Wednesday, 25 August 2010

nfl jerseys Democratic Party Presidential Nomination Contest: a Review of the Delegate and Popular Vote Counts

After the vote in Pennsylvania, it's time to the estimated number of delegates (a total of pledged delegates is updated, the delegates won through elections - the primaries and caucuses, superdelegates and party activists say officialsand) has acquired, and the popular vote by senators Clinton and Obama in the Democratic Party presidential nonfl jerseysmination contest. This - and fill in the votes of the delegates - but not instead of the results of the primaries in cheap nfl jerseysMichigan and Florida. Both Michigan and Florida violated the explicit rules that the Democratic National Committee (DNC) that no country - except Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina - was his party primary or caucus before the appeal presidential nomination Tuesday, set hold, if no state could have made their choice. (Super Tuesday was a day of semi-national primary elections. The four states - Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada (Hispanic population) and South Carolina (large African American population) - and those are the representative of American voters and small enough to campaign without huge amounts of resources.
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As a result of their defiance of the DNC's ruling, DNC mandated that any election would be considered null and void and asked all the presidential candidates (which included Clinton and Obama but it also included Senators Biden and Dodd, and John Edwards) not to campaign in those two states. All the candidates -- including Clinton and Obama -- consented to this. There was absolutely no campaigning. Obama and Edwards even removed their names from the ballot in Michigan (for some reason, Clinton did not.) However, Obama and Edwards (and Clinton) could not remove their names from the Florida ballot -- Florida party would not allow that.

Senator Clinton
now argues that the Michigan and Florida votes should be counted but Obama says no -- so far, the Democratic Party is holding on to its rules and punishment of Michigan and Florida.

If Michigan and Florida were excluded, the the number of delegates required to win the Democratic Party's nomination is 2024. (If Michigan and Florida were included, then the majority number would be approximately 2180.)

The following estimates of delegates vary some because the estimates from the caucus results and the the commitments of super-delegates are just estimates with opportunity for slightly different interpretations and counts.

Delegate counts with Florida and Michigan (approximation)
Obama 1960-65, Clinton 1925-1930
If Florida and Michigan primaries were honored as they were conducted with no adjustments, Obama would only lead by about 30-35 delegates (Clinton would lead by about 95-100 delegates when the approximately 380 Michigan and Florida delegates are counted, i.e. the approximate delegate counts would be about 1960 for Obama and about 1925-30 for Clinton.)

And now to the estimates of popular votes under various scenarios.
Popular Vote Total without MI and FL and without caucus popular votes
Obama 14,417,134(49.2%), Clinton 13,916,781(47.5%), Obama +500,353(+1.7%)
Estimate without MI and FL but with w/IA, NV, ME, WA caucus popular vote
Obama 14,751,218(49.3%), Clinton 14,140,643(47.2%), Obama +610,575(+2.1%)
Popular Vote (w/FL) but no caucus popular votes
Obama 14,993,348(48.3%), Clinton 14,787,767(47.6%), Obama +205,581(+0.7%)
Estimate with FL and w/IA, NV, ME, WA caucus popular votes
Obama 15,327,432(48.4%), Clinton 15,011,629(47.4%), Obama +315,803(+1.0%)

And now we provide numbers from Michigan primary too. But this is seriously problematic because Clinton is given about 328,000 votes (because her name was on the ballot) and Obama is given zero (because the rest of votes went to "uncommitted" as Obama's naauthentic nfl jerseysme was not even on the ballot.)
Popular Vote (w/FL & MI) but no caucus popular votes
Obama 14,993,348(47.4%), Clinton 15,116,076(47.8%), Clinton +122,728(+0.4%)
Estimate with FL and MI, and w/IA, NV, ME, WA , and caucus popular votes
Obama 15,327,432(47.5%), Clinton 15,339,938(47.5%), Clinton +12,506 (+0.04%)

In summary, even with the disputed Florida popular votes included Obama leads Clinton. However, only when Michigan is included (where Obama is given zero votes) Clinton leads Obama narrowly.

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