Kamala Harris has the support of enough Democratic delegates to win the party’s nomination for president, according to CNN’s delegate estimate.
Kamala Harris has the support of enough Democratic delegates to win the party’s nomination for president, according to CNN’s delegate estimate.
While endorsements from delegates continue to come in, the vice president has now been backed by well more than the 1,976 pledged delegates she’ll need to win the nomination on the first ballot.
There's not going to be a popular vote either way, so why wait? Harris is also the most obvious choice, especially since she seems to be the only one who actually wants to run.
How does refusing to acknowledge the successor to the 2024 primary winner as the party's nominee so pundits and convention delegates can push whoever they want at voters instead serve democracy?
There is no time to fuck around unfortunately, they are making a smart move 100%. The Dems were pretty close to cannibalizing themselves over the Biden drop out thing. They need to quickly and coherently organize and unify. I'm saying all this and I'm not a big fan of Harris but I am pretty stoked to vote for her compared to my enthusiasm for voting 4 days ago.
The media is doing that thing again! You know, trying to coronate a candidate instead of waiting for the convention.
I don't see how. The Democratic Party's delegates have committed to a candidate. They're reporting on it. They can't exactly be encouraging anyone to choose a candidate; they're saying that the commitment has already happened.
Obviously a more decentralized process, like new primaries, would have been ideal, and Biden and DNC stood in the way of that, but right now we just need to delegate this decision to our elected leaders to make this decision now before it's too late to resist a Trump dictatorship.
I would love to see election reform in the future so this doesn't happen again, but this is our system, like it or not, and this is the best way forward.
Did you read it? Literally the next sentence is this:
Despite this, the DNC announced earlier this month that it intends to go forward with the virtual nomination as originally planned, citing the possibility that lawsuits may overturn the bill.
This is why the DN is voting on the candidate in the next two weeks, ahead of the convention -- because of legal shenanigans by Republicans in Ohio.
Well Ohio Repblicans were the ones who changed the law, they have a supermajority in OH state congress. I have a feeling going with a virtual roll call has more to do with keeping the DNC less newsworthy since it'll have a ton of protests over Palestine.
Well, you're welcome to have that opinion, but don't claim I didn't read the article, when I'm explaining that the DNC has set a 2 week deadline for choosing their candidate.
Four months until the actual election, not four months before people have to start planning for it. The logistics of finalizing, printing, and distributing materials for a nationwide election isn't something that happens in a few weeks. It's a lot less than four months until decisions need to be final and things need to be moving forward.
The delegates/DNC are responsible here, not the media. If they're all going to support Harris without any debate, the media can't be faulted for reporting it.
I agree with the sentiment though. Harris has a lot of problems on her record and couldn't even make it to Iowa in 2020. That she has enough connections to get picked as VP anyway doesn't mean she has to be the default nominee.