General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWhy are the roll call votes out of whack with the primary results?
For example, I don't think Biden was even viable in Iowa, but he got more votes tonight. Is that due to superdelegates (I thought they can't vote on the first ballot), did Bernie release his delegates and give them the choice the way Hillary did in 2008, or were the delegates for the other candidates all allocated to Biden?
Note: this is just a question, not sour grapes. I was for Warren in the primaries and she wasn't even nominated tonight. I'm just a junkie for this stuff.
brooklynite
(94,727 posts)Super delegates
Delegates release by candidates (Buttigieg, Warren, Bloomberg, Klobuchar) who withdrew.
democrattotheend
(11,607 posts)I thought that was a rule change this year, and it seems like the number of delegates per state is smaller than in the past. I assumed that was because the superdelegates weren't voting on the first ballot? Or did that change once Bernie dropped out?
I was kind of disappointed that the other candidates who won delegates chose not to be placed into nomination. It would have been fun to watch people cast votes for all of the fine candidates we had.
lapucelle
(18,319 posts)A candidate needed a minimum of 300 delegates to submit the paper work to have his/her name placed in nomination.
He was the only other candidate who had the requisite delegates, and he submitted the paper work.
democrattotheend
(11,607 posts)That explains why Warren, Buttigieg, Klobuchar and Bloomberg weren't nominated, I guess? Thanks for clarifying.
lapucelle
(18,319 posts)Stinky The Clown
(67,818 posts)As if that surprises anyone.
democrattotheend
(11,607 posts)I thought under the new rules delegates had to stick with the candidate they were pledged for on the first ballot.
Wounded Bear
(58,706 posts)some finagling of numbers always happens once they get all the votes in.
I've never heard it was a problem, just a shift of a few delegates here or there.
democrattotheend
(11,607 posts)He got the majority of delegates from states like New Hampshire where he wasn't even viable statewide. But it seems that was because delegates for the other candidates who chose not to be placed into nomination voted for him?
lapucelle
(18,319 posts)SharonClark
(10,014 posts)of the process. After that came the county, district, and state conventions, during which candidates dropped out and delegates realigned,