Half Of Americans Think Presidential Nominating System 'Rigged' (huffingtonpost.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Huffington Post: More than half of American voters believe that the system U.S. political parties use to pick their candidates for the White House is "rigged" and more than two-thirds want to see the process changed. The results echo complaints from Republican front-runner Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Bernie Sanders that the system is stacked against them in favor of candidates with close ties to their parties -- a critique that has triggered a nationwide debate over whether the process is fair. The United States is one of just a handful of countries that gives regular voters any say in who should make it onto the presidential ballot. But the state-by-state system of primaries, caucuses and conventions is complex. The contests historically were always party events, and while the popular vote has grown in influence since the mid-20th century, the parties still have considerable sway. Just the other day, a poll was conducted by Harvard University showing a majority of young people do not support capitalism. Are the times they are a changin' or are people starting to wake up?
The thing about granting powers exclusively to a group: those powers are worth money, and so they are used as bargaining chips much like any other property. The major political parties have something to sell, which is control over who can become president, and so they are likely to be "captured" by special interest groups and commercial interests. This is how it usually happens in democracy, but with a twist, because our "checks and balances" have created many gatekeepers, each of which has a "power property" to sell.
Debbie Wasserman-Schulz said straight out the super delegates were put in place to ensure party insiders would win against grassroots candidates.
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
But it shouldn't be "think", rather "know". Superdelegates/unpledged delegates are the most visible part of it all.
-SR
It's not exactly a belief, it's the truth. You can argue about whether it's "fair" or not. But it's not a secret that the process is openly controlled by party insiders. Both parties changed to the current "superdelegate" system in the 1970s IIRC.
More than half of Americans think the whole election process is rigged, not just nominations.
Oh here's more
More than half of Americans don't care to actually catch up on candidates' positions or who for that matter care who they vote for. They vote along party lines because that's what dear old grannie did or those nice politicians promised me free shit.
Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
Maybe it's rigged...those superdelegates are not nearly aligned in the same proportion as the popular vote...but I think the more plausible explanation is the media pushes who the party leaders want (Clinton or Cruz in this case) and the average voter happily goes along with who they are told to vote for because that's what the nice talking head told them they want. This isn't direct rigging in the sense that your vote does not get counted, but the deck is stacked.
like it did in 2000. Made the correct decision for the wang state. Like they were one and the same.
Mob rule isn't a good thing, and corrupt leaders can (in some ways and at some times) be better than no leaders. Leadership trying to keep Trump out of office, even against the wishes of their own party, is good for the system.
They should be able to nominate whoever they want, in whatever method they want, fair or not. The real problem is that they get special privileges. They are using the federal and state governments to legitimize and pay for their primaries. Let the political parties run and pay for their own primaries. The state and federal government should only facilitate the candidacy of individuals to public office, it should not even acknowledge the existence of political parties. Maybe if we pretend for long enough, it will come true.
The system is unfair. Here's why:
1) Superdelegates take the choice partly out of the hands of voters. The same is true of uncommitted delegates from states and territories. Pennsylvania's system is awful, where most of the elected delegates don't even say who they will vote for.
2) There needs to be consistency between the states. Winner take all by state or by district is fair provided it's the same way in every state. Proportional delegates are also fair. But it should be the same way in every state.
3) Votes count more in some states than others. There aren't many Republicans in Massachusetts, but delegates are allocated according to the entire population of the state. A vote in the Republican primary in Massachusetts is worth more than voting in the Republican primary in, say, Kansas.
4) Any system that decides caucus winners based on a coin flip is wrong. I'm looking at you, Iowa. And caucuses bias the results because some people simply aren't able to commit to attending a caucus. Only have caucuses or only have primaries. But pick one.
5) Brokered conventions might not be fair. If Trump wins a plurality of delegates, say, 1,215, it's still very possible that Cruz or Kasich would be the nominee on the revote. That just doesn't seem right. Have a revote where delegates from candidates who dropped out become unpledged but all candidates who remained in the race keep their pledged delegates. Then give the nomination to whoever wins a plurality from the candidates remaining in the race.
6) Have the primary votes on the same day for all states and territories. If your state votes later than others, your vote may count less because candidates you might have supported will have already dropped out.
The nominating process is defined by the Party. A Private entity.
Since it exists in a private organization, there is no legal obligation to be "fair", despite the context of Primaries and political parties, which kind of suggests fair voting and representation.
Interesting.
