LiberalFighter
LiberalFighter's JournalVoter Registration Data (New York)
Democratic Outside NYC(Nov 2015) - (Apr 2016)
2,460,070 -- 2,510,740 -- Active (+50,670)
_ 206,604 -- _ 210,598 -- Inactive
2,666,674 -- 2,721,338 -- Total
Democratic Within NYC
(Nov 2015) - (Apr 2016)
2,821,070 -- 2,757,691 -- Active (-63,379)
_ 290,716 -- _ 313,468 -- Inactive
3,111,786 -- 3,071,159 -- Total
Democratic State Total
(Nov 2015) - (Apr 2016)
5,281,140 -- 5,268,431 -- Active (-12,709)
_ 497,320 -- _ 524,066 -- Inactive
5,778,460 -- 5,792,497 -- Total
Republican Outside NYC
(Nov 2015) - (Apr 2016)
2,116,867 -- 2,140,518 -- Active (+23,651)
_ 131,733 -- _ 131,117 -- Inactive
2,248,600 -- 2,271,635 -- Total
Republican Within NYC
(Nov 2015) - (Apr 2016)
424,400 -- 414,478 -- Active (-9,922)
_46,330 -- _45,575 -- Inactive
470,730 -- 460,053 -- Total
Republican State Total
(Nov 2015) - (Apr 2016)
2,541,267 -- 2,554,996 -- Active (+13,729)
_ 178,063 -- _ 176,692 -- Inactive
2,719,330 -- 2,731,688 -- Total
Bernie is wrong about super-delegates:
This article was posted in the General Discussion: Primaries forum but does not appear to have been in this group.
Bernie is wrong about super-delegates: Why his tortured Dem Primary arguments try to have it both ways
So, contrary to the conspiracy theory that Hillary and Debbie Wasserman-Schultz are rigging the primaries against Bernie by awarding Hillary with delegates she didnt earn, the rules for splitting delegates were approved well in advance of the primary season. In fact, there was plenty of time for Bernie Sanders and his advisers to familiarize themselves with the rules since the latest version was approved by the DNC back in August of 2014.
And regarding the anti-democratic thing, the superdelegates have never once overruled the candidate with a pledged delegate majority.
Sanders and his supporters claim that he is boosting turnout. (2/10/16)
Voter turnout challenges Sanders recipe for successThis isnt the entirety of Sanders pitch, but its a key pillar: the Vermont senator will boost turnout, which will propel him and Democratic candidates up and down the ballot to victory.
They argue Sanders has been boosting turnout yet there hasn't been any data proving their assertion. It seems they are just pulling it out of thin air. If his campaign would boost turnout it would show up in the primaries. And the numbers show that currently 2008 had a higher turnout than 2016 by over 6.2 million votes. Even if only Clinton and Obama are totaled for 2008 it is over 5 million more than in 2016.
What has happened is Hillary has received more votes in many of the 2016 contests then she did in 2008.
There are only 16 primaries and 4 caucuses left. 66% of the contests are over and time is running out. Where is the momentum? Why is Sanders' "resonating" message not boosting his campaign? Possibly because his message is not wide enough. They did not target a big enough slice of the pie.
Bernie Sanders Just Released His Tax Returns. (2014)
Tax Return Courtesy of Mother JonesItems that caught my eye and wonder if they are questionable.
He claimed exactly $8,000 for charity (amounts under $200) with an additional $350.
$ 4,900 -- Business Income
$56,377 -- Itemized Deductions
Paid Preparer -- Self-Prepared
$9,666 --- State & Local Income Taxes
$14,843 -- Real Estate Taxes
$22,946 -- Mortgage interest
Tax Preparation Fees -- 204
Hillary would have to receive no more than 43.5% of the remaining delegates to lose.
If this were applied for the remaining primaries, Hillary would need to receive only
New York: 107 out of 247
Connecticut: 24 out of 55
Delaware: 9 out of 21
Maryland: 41 out of 95
Pennsylvania: 82 out of 189
Rhode Island: 10 out of 24
Indiana: 36 out of 83
Guam: 3 out of 7
West Virginia: 13 out of 29
Kentucky: 24 out of 55
Oregon: 27 out of 61
Virgin Islands: 3 out of 7
California: 207 out of 475
Montana: 9 out of 21
New Jersey: 55 out of 126
New Mexico: 15 out of 34
North Dakota: 8 out of 18
South Dakota: 9 out of 20
Puerto Rico: 26 out of 60
DC: 9 out of 20
It’s Really Hard To Get Bernie Sanders 988 More Delegates
After a trio of landslide wins in Washington, Alaska and Hawaii on Saturday the best single day of his campaign Bernie Sanders narrowed his delegate deficit with Hillary Clinton. But he still has a lot of work to do. Sanders trails Clinton by 228 pledged delegates and will need 988 more a bit under 57 percent of those available to finish with the majority.
That alone wouldnt be enough to assure Sanders of the nomination because superdelegates could still swing things Hillary Clintons way in a close race, but put aside that not-so-small complication for now. The much bigger problem is that it isnt easy to see where Sanders gets those 988 delegates.
Its Really Hard To Get Bernie Sanders 988 More Delegates
Nate Silver shows what Bernie Sanders needs to get the nomination. This is just before the Wisconsin primary. Sanders was 2 delegates short of the target.
Nate's closing paragraph...
But things can change, and polls can be wrong and so its worth doing the math to see what winning 988 more delegates would look like for Sanders. Call it a path-of-least-implausibility. If you think Sanders can meet or exceed these targets, then you can say with a straight face that you think hell win the nomination. If you think theyre too good to be true, then you cant. Heres the Bernie-miracle path I came up with:
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Current location: NE Indiana
Member since: 2002
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