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Category Archives: 2020 Convention
Democratic Convention postponed to Aug 17
We had this one called before anyone else:
The Democratic National Committee is postponing the party’s presidential convention in Milwaukee to August 17, the week before the Republican Party’s convention.
The delay from July 13 came after likely nominee Joe Biden publicly called for the convention to be rescheduled in response to the coronavirus pandemic. –Politico
Comments Off on Democratic Convention postponed to Aug 17
The Tentative Remaining Primary Schedule
Less than three weeks ago, we had Echo Tuesday with six states holding primary contests. At that point in time, COVID 19 was a growing concern. In short order, the party moved the debate between Vice-President Biden and Senator Sanders from Arizona with a full audience to D.C. and no audience and states began to move their primaries to minimize the impact of COVID 19. Now, we have an entirely new schedule for the last three months of the primary season.
Before going into the details of the current schedule, as Matt noted yesterday, there are real issues with holding the Democratic convention in mid-July. Aside from the health issues, there are also issues caused by the revisions to the primary calendar.
First, while the media pays a lot of attention to the initial results on election night, those results are merely the initial results. There are still some absentee ballots and provisional ballots to count (and in the case of vote-by-mail states that number can be very significant). So it can take two weeks or more for the local election authority to finalize their counts. Those counts then have to be sent to the state election authority which has to add all of those results together to get the final official result. In part for this reason, the current rules require that primaries be held no later than June 9. However, some of the primaries are now scheduled for June 23 (and more may join them if the current shutdown is extended). It is almost impossible that those states will have a final result before a July 13 convention.
Also posted in COVID-19, Primary Elections
Tagged Delegate Seclection, Primary Calendar
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Delegate Math 2020 — March 17
After the sprint of twenty-four contests in fifteen days, this week’s four primaries represents a slowing of the pace. After the March 17 contests, there will be only seven contests over the next three weeks concluding with the Wisconsin primary before there is a three-week break between Wisconsin and the Mid-Atlantic primary on April 28. (EDIT: Now six contests, with Georgia’s primary being postponed until May.)
In the last two weeks, in the states that vote by mail, we have seen the early results showing significant number of votes for candidates that are no longer in the race. As counting has continued, however, the later arriving ballots have swung away from the candidates who have suspended their campaigns and toward Senator Sanders and Vice-President Biden. There will have been some early voting in the states that are voting on March 17. As such, the initial release of numbers will probably include some votes for these candidates, but that number should decline over the evening as election day returns are added in.
With the narrowing of the field, delegate math is now a state-by-state struggle. And this state-by-state battle is different for the Democratic primaries than it is on the Republican side. The media likes to focus on who wins a state. And, in the general election (and in many states on the Republican side), the winner-take-all rule makes winning a state very important. On the Democratic side, the proportional allocation of delegates means that it matters more whether somebody wins a state by a large margin than who wins the state. As we have seen over the past seven days, a narrow in by Vice-President Biden is currently netting him around seven delegates in a large state, but his big win in Mississippi (less than half the size of Washington) is netting him over thirty delegates.
Also posted in Delegates, Primary Elections
Tagged 2020 Delegate Selection Plans, 2020 Democratic Primaries, Arizona, Bernie Sanders, Florida, Illinois, Joe Biden, Ohio
Comments Off on Delegate Math 2020 — March 17
2020 Delegate Math — Northern Marianas
While most states hold elections on Tuesdays, Saturdays have also been a traditional election date as we have already seen this year with the Nevada Caucuses and South Carolina primary. In past years, the first two Saturdays after the windows open have been somewhat busy. In 2016, three states held primaries or caucuses on the first Saturday in March (with one contest being held on the first Sunday in March and one contest being held on the second Saturday in March). While the first Saturday in March was not an available date in 2012, the Republicans had four caucuses on the second Saturday in March. On the first available weekend in February 2008, four caucuses and one primary took place.
This year, the weekend after Super Tuesday had no contests, and only one contest is scheduled for the second weekend in March. That contest is the Northern Marianas which will hold its convention on March 14. The Northern Marianas is an “unincorporated territory” consisting of the islands in the Marianas Archipelego (excluding Guam). The contest in the Northern Marianas is a territory-wide convention. In 2016, less than 200 people attended the convention.
This is only the second time that the people in Northern Marianas will be electing delegates to the national convention. My hunch is that, even though every delegate counts, the major candidates are unlikely to put much effort into this contest, and the vote will be based on what news media and social media coverage Democrats in that territory have seen. In other words, name recognition and success in the earlier contests will count for a lot.
Also posted in 2020DNC, Delegates, Primary Elections
Tagged 2020 Delegate Seletion Plans, 2020 Pesidential Primary, Northern Marianas
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2020 Delegate Math — March 10
There is just a little bit of room between Super Tuesday and March 10 for everyone to catch their breath. Over the past seven days, over half of the candidates have dropped out, and we are left with three candidates (Joe Biden, Tulsi Gabbard, and Bernie Sanders.)