When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
You can debate whether party insiders have too much control, but it's entirely obvious that having only 2 parties (of elected consequence) makes the system much more easily controlled by the omnipotent smoke filled room they have come to represent. The obvious question, is there enough common ground between the people as-is to actually get any reform accomplished on this issue, and who currently in power would be willing to spearhead the dismantling of their power base?
The Republican Party and Democratic Party have all the same rights as the Liberatarian Party the Green Party and the American Nazi Party...
They're "private" parties who allow their registered members to cast a vote for their favorite candidate but ultimately the leaders in the party determine who has the best chance of winning and puts them forward as a presidential candidate.
The confusion here seems to be people thinking that political parties are government operated and that primaries are legitimate pre-voting or something.
People are ignorant, they get their "facts" from Facebook memes and yeah, kids have no idea what capitalism actually is or experience in the real world. You can poll the same kids and ask them "should everyone automatically receive $10,000/week in America" and they'd also say 'yes'.
Just because you disagree doesn't mean it's not true.
The parties want to have a candidate who can actually WIN the election. That means they must put up someone who is liked by their side, and not hated too much by the other side. Trump and Sanders completely fail that test. As popular as they may be with some primary voters, they stand practically ZERO chance of winning the general election.
As for the 'capitialism' thing - again, what else is new? This is the same as a young generation thinking it has invented sex. Pretty much EVERY generation starts out with liberal ideals and bemoans the 'unfairness' of capitalism. Then they grow up, get some wisdom, change from an idealistic view to a pragmatic one, and suddenly capitalism doesn't seem like such an awful thing.
Where can I get a Trump for President sticker for my car?
Why the hell is this submission on the front page of Slashdot, of all sites?!
I can understand political submissions if they're somehow, in some very small way, related to science, or technology, or math, or something relevant like that.
But this submission? It's about politics and nothing but politics. It isn't even about politics at any meaningful level. It's politics within the goddamn parties themselves!
There is absolutely nothing relevant about this submission at all.
Even the "stuff that matters" excuse doesn't work here. And don't waste your time with the "skip submissions you don't like", either.
Things were looking up after Dice sold the site. But since then I've been finding myself more and more disappointed. This submission is a great example. It's irrelevant, and it references the goddamn Huffington Post of all sources!
If I wanted to read shitty content like this, then I'd go visit the Huffington Post site directly! But I don't want to, and that's why I'm at Slashdot. I'm here for the science, tech, math and computing news that I can't find on other sites.
Please, editors, don't ignore the importance of Slashdot being a niche site! Trying to cater to a wider audience won't work, and will be the quickest way to destroy this site.
Superdelegates. Sure as hell isn't democratic!
I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
A political party is free to come up with how it presents its candidate any way it wants. So if they don't like the nomination process they have 2 options. #1 go form their own party with their own nomination process. #2 try and fix the current party.
There is nothing that says there has to be 2 parties or that the senate, congress and the president all have to be divided by the party allegiance.
I think the whole process would be much better off with out the party system. That said the real problem is with the vote.
But the process is saddled with a first past the post system that puts pressure on the process such that if there is more than 1 party then any 2 parties can get better results by joining.
If the US wants to fix the political system they need to get rid of the archaic voting system first.
If they thought about it, they would do wild and crazy things, like petition for and vote for independent candidates. You don't need money to get on the ballot. You only need signatures and votes. If you speak up they cannot stop you. If you don't make the effort, then you will suffer destiny. 98% of the people who vote choose to follow the herd, but it's still a personal choice. No outside force was applied.
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
When the residents of an entire state are disenfranchised because "that's the rules of the party" you'd better believe people are going to be angry.
Slashdot is seriously dumpster diving by even reading that garbage. Pathetic.
Its the delegates, stupid. Why do you think Madison, Hamilton and Jefferson compromised with the "slave issue" ? Hint: to get the certain states to ratify the constitution. For the love of the baby jesus: it's OK for our European cousins to not understand..but, effin you be American, you really should know this.
Trump is the exact type of demagogue Madison had read so many times about; they screw up everything around themselves with their self-delusions and the delusions they inspire in their followrers.
It's the delegates, stupid...the people are too untrustworthy, to easily swayed by demagogues to elect the Prez in Nov; that's just for fun.
it's the delegates, stupid...in Dec.
Got it ?
That'd be as opposed to the half that rarely think at all.
It is rigged, but it is rigged by design.
