A couple of
days ago New Hampshire had their primary election. In the Democratic race, Bernie Sanders
cleaned Hillary Clinton’s plow, every spec of dirt from it. Or, at first glance, it appeared that
way. Sanders received 60% of the
Democrats’ votes to Clinton’s 38%. As
you know, a primary election is held to determine committed delegates to the
party’s convention from each state. The
results mentioned above gave Sanders 15 delegates and Clinton 9. Ah, but New Hampshire has another 8 “Super
Delegates” that have the same voting power as the people’s delegates, but have
no responsibility to vote as the people voted.
So far, 6 of the 8 “Super Delegates” have cast their votes for Clinton,
bringing the present results of the election to a tie. The other two Supers haven’t committed yet,
but probably soon will vote for Clinton, giving her the surprise win in New
Hampshire. These two Supers will quietly
cast their votes after the results are in for South Carolina. You won’t notice them. It is the Democratic Party in action. Clinton will be the Democrat’s nomination for
the Presidency in 2016 and she will have the dirtiest plow you have ever
seen. The Party will not allow Bernie to
be the gentleman that he is and clean it for her.
I go to
votesmart.org for my information on political candidates. They seem not to editorialize the information
they present on subjects like: voting records, education, background and
donations received. It gives a very
clear picture of the candidate. Most of
the data is fascinating. For instance,
the site showed Clinton’s top contributor as Goldman Sachs, several weeks ago. Some of the criticism of her, by the press
and the Sanders’ campaign, was her closeness to G-S and Wall Street in general. If you look at Vote Smart today, Goldman
Sachs doesn’t appear as a Clinton donor, but there is an unspecified lender
debt of nearly a million dollars. Could
there be a connection? The dark money,
Pac Money, will really begin to flow very soon. Thanks to Citizens United, there is a 74
million dollar basket with Clinton money in it.
Clinton’s campaign has about 38 million today and Sanders has about 28
million. He has no giant corporate
donors. All that Bernie has is
voters. When the 74 million is handed to
the Clinton campaign, the race is run.
So the 2016 race will be Clinton vs. Trump.
The
Republican powers that be, seem to treat Trump better than the Democratic
powers treat Sanders. Trump gets the
delegates equal to his primary votes.
Trump can still run an independent campaign that will hand the election
to the Democrats. The Republican Fathers
will not mess with Donald, but if Trump is the Republican candidate, Clinton
wins. The independents are presently the
largest voting block and even though they won’t vote as a block, I don’t see
the independents voting largely for Trump.
Hell, a lot of Republicans won’t vote for Trump. By the time the contest in the Republican
primaries is down to two candidates, Trump and Bush (the candidate of the
powerful), the Trump train will have the momentum to win the nomination and for
probably the first time ever, the Party will not get to run their choice. I see this as a good thing. Political Parties, both of them, have
outlived their usefulness. The first
small step in this direction is the removal of “Super Delegates” from the
election system. “Power to the people.” “There is only time to iron your cape … then
back to the sky.”
Cheers, Old
Buz
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