On January 15 2016 06:41 GreenHorizons wrote: If you're a Bernie Sanders supporter you need to know about this site: http://www.bernkit.com/ (most/all of the important apps and web pages)
feelthebern.org should be at the top of that, otherwise neat.
According to Politico Sanders got 58,9% of the votes and 38 delegates in Colorado. However Clinton just got 40,4% of the votes and also got 38 delegates in Colorado.
Can somebody please explain why both candidates have gotten the same number of delegates in Colorado?
On March 09 2016 00:46 The_Templar wrote: Didn't she get 28 delegates, not 38? Maybe that is also counting superdelegates?
It seems Politico is including unpledged delegates which as I understand it are what is referred to as super-delegates.
According to The Green Papers there are 13 unpledged delegates available in Colorado and according to the NY Daily News article almost all of those unpledged delegates pick Clinton.
Literally, Clinton has received 95.3% of the superdelegates and these individual voters have nothing to do with the actual will of the people in their states.
The super-delegates, which again are just individual people chosen by established party leaders, currently represent 41.8 of the total delegates the candidates have received. And again, 95.3% of these 473 people have chosen Clinton as their candidate.
So, even though 7 million have voted, 473 people that nearly none of us know, get to account for 41.8% of the delegates.
So what happens if like Bernie gets 51% of the delegates (not including super delagates) ? Will the super delegates give the middle finger to the will of the people or will they switch over?
On March 09 2016 13:20 Petrosidius wrote: Wow I'm from Michigan and I'm really surprised. Even in a liberal Ann Arbor nobody thought this was possible.
On March 09 2016 09:38 TheFish7 wrote: So what happens if like Bernie gets 51% of the delegates (not including super delagates) ? Will the super delegates give the middle finger to the will of the people or will they switch over?
Considering what the Sanders campaign is all about it is unlikely that the unpledged-super-delegates would dare to go against the will of the people if Sanders were to overtake Clinton in pledged-delegates.