The thought was that the populace at large could be swayed towards a charismatic yet evil candidate. The populace at large could elect the delegates, but the thought was that as "insiders" they would be less influenced by charm and would choose a candidate using reason instead of emotion.
You can make an argument that Trump or Bernie represent this sort of scenario, that voters are choosing them over other candidates for reasons of emotion, out of anger with current insiders or have fallen sway to the candidate's charm. The delegates, as experienced representatives, are supposed to be less influenced by charm and would use wisdom to back a different candidate.
So the delegates are meant to rescue us and the republic from the rise of extremists or demagogues.
While this is how it was designed to work, over time the concept has become corrupted by money, influence and power. It's hard to say whether any of the candidates or the public at large is getting more of the shaft over the system now.
I mean it is just that simple. Of COURSE the system is rigged towards the "party insiders". IT IS THEIR PARTY! The Democrat and Republican party leaders have final say in how they want their party to work, and these "outsiders" are attempting to get the endorsement of respective party leaders to run on that party's name.
Of course the party leadership has setup rules to be able to influence who is and isn't able to be put forward as their candidate. If you don't like those rules, you have a choice to either get high enough up in the respective party to influence a change of the rules, or go start your own damn party and set your own rules.
We were all warned a long time ago that MS products sucked, remember the Magic 8 Ball said, "Outlook not so good"
The super delegates problem is a side effect of the same thing that has Clinton leading, which is that insiders chose their candidate years ago. Hillary is leading because the media, owned by that same insider group, plays her constant lip service and has for well over a year leading up to this election. Other owned politicians are similarly playing her lip service. There is little to no talk about the corruption in her public service, no talk about how she openly panders and lies to do so, and no talk about her political past as the first lady which would harm her campaign.
Early on, she won how many tie breakers by coin toss exactly? Winning because of votes my ass! She is winning because voters were given a horrible choice and even when they pick the "evil socialist" option they were revoked by this system you claim she is "winning".
Over 50% of the public thinks the system is rigged, the rest are either blind or have not looked into it. There is that .01% or so who know it's rigged and fight tooth and nail to keep it that way. They are happy to pay turds to claim "it's fair" despite how easy it is to prove that it's anything but "fair".
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
Debbie Wasserman-Schulz said straight out the super delegates were put in place to ensure party insiders would win against grassroots candidates.
With only ~11% voter turnout in primaries it's because you don't care... A few super delegates, etc, makes no difference... Americans just don't care.
And as long as you care, nobody and I mean nobody can help you.
I live in San Francisco, and the homeless problem isn't unsolvable, it's just that Americans don't care about people dying on the streets.
This is not people "waking up". That might have applied during the hanging chad fiasco of the W/Gore election, but this is way beyond that.
What has actually happened is there's a demographic shift in the majority of the voting public. This is the last election where the Baby Boomers will hold any major sway in the election and it frightens the heck out of the establishment because they're about to lose control. The largest voting bloc going forward is going to be digital natives and early adoption digital immigrants.
These are people who didn't have limited resources that they could scour endlessly for rote memorization. Instead they have vast information access at their fingertips and have to filter through to find the truth. It's gone from "knowing a few things about something" to "being able to find anything". While those kids may come across as lazy and tuned out, they have the ability to run circles around the establishment for researching what's really going on. The speed at which information travels is still too much for the major political parties to fathom. They can't rely on smoke, mirrors and a complicit mass media anymore. They either have to change or get pushed out.
Sticking to the "Oh they're finally waking up?" narrative is just trying to frame it in the establishments favor. They aren't waking up, they woke up years ago, now they're pissed off because the party is overtly (Thanks for the admission, Wasserman-Schultz) screwing them over and they can actively see it. How many states had major issues during caucus events that led to voters feeling like they were intentionally hindered? How many now have lawsuits or were threatened with lawsuits based on this?
Kings only stay kings as long as the masses let them.
It's definitely rigged.
The other half are as stupid as a rock.
Somewhere around 99% of voters support whatever candidates that the two biggest parties decide to put forth. Maybe about half of Americans think it's rigged, but nearly all Americans agree that the current situation is something they approve of and will reliably vote for. Ask anyone on voting day after they come out of the booth: rigged was good. Today's Bernie supporters are going to vote against Bernie on election day, if he doesn't win his party's nomination. Same for Cruz supporters.
