Showing posts with label Convention. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Convention. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

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DNC Rules and Bylaws Committee Membership

Democratic Convention Watch has a list of members on the DNC Rules and Bylaws Committee.

With the expected hearing on the FL and MI delegation plans on May 31, here is a look at the makeup of the committee and who supports who.

Co-Chairs - no endorsement
Alexis Herman (co-chair, Washington , D.C. )
James Roosevelt, Jr. (co-chair, Massachusetts )

Members - Clinton supporters (12)
Hartina Flournay (DC)
Donald Fowler (SC)
Harold Ickes, Jr. (DC)
Alice Huffman (CA)
Ben Johnson (DC)
Elaine Kamarck (MA)
Eric Kleinfeld (DC)
Mona Pasquil (CA)
Mame Reiley (VA)
Garry Shay (CA)
Elizabeth Smith (DC)
Michael Steed (MD)

Members - Obama supporters (8)
Martha Fuller Clark (NH)
Carol Khare Fowler (SC)
Janice Griffin (MD)
Thomas Hynes (IL)
Allan Katz (FL)
Sharon Stroschein (SD)
Sarah Swisher (IA)
Everett Ward (NC)

Members - no known endorsement (8)
Donna Brazille (DC)
Mark Brewer (MI)
Ralph Dawson (NY)
Yvonne Gates ( NV)
Alice Germond (DC) - DNC Secretary
Jaime Gonzalez, Jr. (TX)
David McDonald (WA)
Jerome Wiley Segovia (VA)


Matt notes that Allan Katz is on Obama's Finance Committee and Ralph Dawson is one of the few New York superdelegates who have not endorsed Clinton. However, Dawson introduced the measure to strip FL and MI of their delegates.

There are 30 members, hence, 16 is a majority. If all of Clinton's supporters vote as a block, they will only need 4 more votes to secure their desired outcome.

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Rep. Ike Skelton Endorses Clinton

Clinton picks up another superdelegate today, this one from Missouri Congressman Ike Skelton.

Skelton is the Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee. Clinton sits on the Senate counterpart.

According to the Democratic Convention Watch, the superdelegate count stands as:

Hillary Clinton: 259
Barack Obama: 239
Undecided: 296

Monday, April 21, 2008

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Nelson and Hastings Criticize DNC's "Secrecy" Regarding FL Delegation

This one from Marc Ambinder. Senator Ben Nelson and Congressman Alcee Hastings sent a letter to the Rules and Bylaws Committee criticizing them of the secrecy regarding the validity of their state's appeal on Florida's participation in the nominating process.

Here is a quote from the letter:

If the Rules and Bylaws Committee does not pro actively and openly resolve the issue of how to honor Florida's primary and seat the state's delegates, the entire nominating process will continue to unfold under a cloud. This only serves to perpetuate division instead of unity as we move toward the convention and general election - something on which we agreed yesterday is not in the best interest of the party or the nation.


So far, the DNC has been slow to move along the process of seating at least a portion of the FL or MI delegations. At this point, it looks like they are aiming at a June decision after everyone has voted.

Friday, February 08, 2008

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Seat the Florida and Michigan Delegations

I am a strong supporter of voter rights. So, when the DNC decided to strip Florida and Michigan of all their delegates, I was horrified.

Help seat these delegations by signing the petition sending a message to the DNC.

Sunday, January 20, 2008

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More Explanation on Delegate Counts

My first post on delegate counts was brief with a link to a site that provided very detailed information on the primary process and delegate info. Since I received a few comments on the system and the process, let me do my best to explain the system and the process.

How are Delegates Allocated to Each State?

Delegate allocation rules are decided by the Party. On the Democratic side, the delegate allocation is based on something called an allocation factor which is calculated based on the state's total Democratic vote for the three preceding presidential elections and the states electoral votes. Here is the math:

Allocation Factor = ½ × ( ( State's Democratic Vote ÷ Total Democratic Vote ) + ( State's Electoral Vote ÷ 538 ) )

Example for New York State:
½ × ( ( 12,178,154 ÷ 157,430,363 ) + ( 31 ÷ 538 ) ) = 0.067488

0.067488 is then multiplied by 3000 which give you 202 base delegates. Superdelegates, PLEO's and Bonuses (which are base on what date the state holds its primary) are then added which gives New York a total of 281 delegates to the National Convention.

The Republican allocation rules are MUCH different. Each state is given 10 at-large delegates, 5 for each Senator. In addition, 3 district delegates are given to each elected member of the House of Representatives. 3 "Party Leader" delegates are then given to each state, which comprises of he National Committeeman, the Cational Committee Woman, and the Chairman of the State Republican Party. Next are the bonus delegates. Bonuses are given based on the previous presidential election, the Governorship, the Senate, the House and the state legislature. If a state gave a majority of its electoral votes to the Republican candidate in the previous presidential election then that state will receive a bonus of 4.5 + 0.60 × the Jurisdiction's Total 2004 Electoral Vote. One delegate is awarded to the state for every Republican Senator elected in the six years prior to the year of the general election. States electing a Republican Governor four years prior to the general election is awarded 1 delegate. States which Republican House members controlled 50% of the delegation four years prior to the general gets 1 bonus delegate. States electing a majority of Republicans in one chamber of the state legislature will also get a bonus delegate. States electing a majority of Republicans in both chambers of the state's legislature will get one bonus delegate.

