstances.” He's going to win as surely as the sun rises in the east, as certainly as high tide follows low, and as definitively as Steph Curry laid waste to the Oklahoma City Thunder's defense.

Here are five reasons why:

His rhetoric resonates. (Even as it appalls.)
Most Republicans are falling in line.
Gotcha journalism doesn't faze Trump.
Hillary follows his lead – badly.
Trump will crush Clinton in the debates.

A few months ago, Trump started referring to Clinton as "Crooked Hillary.” He's preparing the rhetorical battle space.

Also, Clinton is not a very good debater. People forget the way Barack Obama eviscerated her during the 2008 Democratic primaries. She does not do well in situations where she doesn't have complete control. It's why she prefers interviews to news conferences. Interviews are more predictable. Press conferences are free-for-alls.

We're a long way from the Lincoln-Douglas era, when people would sit and listen for hours to closely argued speeches. Trump is a master of the emotional appeal. He's shown he has no compunction about attacking Clinton and her husband on their moral and ethical lapses, even as he's fighting lawsuits accusing him of fraud and dodging questions about his past infidelities and current net worth.

In a contest between two shameless politicians, the one with the least shame wins. Get ready for President Trump.

A Trump-Sanders debate would go vastly different. Sanders appeals to independent and swing voters, people who want an intelligent president. Trump's tactics would backfire if he had to debate Sanders only increasing popular support for Bernie. Clinton's campaign so far has heavily played into Trump's tiny, tiny hands.

#politics #smallHandsSmallPenis #20MillionDollarPantSuit

Comments 1 - 12 of 64       Last »     Search these comments

1   Sharingmyintelligencewiththedumbasses   2016 Jun 8, 8:35am  

Take a double dose, until you get an appointment with a good proctologist.

2   HydroCabron   2016 Jun 8, 8:38am  

Agreed.

The ass-whoopings in California and New Jersey place Sanders in good position to sell his case to the superdelegates.

Having lost to Hillary at the ballot box, it's clear that Bernie deserves the nomination and is best qualified to face Trump in the general election.

3   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2016 Jun 8, 8:46am  

Dan8267 says

For all practical purposes, it's a tie.

You are delusional. In now way is 2184 to 1804 a tie in an election. That's roughly 55% to 45%. She got roughly 57% of the popular vote in the primary. That's a pretty dam big lead. It would take a monumental move by super-delegates to override that lead. That would be incredible considering (1) Bernie is not even a Democrat (2) Bernie has been running against the Democratic establishment (3) Bernie used to complain that the super-delegates were going to override his popular vote victory (4) Hillary has raised tons of money for the Democratic party and has courted the support of the super-delegates for ages.

4   HEY YOU   2016 Jun 8, 9:00am  

Make sure everyone votes for Hillary. I sure she will show us the WMDs.

A new Democratic party motto? Fuck you voters! Our super delegates will decide who the nominee will be.

George Carlin:
"Forget the politicians. They are irrelevant. The politicians are put there to give you the idea that you have freedom of choice. You don't. You have no choice! You have OWNERS! They OWN YOU. They own everything. They own all the important land. They own and control the corporations. They’ve long since bought, and paid for the Senate, the Congress, the state houses, the city halls, they got the judges in their back pockets and they own all the big media companies, so they control just about all of the news and information you get to hear. They got you by the balls."

He forgot to end this with, You Stupid Fucks!

5   HydroCabron   2016 Jun 8, 9:03am  

YesYNot says

Dan8267 says

For all practical purposes, it's a tie.

You are delusional. In now way is 2184 to 1804 a tie in an election. That's roughly 55% to 45%.

You must step back and consider the quality of the votes Bernie received.

In an insightful earlier post, Dan explained that Bernie received more votes in less-blue states. Now these votes are much like three-point shots in the NBA, so each should count 50% more than regular votes, which probably came from blacks and Mexicans in bluer states, anyway.

After making these and other adjustments after the fact, it becomes clear that Bernie is the rightful nominee.

6   Dan8267   2016 Jun 8, 10:29am  

YesYNot says

In now way is 2184 to 1804 a tie in an election.

I take it you mean "in what way is 2184 to 1804 a tie". Clearly you do not understand the Democratic primary process, so I will explain.

The ONLY thing that matters regarding who gets nominated is whether or not a candidate gets to 2383 pledged delegates BEFORE the Democratic convention. 2184 is less than 2383. Therefore, neither candidate has won by definition and neither candidate can know whether or not he or she will get the nomination at the convention.

More importantly there are 619 superdelegates who will talk over strategy between now and the convention and debate how they should vote. Not every superdelegate will vote the same way, but they do persuade each other and vote strategically. Both 2184 + 619 > 2383 and 1804 + 619 > 2383 so either candidate can still win if enough superdelegates vote for him or her. So by definition, not reaching the pledged delegates threshold is an effective tie. It may not be an even tie, but it is a tie.

Again, you may think the system sucks -- and it does -- but that doesn't change how the system works. Under the system, both candidates are tied and the tie is supposed to be broken by the superdelegates. However, the superdelegate vote may be split so that neither candidate has enough delegates even after the superdelegates all vote. If this happens there are rounds of votings in which delegates get unbounded and can vote for anyone regardless of the popular vote. The precise way this happens depends on the rules set by the Democratic Party for their convention and the GOP for theirs. In short, if the superdelegates can't agree in enough numbers on one of the two candidates then pledged delegates become unpledged and can switch their votes. The rounds of voting ends when their is a clear victor.

It is a value judgement to say that Sanders or Hillary should not get the nomination. It is factually incorrect to say that either Sanders or Hillary cannot get the nomination at this point.