If there's a complaint here (and I don't think there is; is anyone complaining?) it's about we the voters, not the system or parties. We love the system and parties and every two years, we renew our vows of lifelong support. All of this would disappear overnight if we all didn't make so much effort to prop it up. We Approve.
Disagree? I don't believe you, liar. But go ahead and tell me you voted against the two big parties' nominees. The stats say there weren't a significant number of you. You support the parties and you always will, because you're a weak coward without any political ideals. And I bet the day after election day, you'll lie again, and say you voted against them. Bullshit.
And very sad the other 49 percent revel in their serfdom.
Wait.
Serfs had rights.
Americans don't.
Strike that.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Blaming the parties may be missing the root cause -- that our archaic plurality voting system eventually fosters a two-party system.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
The main problem is that understanding how voting is broken is tougher than coming to terms with climate change or unisex bathrooms. As long as people are content to get into shouting matches over their favorite political grapplers while ignoring that they are actually watching the equivalent of the WWF and not the Olympics, nothing will change.
You're exactly right on the button. Political parties are private institutions, and they can make whatever rules they want. Super-delegates, uncommitted delegates, state-by-state rules ... hell, they can throw darts at a dartboard or draw names out of a hat for all I care. They make the rules for their party, and they have every right to do so.
Only a minority of states even had a primary prior to 1972. It was the mess of a 1968 Democratic Convention and nomination of Hubert Humphrey after not having won a single state primary that pushed both parties for nationalization of the state primary process. But, just because it's a national process doesn't mean it needs to be a democratic one. Major news networks are so starving for every iota of election coverage that they make primaries sound like elections. They're not; nothing in the Constitution mandates or even mentions them. The only thing citizens should be concerned about is the limits the reigning political parties have put in place making it near-impossible for any other individual or party to participate in the presidential election.
We just need to stop these polls. We're asking Americans who just don't understand the political process what they think about it. Their answers are going to be misguided, and we shouldn't consider the poll results any more valid than asking Pacific Islanders what ice is best for making an igloo.
For a country that ostensibly is 'government by the people, for the people', the 'people' don't seem to give a damn. If 100% of eligible voters bothered to go vote, I think it'd be a very different situation.
Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
DO you have an answer? If everyone can vote for anybody in the Primary then what is the Point.
Just have the elections with 20 candidates. Then have a second round to pick the winner if no one gets over 50%. It is a Common system.
The Primary is supposed to pick a party candidate. It is not a general election. The Democratic Party does not have make it easy for the G.O.P. to overwelm them and pic a Tea Party candidate to run with their Money.
If Bernie Loses he loses. That is the game. Those were the rules when he started.
Trump is starting to like the rules, Nut he promise to hate them if he misses the the count for the first round.
It is rigged, and it should be. Political parties are not part of the government. They're private entities. They can nominate whoever they want. I don't care how they do it, whether they poll their members or read tarot cards or have some secret shadowy figure choose from in the back of a smoke-filled room. Parties should choose their candidates in pretty much any way except via primaries. At least, any way except taxpayer-paid primaries. If the parties want to foot the bill for the time and effort expended to poll the general public, more power to them.
The appalling part isn't how the candidates are chosen by the parties. It's how the electoral system is rigged to keep the two big parties in power. The whole thing is set up to encourage an Us-versus-Them attitude. If anyone votes for a candidate without a (D) or (R) after their name they're just "throwing their vote away". There's no way in hell that any third-party presidential candidate is going to get a majority or even a plurality of votes.
That's the part that needs to be fixed. Switch to an instant run-off system or something else that encourages votes for who people really want to lead, rather than just encouraging votes against the worst guy. Change parties to an advisory system, where instead of running a candidate every party endorses one (or more) candidates. And get rid of the fscking (D) and (R) after the candidates' names, like their sole job is to represent the party's interest. We're not voting a party into the presidency, we're voting an individual in there. Let's minimize the party influence, or we're going to continue to be governed by unelected party officials who are pulling the candidates' strings.
Chelloveck
I give up on debugging. From now on, SIGSEGV is a feature.
Switch to approval (aka "multi-choice" voting) and the need for tweaks that mitigate burial and vote splitting issues go away. I think most if not all the crazy stuff that you see in primaries evolved from various moronic attempts to fix plurality.
Plurality always slowly degenerates into dysfunction. Try it with a bunch of friends. Use single choice to decide where to go for dinner. It might work once or twice but most of the time it will not yield the "winner" that makes the most people happy. Then switch to approval (which actually most people would intuitively use anyway). The result might not be perfect but it won't be pathologically wrong most of the time.