Example for Arizona:
( 10 At-Large + 3 District + 3 Party Leaders ) + ( Presidential Bonus is 4.5 + 0.60 × 10 ) + ( Senate Bonus is 2 ) + ( House Bonus is 1 ) + ( Legislature Bonus is 2 ) = 53 delegates

How are Delegates Allocated to Each Presidential candidate?


This also depends on the Party and the state. There are several different ways of allocating national delegates to the national convention. Some of the common ones are proportional and winner-take-all. On the Democratic side, 38 jurisdictions hold a proportional primary. 18 holds a caucus. In a proportional primary a candidate must receive 15% of the popular vote to be eligible to get delegates. Delegates are then allocated at both the state level and the district level. For example. In New York, 151 delegates will be allocated based on the results of the 29 districts in the state, while 81 delegates will be allocated based on the states total popular vote. This means in a close race a candidate can get the most delegates but not the most votes. If such rules were to be applied to Iowa and Nevada, such outcomes are likely in which Clinton would get more delegates than Edwards in Iowa and Obama will get more delegates than Clinton in Nevada. However, Iowa and Nevada are caucuses which chooses state delegates to the state convention which will ultimately choose the national delegates to the national convention. So, the make up of the delegates can be completely unrepresentative of the actual vote.

On the Republican side, there is mixture of the system of delegate allocation to the candidate. The most common system is the winner-take-all system. 26 jurisdictions have either a winner-take-all system or a winner-take-all system with a combination of another system. In this system, the candidate with the most votes gets all the delegates. Arizona is one of these systems and 50 delegates are tied to the winner-take-all allocation. Some states have winner-take-all by the district. In this case, delegates are allocated to the candidate by simply getting the most votes in a district. California is such a state in which 159 delegates are allocated based on the results of the 53 districts. 11 at-large delegates are awarded to the winner of the state. A proportional primary is essentially the same as the Democrats with the exception of the threshold viability. The threshold viability can vary in the Republican race state by state.

What are Superdelegates?

Superdelegates are party leaders or elected officials which can endorse any candidate at any time and vote for any candidate at the national convention. They can also switch support.

How is a candidate formally nominated?

A candidate must receive 50% of the total delegates to the national convention. In this case, it is 2,025 for the Democrats and 1,191 for the Republicans.

What happens if no candidate receives a majority of the delegates?

We then have what is called a brokered convention. The last one was in 1976, Ford vs. Reagan. All the candidates will go into the convention and essentially negotiate to be the Party's presidential nominee. So, a candidate with the least delegates can go into the convention and come out the nominee. A candidate with no delegate or someone who was not running for President can also jump in. If you want to see a good example of a brokered convention watch "2,162" of The West Wing in which two Vice Presidents, a Congressman and a Governor who jumps into the fray duke it out to be the Democratic nominee.

But, I still don't understand...

Go here: The Green Papers

Saturday, January 19, 2008

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Delegate Count as of January 19

Here are the updated delegate counts for the Democrats and Republicans.

The percentage is the percent of the total NEEDED to be nominated.

Democrats

Hillary Clinton: 210 (10.4%)
Barack Obama: 123 (6.1%)
John Edwards: 52 (2.6%)
Dennis Kucinich: 1

Republicans

Mitt Romney: 72 (6.0%)
John McCain: 38 (3.2%)
Mike Huckabee: 29 (2.4%)
Fred Thompson: 8 (0.7%)
Ron Paul: 6 (0.5%)
Rudy Giuliani: 2 (0.2%)
Duncan Hunter: 1 (0.1%)

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

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Delegate Count as of January 16

I have decided use the delegate counts of CNN for my blog. Why? It will be the MSM that will eventually call an official nominee, not a website (The Green Papers). However, I highly suggest you visit the website to learn more about the primaries and their counts. You can view the numbers from CNN by clicking on the delegate counts on the sidebar.

So here is where the delegate count stands. The percentages is the percent of what is NEEDED to be nominated.

Democrats

Hillary Clinton: 190 (9%)
Barack Obama: 103 (5%)
John Edwards: 51 (3%)
Dennis Kucinich: 1

Republican

Mitt Romney: 52 (4%)
Mike Huckabee: 22 (2%)
John McCain: 15 (1%)
Fred Thompson: 6 (1%)
Ron Paul: 2
Rudy Giuliani: 1
Duncan Hunter: 1

Wednesday, January 09, 2008

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Delegate Count as of 1/9

Delegate counts are estimates and can vary from source to source.

Democrats

Barack Obama: 25
Hillary Clinton: 24
John Edwards: 18

Republicans

Mitt Romney: 21
Mike Huckabee: 14
John McCain: 12
Fred Thompson: 8
Ron Paul: 4
Rudy Giuliani: 1
Duncan Hunter: 1

These estimates are from the Green Papers. CNN and other networks have different estimates. I'm contemplating whether or not I should start to use the CNN delegate count for this blog as it is the media who will "project" or determine the nominee with their delegate counts.