General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Can we give decent burial to the meme that Bernie Sanders didn't appeal to black voters. [View all]hughee99
(16,113 posts)You think the popular vote is important and use that to argue against caucuses. Then, you don't care at all about the popular vote when arguing for superdelegates.
And I think the argument that the idea of superdelegates is far more antithetical to the popular vote (650 people whose opinion is more valued than millions of voters) than the caucus system is.
If you aren't sure that's the case, about superdelegates vs. caucus voters, think of it this way. Two million california voters could all vote for one candidate, and 650 superdelegates could cancel out all of those delegates and then some.
Explain a caucus scenario in which one candidate has a MAJORITY of the total votes and comes away with nothing, or even significantly less than a split. A scenario in which the will of the participants isn't even close to being reflected in the final delegate total.