By the by, IRV is *worse* than single choice. This is one of those cases where intuition leads you astray. Also don't waste our time with range voting. Burial is a major source of voting dysfunction and a 0-1 range (approval) is far less vulnerable to burial than a 0-10 range (for example).
90% of the wealth is in 2% of the pockets. Bummer to be in the majority.
The main problem is that first past the post voting supports this two-party situation as a stable equilibrium through tactical voting, etc...
Political parties, as others have pointed out, are private entities (and therefore can nominate candidates however they please). The problem is that the US government is virtually guaranteed to be controlled by one of those two private entities and it is in neither parties' best interest to fix that problem.
If you're running as a party outsider, run as a independent or new party.
It's like saying you want to Apple's new CEO, but only if you make the whole company run Windows. My guess is that you won't get very far. It would be a stretch to say "rigged".
is that half of of all americans can even think.
At one point, common law parliamentary procedure... the basics for how deliberative assemblies, organizations, and basically any other sort of self-organizing collection of people of a Britannic heritage work was widely known. We also had basic civics, so people knew about things like federalism.
Nowadays, we don't have a great grasp of either. Anyone who thinks the system is "rigged" simply doesn't understand how the process works. First of all, it's a Republic, not a Democracy. Secondly, a political party -- or any other type of organization -- is free to write its own rules for how it conducts business, who's a voting member, or anything else. The DNC has "superdelegates;" the RNC doesn't. If you think superdelegates are a bad thing, maybe you should have your delegates say something. If you think superdelagates are awesome, maybe you should ask your delegates to add them in.
Quit complaining; start making motions. Start running for office. Start attending county meetings for your political party. (News flash: That's what the Tea Partiers did, and that's how they began to get more control over the GOP party apparatus in 2009-2010.)
Hire a Linux system administrator, systems engineer,
"Wake up"? Fall asleep is more like it. If only 37% of highschool seniors are prepared for college Math and Reading, why should their ignorance of Socialism's 100 years of failure be taken as anything other than a similar lapse of their educators?
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
I complained too, but hey, it happened. I think the corrosiveness of politics has now mostly infected slashdot.
54.9% in 2012, probably the same people that think it's rigged.
...clearly haven't been paying attention.
And the other half just aren't paying attention.
*** *** You're just jealous 'cause the voices talk to me... ***
our entire Republic system of gov't was designed from the get go to protect wealthy land and property owns. This is BAU, functioning as designed.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
Because they are so old and our education system so inbred and politicized, out younger voters and less informed older voters seem to think the parties are a function of government. They arent. And as as parties they arent there to pick the most popular candidate, but rather the candidate which fits the need of the party. The republicans skewed their system over the years to exclude Reagan types and opened the door to populists with limited appeal. The democrats have an equally skewed system geared toward specifically excluding that populism.
As for hating capitalism. One has only to look at said populists candidates to see just how misunderstood something can be. Capitalism is, as a fundamental economic concept, broadly responsible for vast economic wealth and prosperity for any nation which implemented it. That alone is responsible for taking the dirt floor hovels and villages of squalor from the 19th century to the universal electric cities and relatively astronomical living standards in even the most remote regions of the 20th and 21st centuries. Capitalism is the only system which gives the poorest any real rights at all because it gives them the right to spend their monies anywhere.
Quote, "...is stacked against them in favor of candidates with close ties to their parties." What do you think a 'party' is? And why should those not affiliated or not having 'close ties' to the party expect to win from the 'party'?
Trump is a spoiled brat bully that only complains when he doesn't win. He has a larger number of delegates by percentage than percentage of votes due to the all or nothing states. He didn't complain about the system in those states. What a buffoon.
Getting nominated weeds out some who don't have the skills, intelligence and guts to win.
If you can make it through the insane bizarre electorial process to be nominated and then get elected, you may be qualified to be president.
It's not like the world will only throw rational and fair situations for the president to deal with.
If a healthy 18 adult plays football scoring 140 points against an 8 year old autistic child who scored 0, did they "win" the game? Winning requires a competition, and I'll add a somewhat "fair" competition. You know, that thing that is completely absent in the Democratic primary system right? I think you mean something other than "winning", maybe check out a dictionary.