While we are down to three candidates, one word of warning is appropriate. As we saw on Super Tuesday, some states have no excuse early voting or mail-in ballots. On Super Tuesday, we saw some significant differences between the early vote count and the “election day” count. Simply put, people who voted early may have voted for a candidate who was no longer actively running. It is unclear if any of these candidates will ultimately win a delegate, but some of these candidates did get a significant number of votes in some states. The extra seven days should lessen this effect, but there could be — depending on the state — a significant number of voters who voted before February 28th, and some of these voters went with one of the five candidates who are no longer running.
There are seven contests which will conclude on March 10. (I use the term conclude because one of them — Democrats Abroad — is a party-run primary in which the polls are open for almost one week and others allow early voting.) Besides Democrats Abroad, the other six contests are Idaho, Michigan, Missouri, Mississippi, North Dakota, and Washington. While nominally styled as a caucus, North Dakota is a party-run primary. Idaho, Michigan, Missouri, Mississippi, and Washington are state-run primaries. (Washington like California relies heavily on mail-in ballots which can cause a delay in getting final results.) Under the rules of the Democratic Party, all of these contests are binding and delegates will be allocated based on the votes cast for each candidate.
Also posted in 2020DNC, Delegates, Primary Elections
Tagged 2020 Delegate Selection Plans, 2020 Pesidential Primary, Democrats Abroad, Idaho, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, North Dakota, Washington
Comments Off on 2020 Delegate Math — March 10
Delegate Math 2020 — Super Tuesday (Part 4 — California and Texas)
Texas and California as the two largest states in the country are the big prizes on Super Tuesday. They also have several unusual features that will impact the process.
For Texas, early voting is a significant percentage of the vote. By definition, people who vote early are locked in regardless of developments that occur between when they vote and the election. In Nevada, we saw a solid majority of the vote coming from people who voted before the Nevada debate. In Texas, we could easily have a majority of the vote coming from people who voted before the South Carolina debate (or the results from South Carolina). The other big thing that makes Texas different is how it splits the district-level delegates. The national rules only require that states with multiple congressional districts elect delegates from the individual congressional district or some smaller district. For over thirty years, Texas has used its state senate districts rather than congressional districts in its delegate selection process. Texas has 31 state senate districts. Back in the 1980s and 1990s, Texas had fewer than 31 seats in Congress. Since 2000, Texas has had more than 31 representatives in Congress. Even though state senate districts are now larger than congressional districts, Texas still uses state senate districts to allocate district-level delegates.
What makes California somewhat unique (some other Pacific Coast states have similar rules) is its liberal rules on voting by mail. A mail ballot can be dropped off at a ballot drop-off location up until the time that polls close. In addition, a mail ballot counts if it is mailed on or before election day and received within three days of the election. Approximately two-thirds of the vote in California is by mail-in or other early vote. Counting the mail-in vote typically takes several weeks. Often there is a significant difference between in-person votes on election day and mail-in ballots. Given how little it takes to change the delegate count in California, any initial estimate of the delegates won in California are just an estimate and the final results could see a change of a delegate in a congressional district or three or four state-wide delegates.
Also posted in Delegates, Primary Elections
Tagged 2020 Delegate Selection Plans, 2020 Democratic Primaries, 2020 Pesidential Primary, California, Texas
Comments Off on Delegate Math 2020 — Super Tuesday (Part 4 — California and Texas)
Delegate Math 2020 — Super Tuesday (Part 3 — Late States)
Aside from the big two states (California and Texas), there are three states that will close their polls after 7:00 p.m. CST — Arkansas, Colorado, Utah. Arkansas and Utah are small red states. Colorado is a medium-size purple-blue state. Between these three states, there are fifteen congressional districts with between two and nine delegates each.
A basic reminder, the rules of the Democratic Party requires each state to have district level delegates (roughly 65% of the state’s total), at-large delegates (roughly 22% of the state’s total), and party leader delegates (roughly 12% of the state’s total). The district level delegates are split between the districts (usually congressional districts) in the state typically based on votes in past elections. Each of the pools of delegate (each district is a separate pool) is based on the results in the area covered by the pool (the individual district for a district-level delegates and the state-wide results for the at-large and party-leader pools). It usually takes 15% of the vote for a candidate to be viable. And the delegates are allocated proportionately based on the percentage of the qualified vote (the total vote for all viable candidates) that each candidate receives. The percentages below assume that only viable candidates receive votes, As the early states have shown, with this many candidates, a significant portion of the vote will go to non-viable candidates. As such, it is likely that candidates will earn additional delegates despite not reaching the target numbers described below. Covering all possible situations (number of viable candidates, percentage of vote that goes to the viable candidates, etc.) would, however, lengthen these posts by a significant amount. As long as we still have seven candidates qualifying for the debate stage and potentially qualifying for delegates in a district, we will have to go with this oversimplified calculation.
With Mayor Pete Buttigieg deciding on Sunday to join Tom Steyer on the sidelines, we are down to six major candidates, four of whom have won delegates in prior contests and two of whom have not. One of those two, however, is Mayor Michael Bloomberg who is almost certain to win delegates. So in most districts, we are probably looking at somewhere between two and five viable candidates.
