Earlier in the week, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump charged that some GOP officials were “rigging” the nomination process against him. Now that Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) is beginning to reap the benefits of his campaign laying the groundwork in key places during the past several months, particularly in unbound delegation states such as Colorado and North Dakota, Trump is finding himself on the short end of the delegate selection process.
Because Colorado did not have a primary or caucus but went only to a state convention, Trump is saying such a move is out of bounds. The North Dakota Republicans did the exact same thing a week earlier, but he didn’t levy the same charges toward the Peace Garden State GOP leaders.
Simultaneously, Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton’s campaign spokesman claimed that Sen. Bernie Sanders (I/D-VT) is trying to “rig” the Democratic system by attempting to convince Super Delegates who have already announced for Clinton to change their minds.
For Republicans, state party leaders in Colorado and North Dakota, as well those in Louisiana, South Carolina, and Tennessee, have acted within the party rules. The latter three have apparently elected a large number of Cruz supporters as delegates in Trump-won states. This result displeases the Trump operation because it may result in those latter delegations voting differently past the first roll call than how their respective Republican electorates decided.
In fact, the Cruz campaign worked the system; the Trump organization did not. The result may be trending Cruz’s way through strategy, planning, and implementation, and not because a group of biased state party leaders “rigged” the system.
For the Democrats, about 60% of Super Delegates are unbound. Therefore, these individuals have the right to change their votes. Just because some may have announced for Clinton doesn’t mean they can’t change their minds. The Sanders’ campaign trying to get their votes is certainly well within the rules.
Clinton spokesman Brian Fallon, in a CNN interview as reported by the Politico newspaper, said he believes Sanders is the candidate who is trying to “rig” the system and deny Clinton the nomination even though the majority of Democrats (56%) in primaries and caucuses have voted for her and she has won more bound, or pledged, delegates.
While his statistics are correct, such is not to say that Sanders is somehow violating the party rules by nefariously trying to undercut the majority of party voters. His actions are well within the party rules, just as were those of the Clinton campaign ground workers when they originally committed these same Super Delegate votes. Many of these Party Leader/Elected Official delegates committed to the former Secretary of State long before votes were cast in the 35 Democratic primaries or caucus held so far, therefore the argument that Sanders should not try to convert them because a majority has been established does not hold water.
Tension is thick, and tempers are becoming frayed. Such is the case when the campaigns can see the finish line in front of them, meaning the end is near for all but two candidates. To date, despite the complaints and foul cries, the nomination systems appear to be working properly.
Source: AAN
First, Hillary and Trump are fatally flawed candidates. Hillary just happens to have the support of party insiders. If Trump and Sanders really want to shake things up, they should run a coalition campaign. They could win, and turn the establishment on it's head. Plus, they agree on a lot of critical points.
ReplyDeleteTrump is not a fatally flawed candidate. You must be smoking crack to even say something like that. He has laid out his platform, most of which Cruz has been tooting lately as his own. He has stuck to the issues and tried not to get in the mud like your golden boy. Please. Get a clue, 1008. You sound like an amateur trying to talk about something you're obviously not informed about. And no, they do not have similar platforms. God, I wish you people would educate yourselves instead of swallowing the MSM pie like it was gospel.
ReplyDeleteI am surprised there are 2 people who think voting still matters.
ReplyDeleteIf trump don't win with the popular vote then I don't vote any more!
ReplyDeleteTrump is our BEST candidate, 10:08. Cruz is trying to "act" like he's for Trump's platform, but he along with Clinton & Sanders are all Establishment liberals/ socialists bought and paid for by the banks, Big Pharma& whoever else is handing out cash to clunkers.
ReplyDeleteAt least Trump is in this for America & Her Constitution! And, HE CAN'T BE BOUGHT!
I hope trump wins and there is hell to pay for republicans who seem intent on blowing up the party and not letting trump take it.
ReplyDelete717, Trump can only win if we all go out and vote for that name, no matter WHAT his hashtag is in November, and the election is less rigged than voter turnout can overcome.
ReplyDeleteJust do it!