-The wise argue that there are few absolutes, the fool argues that there are no probabilities.
http://fairvote.org/
I figured it would be more. But seriously, the system isn't rigged. It's that nobody has bothered to look how each party decides its nominee. After all, most people in this country probably think that we directly elect our President. We don't. We never have. We're not a true democracy and never have been.
The dangerous part is that there are people who think all of our elections should be direct elections decided by popular vote. They fail to realize why each state has their own process and why the electoral college was put into place. We are a union of states.
"A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
The presidential election needs runoff elections, not primaries.
Runoff election 1 should allow anyone who can raise a million signatures to be on the ballot nationally. This would require enough time and organization to keep out the joke candidates and the true crackpots, but still allow for niche candidates or underdogs to get onto the ballot if they can demonstrate some legwork.
Runoff election 2 should be made up of the top 10 vote getters in runoff 1. That's enough to still give minor candidates exposure, but will all but assure crackpots don't make the cut.
Both runoff elections should be open and party-independent. You can label yourself by an actual party or none at all.
The top 4 candidates from runoff 2 should be on the final ballot in November and the winner decided by ranked choice voting. No party dependencies. If the top 4 end up being 3 Democrats and 1 Republican, so be it, the three Democrats are offering enough unique value to the electorate that they don't feel the need to dump all but one.
The existing system sucks because of the ridiculous state by state nature of ballots. I fine with devolved government, but devolving the method of electing a common president is lunacy, and it makes it extraordinarily hard for a third party to get much traction.
This results in third parties being dismissed as ineffective and forces independent minded candidates like Trump or Sanders to identify with a major party and be subject to rules and a party establishment that has other ideas. I get it, parties are private, but you face impossible odds if you're not a major party candidate, which gives ridiculous power to two parties to control who's even available as an option.
The process of selecting who ends up on the final ballot should be wide open. Democrats or Republicans or Libertarians or National Socialists can have whatever process they want for their own internal candidate choice, but it should not be a determinant for who is actually available to be voted for by the public.
I remember as a kid attending a business meeting at our church (which was independent - that is it was owned by the members not by some external organization). When a person professed their faith and were baptized they generally became a member of the church. I was surprised then when during the business meeting they voted on whether to admit some recently baptized person as a member. Wasn't their a conversion a matter between them and God? Yes it was, but my dad explained that they weren't voting on whether the person was a Christian, they were voting on whether the person would have the same control over the budget and church building as the people who were already members. I understood. What if, for example, a large biker gang decided they wanted a meeting hall so they all joined the church and voted to turn it into a clubhouse? That wouldn't be fair to all the people who had donated to build the church.
A political party has similar concerns. The Republican Party has assets. It has salaried employees. It has a recognized brand. These have been built up over 150 years by donations of money and time from people who believe in ideals like freedom and rule-of-law.
What Donald Trump is doing is using the rules to perform a hostile take-over and use the assets, brand name, and employees to accomplish goals that are the opposite of what most of the people who built the party believed in (of course it is arguable that Mitch McConnell has been doing the same thing). The party has a right to defend itself and that's why the rules have built-in protections. Let's hope they are enough.
I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
What on Earth do the other half think? Of course it's rigged - they're completely open about it. Superdelegates aren't a secret.
My, we Americans are pretty stupid if only half of us think this game is rigged.
"I know it's rigged, but it's the only game in town." - "Canada Bill' Smith
What many people don't realize is that the party machine is much bigger than a single election or politician. Politicians come and go for the most part, but the machine is there today, tomorrow, and for a long time to come.
This has huge implications for those preparing to fight the machine. For instance if some small town guy puts up a Feel the Bern sign, the local democratic HOA or alderman will come knocking and put a bit of pressure on that person even if they agree with them and like the person in question. The reason they will do this is because the machine remembers who supports and who hurts them. So while they might be able to directly get to the guy who puts up the sign they can get to the people who can shut him down. They will deny the alderman support in the next election. Even the HOA president would be in trouble if the local state legislator showed up at a HOA election BBQ for the opponent this year instead of them.
This doesn't only apply to elections and election support. The airport might have been funded by a party senator, jobs at that airport, contracts at that airport, etc are very much handed out to party loyalists. So maybe the company that has the fuel contract is the employer of the guy with the sign. A little reminder as to who is in charge of their future will have them talk to the guy with the sign.
But this isn't a huge well organized conspiracy. Each level knows what is expected of it and just acts. Thus there are no wiretaps that will expose this, no paper trails to follow.