Also posted in Delegates, Primary and Caucus Results
Tagged 2020 Delegate Selection Plans, 2020 Democratic Primaries, Arkansas, Colorado, Utah
Comments Off on Delegate Math 2020 — Super Tuesday (Part 3 — Late States)
Delegate Math 2020 — Super Tuesday (Part 2 — Early Prime Time States)
On any election day, 8:00 p.m. EST/7:00 p.m. CST, is a key time when polls close in a significant number of states in the Eastern and Central time zones. (For the general election, the polls close in seventeen states at that time, the largest single batch of states.) On Super Tuesday, six states will close their polls at that time: Alabama, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oklahoma, and Tennessee. As with the states closing earlier that evening, poll closing is not an exact end to the voting. Instead, all voters still in line at a precinct still get to vote. Additionally, election workers have to get the ballots from the precinct to a centralized vote counting location. So there is a lag between the polls closing and the results being reported. However, this time is when the news media can release exit polls and make projections and counties can report the totals from early votes.
Before going much further into the details, one significant change from earlier reports. Maine law currently allow parties to opt to use ranked-choice voting for their primaries. Early drafts of the Maine delegate selection plan indicated that the Maine Democrats would use ranked-choice voting. Ultimately, the party decided against using ranked-choice voting. (Apparently, Maine’s law required a party using ranked-choice to continue the process until one candidate got a majority of the vote and did not give the option of using it to determine who met a party’s threshold for delegates).
While Tom Steyer has ended his campaign, we still have five candidates in the race who have won delegates in at least one state. We also have Michael Bloomberg who has put a lot of money into these states. So far, we have not had any district (or state-wide) result in which more than four candidates reached 15%, but every one of these six candidates has at least one state or district in which they expect to be viable. How many are viable in each district will impact the math for the distribution. (And with early voting/absentee ballots and his ad spending, Tom Steyer could still get a significant number of votes in some locations even if he is not viable.)
Also posted in Delegates, Primary Elections
Tagged 2020 Delegate Selection Plans, Alabama, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Tennessee
Comments Off on Delegate Math 2020 — Super Tuesday (Part 2 — Early Prime Time States)
What if they gave a Convention and Nobody came?
Last evening the first community based US coronavirus case was announced. There is never just one. And so, just like flu hits different areas of the country at different times, there will be pockets and hot spots, and then they’ll clear and there will be others.
In China, the first cases arose in November of 2019. (Yes, that’s correct, not December.) It was noticed by medical personnel in December, who were silenced by the regime (and several later died), and not “believed” by the Xi regime until late January, when they began locking down China. It is now two months later, and China is still in partial lock-down. It will take another few months, at least, to get back to full speed.
The difference between China (and Italy, Iran, South Korea and Japan) is that we know it’s coming, and we are learning every day from what those countries do what works and what doesn’t. And we know the best possible thing to do is to test people, and the worst possible thing to do is to place large numbers of people in an enclosed space. Like, um, a political convention with people coming from all over the country, and journalists coming from other countries.
Also posted in 2020DNC, Coronavirus, COVID-19, Notes from Your Doctor, Pandemic
Tagged 2020DNC, Coronavirus, COVID-19, pandemic
3 Comments
Contested Convention? — February 2020 Edition
The eleven days between New Hampshire and Nevada is the third longest “break” of the primary process. So with a little time to spare before the pace picks up (and March is the busiest month in the primary cycle), time to turn to one of the perennial topics of discussion in the primary process. (Whether there is a second edition this year will depend on how things look at the next major break — the three weeks between Wisconsin and the Mid-Atlantic states. Every four years, there is speculation about the possibility that the race will not be decided until the convention. And every four years, by mid-April, it’s pretty clear that the race is over. So why has this speculation been wrong in the past and why might it be true this year (or why will the speculation go bust again this year).
Before getting to the issue of a contested convention, there is a question of terminology. Many people talk about the possibility of a “brokered” convention. Prior to 1968, state party leaders had solid control over the delegate selection process. Most states used a caucus system with little if any role for presidential preference in the election of delegates. The delegates elected tended to be loyal to state party leaders not to any particular presidential candidate. And even if an individual delegate might want to go rogue, there were tools like the unit rule mandating that a state vote as a block (i.e. as the majority of the delegation decided) to prevent it. So, even if the convention only went one ballot, most conventions for 130 years were brokered conventions in the sense that the party leaders talked with each other and reached an agreement as to who should be the nominee (sometimes on the first ballot and sometimes after many, many ballots).
Since 1968, the two parties have enacted mechanisms in which presidential preference in the primary/caucus controls the vote on the first ballot. The Republican rules give a little less power to the presidential candidate, but the typical Democratic delegate is more loyal to the candidate than to the state party leadership. Even that loyalty is loyalty to a movement and, not necessarily, to the personal success of the candidate. In other words, it is unclear that — in the case of a contested convention — presidential candidates could deliver their delegates.
Also posted in Primary Elections
Tagged Contested Convention, proportional representation, Superdelegates.
2 Comments