I hope this post clears things up because it seems that the vast majority of Americans have no clue as to how the primary process works or how the Democratic convention works.

HydroCabron says

In an insightful earlier post, Dan explained that Bernie received more votes in less-blue states.

One can make many valid criticisms of the primary process used by each party. They are both really, really stupid. In fact, everything we do in elections is really, really stupid, but I could write a whole thread on that subject matter.

The bottom line is that the SOLE, not primary, but SOLE purpose of superdelegates is to vote AGAINST the will of the narrow subset of voters who can and do vote in the primaries because they picked a candidate that is not likely to win the general election. Superdelegates exist solely for the purpose of overriding bad decision making caused by all the problems in the primary process such as not letting independent swing voters vote. Superdelegates were created to vote strategically when necessary. This election is the quintessential example of why the Democratic party leaders thought superdelegates were necessary.

Now I don't think that enough of the superdelegates will vote for Bernie to nominate him. I think that Hillary will be the nominee on July 28th, but unlike 99% of Americans I don't lie about knowing something just because I want that something to be true. I honestly do think that enough superdelegates will vote in their own personal interest in garnering favor from Hillary rather than voting for their party's interests and ensuring someone who will defeat Trump is elected. I'd like to be wrong tough.

In any case, I cannot calculate the probability of superdelegates voting for Sanders or Clinton, and neither can anyone else. Whoever says they can is either a liar or a fool or both. There is simply not enough publicly available information to make any accurate mathematical model of the superdelegate vote. This is a mathematical fact, not an opinion. If you disagree with it, you are simply wrong.

All one can say honestly is that if the superdelegates did the sole job they were created for, they would nominate Bernie because he stands a far, far better chance of defeating Trump than Clinton as every single poll from last year to today clearly shows. Furthermore, if Bernie supporters stay home, and many will if he's not the nominee, the Democrats will lose many critical House and Senate seats that are far more important than the White House. So nominating Clinton will greatly harm the Democrats even if she wins. Every GOP insider is praying to his fictitious god that Hillary is the nominee.

7   Heraclitusstudent   2016 Jun 8, 10:47am  

First woman presumptive nominee, and she's there because she did the right slob.
Ok she was persistent too.

8   zzyzzx   2016 Jun 8, 11:14am  

Congratulations to Bernie Sanders for getting the nomination:

9   FNWGMOBDVZXDNW   2016 Jun 8, 11:44am  

Dan8267 says

I take it you mean "in what way is 2184 to 1804 a tie".

I meant 'in no way,' but for some reason, I type now instead of no sometimes. You confuse the game not being over with a tie. It's now the 4th quarter with 50 seconds left, and Bernie is down by 2 touchdowns with one time out. Is it technically possible for him to win? Yes. Is it a tie game? In no fucking way is this a tie. Even if there was only one superdelegate who at this point got to decide the election, it wouldn't be a tie, b/c the superdelegate would have to override the will of the voters. They could do that of course, but it would tarnish the candidate. The same arguments were made about Cruz when he and Kasich were angling for a contested convention. Oh the cries of the establishment stealing the election were loud. It could have been done, but everybody knew it would tarnish the victor.
Back in reality, there are 619 superdelegates. They will not all vote as one block. Based on the numbers you gave, Hillary needs 199 of them and Bernie needs 579 of them. Do you really think that Bernie will get 94% of the super delegates? How many changed their mind to vote for Obama? How many would need to change their mind to vote for Bernie?

I see that 619 is not the number of superdelegates, although I just skimmed 3 articles, and they all listed a different number of superdelegates.

10   Dan8267   2016 Jun 8, 11:51am  

YesYNot says

You confuse the game not being over with a tie. It's now the 4th quarter with 50 seconds left, and Bernie is down by 2 touchdowns with one time out. Is it technically possible for him to win?

No, you clearly don't understand what I mean by an "effective tie". This really is an intelligence test. If you cannot understand this, then that's on you.

It means almost nothing that Hillary has more pledged delegates than Bernie because the superdelegates are under no obligation whatsoever to take that into account when deciding how they should vote. In fact, the sole purpose of their existence is to vote contrary to the pledged delegates. This is something you just don't seem to understand.

The only effect that having more pledged delegates has is that it requires a greater number of superdelegates to vote for Bernie for him to be nominated. But since superdelegates go into a smoke filled room and discuss voting strategy and how the general election will turn out under different scenarios, superdelegate votes are not independent of each other. They collude. They are suppose to collude. That's why they exist.

Failing to get enough pledged delegates before the convention is an effective tie because the superdelegates must break a stalemate. If you cannot understand this simple principle, you are not that smart.

By the way, absolutely nothing I said in this thread or others like it would be changed if I wanted Hillary to be president instead of Bernie. You cannot honestly make a similar claim.

11   Dan8267   2016 Jun 8, 11:57am  

YesYNot says

I see that 619 is not the number of superdelegates

Maybe. I was going off Google. See the picture in the original post. 571 + 48 = 619. Maybe Google is neglecting to report some of the superdelegates who haven't stated a preference in the past. If so, that makes it easier for Bernie to be nominated.

In any case there are enough superdelegates to have the nomination go either way. That is undeniable.

12   MisdemeanorRebel   2016 Jun 8, 12:21pm  

Dan8267 says

For all practical purposes, it's a tie. It's all up to the super delegates now. We won't know who they pick until July 25-28 when the Democratic convention is held and the super delegates finally vote.

Yup, Hillary is short of elected delegates. Superdelegates vote at the convention. They can still change their minds.

Comments 1 - 12 of 64       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   users   suggestions   gaiste