The crazy part is that both machines are active regardless of who is in power, or even who is the default party in that neck of the woods. If you take a state like Connecticut which will never go all republican, you still have a republican party machine that demands loyalty.
Where it gets even weirder is that they are like a cult hunting apostates. When the machine sees someone supporting the other party, that is from their view a healthy part of democracy. He won't get any contracts while they are in power, but they aren't overly vindictive. It is when their own don't support the candidate picked in a smokey back room. Those disloyal Mofos need to be taught some respect.
This is one of the reasons Millennials are the ones supporting Sanders, they aren't typically part of the machine and getting their livelihood from the machine. But if you are 60 and own a solid pillar-of-the-community business, then you don't dare turn your back on your superiors.
When my guy wins it's the voice of the people.
When my guy loses it's rigged and there will be revolution in the streets.
Those politicians sound like my Italian ones.
It's never their fault, it's someone else's.Always!
And a lot of people believe them! 50% is an approximation of the average amount of votes the losing candidate will get.
They'd try to look the situation the other way around.
Why are the winners so strongly tied to the respective parties?
The other answer is because the parties tighten the relationships with those candidates with larger appreciation.
Sorry, I forgot! We are talking about politicians: they don't have mind honesty! Any honesty!
Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
Voters want as much power as possible. Parties want the same and so do the candidates.
If I were Trump or Sanders you better believe I would be pushing hard to build consensus fucking with the popular vote is unacceptable. This is how real power works.
The political parties depend on legitimacy for their survival. Should parties pull a stunt like voting against clear majority they know they will pay a price for it. It is very much the job of the candidates to maximize this price as a hedge against it ever happening.
the founders of the United States denounced democracy and explicitly created a Constitutional Republic. They studied and debated all the forms of government that had been tried and concluded that democracy is inherently self-destructive in that it includes features that inevitably make it captive to special interests rallying the support of the masses who then get the power to plunder it.
During WWII and the Cold War, western political leaders started referring to their countries as "democracies" as short-hand for long sentences explaining that the "good guys" were nations with various forms of representative governments with democratic elections, and unfortunately while this rhetoric was useful THEN, it has caused younger generations of people to think that they live in democracies and to try to make them more democratic in form (which in the US means driving them further from what the founders designed and toward what is known to be unsustainable).
"Remember, democracy never lasts long. It soon wastes, exhausts, and murders itself. There never was a democracy yet that did not commit suicide." - John Adams
"A Republic, if you can keep it." - Benjamin Franklin, when asked what sort of government the founders had just created
The system IS completely rigged. One word:
Dubya.
America hasn't been a democracy for decades. It's a sick corporate oligarchy.
America was one of the greatest ideas in human history.
And like most great ideas it was corrupted and destroyed from the inside due to public apathy and an unwillingness to fight for what the founding fathers achieved.
.
Both major Parties are controlled by the wealthy. Want it to stop? Then we need election reform as is pushed by Lawrence lessig.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Surely a party can support whomever they choose? Why wouldn't they pick someone "with close ties to their parties"?
Do people also think they should have a say in whom the Green party supports for President?
See above.
This could just as easily been titled: "Half of Americans don't understand what it means to have a representative republican form of government."
Ignorance.
It's pretty obvious that your vote doesn't count much when each voting machine can be off by 10,000 or more votes. I'd vote again if it were pen and paper ballots and actual "PEOPLE" had to count them all... then another group would re-count them to be sure.
Aren't quite that optimistic.
The first change that has to come is for parties to organize and pay the primary elections on their own. They will still be allowed to rent schools or other public buildings as polling places outside of school hours, but otherwise are to get zero support, financially or otherwise, by public entities unless they request and pay for it. Or do we really want to waste tax money on charades like the current Republican primaries? All other democracies have their parties fund the process for finding their front runner and candidates. Once determined by the parties, the candidates get a set amount of money to campaign, but cannot use their own money, the party's money, or have representation through PACs/SuperPACs. Final elections will be fully funded by the governments as it always has been, but election day is better moved to some time in May and on a Saturday or Sunday rather than in the middle of the week in November where weather is craptastic in most places in the US. This will effectively reduce the money spent/wasted on campaigning and at least for the most part takes special interest funding out of the picture. It also will give equal opportunity for all candidates that qualify for the final election. Currently, Reps and Dems get all the benefits while other parties are left out entirely. What the US direly needs is an end of the two party system which is only marginally better than a one party system found in China or North Korea. This black/white, with us or against us think needs to go.