Nah, he'd say that anything that causes us to question everything we think that we know is healthy for the scientific community. We want to know more, not less![]()
There's a big difference between encountering magic and hoping magic happens


;(
Nah, he'd say that anything that causes us to question everything we think that we know is healthy for the scientific community. We want to know more, not less![]()
Don't see how this ends peacefully even if he gets the nomination.
Don't see how this ends peacefully even if he gets the nomination.
Had Cruz won some SEC states, he would probably be on his way to the nomination. He has lost every one of those though. I don't see him doing well in states like New York, Pennsylvania, Jersey, and such. He may be too conservative for Northern Republicans.
Plus Cruz does really well in caucus states which only three remain.
Plus he did well in Maine because it's close to Canada.Had Cruz won some SEC states, he would probably be on his way to the nomination. He has lost every one of those though. I don't see him doing well in states like New York, Pennsylvania, Jersey, and such. He may be too conservative for Northern Republicans.
Plus Cruz does really well in caucus states which only three remain.
I love how the Republican parties only hope is the batshit crazy Cruz... It's quite fascinating.
Cruz is definitely a bit crazy when it comes to his religious views, but he is also a brilliant guy. An evil genius maybe. Lol.
Plus he did well in Maine because it's close to Canada.
There's a big difference between encountering magic and hoping magic happens
;(
The delegates are free to vote how they want after the first ballot, Rubio's endorsement wouldn't compel them to do anything.Thanks to all who responded my caucus vs primary question. I have another one though:
What's keeping Ted from overcoming Trump at the snap of a finger if Rubio folds and endorsers Cruz? Wouldn't that give Cruz all of Rubio's delegates this making Cruz the front runner at a moment's notice?
What do you mean by first ballot?The delegates are free to vote how they want after the first ballot, Rubio's endorsement wouldn't compel them to do anything.
All of the hard delegates are locked into their vote on the first ballot though.
Thanks to all who responded my caucus vs primary question. I have another one though:
What's keeping Ted from overcoming Trump at the snap of a finger if Rubio folds and endorsers Cruz? Wouldn't that give Cruz all of Rubio's delegates this making Cruz the front runner at a moment's notice?
What do you mean by first ballot?
What a complicated system you guys have!
John Oliver wasn't kidding about Trump being insecure about his hands.
https://ballotpedia.org/Ballot_access_for_presidential_candidatesI'm sure this has been covered, but assuming this does end up in a brokered convention situation, is there ever a time where it becomes too late for Trump to go independent and form The Great Party? Like, if the GOP scheme works, he's not somehow prohibited from changing parties is he?
I'm sure this has been covered, but assuming this does end up in a brokered convention situation, is there ever a time where it becomes too late for Trump to go independent and form The Great Party? Like, if the GOP scheme works, he's not somehow prohibited from changing parties is he?
Has there ever been a case where a party's nominee didn't get the required number of delegates?So, all of these contests award delegates. These are people that will go to the Republican Convention in July (I think...) and they will put forward the nominees. Each state is seated in a group, and they award their delegates to the winner of their state's primary/caucus.
The first time this happens, it's the first ballot. Usually (ie everytime) someone has a majority of the delegates. Once that happens, that person is no longer the presumptive nominee but is the actual nominee.
If, however, no one has the required number of delegates, they go to a second ballot. At that point, the delegates are free to vote how they want (depending on the rules the RNC/DNC put in place). So, at that point, Rubio could tell his delegates "Vote for Cruz." They're free to do that. Or they're free to completely ignore him and vote for whomever they want. Then we keep going until someone gets 50%+1 of the delegates.
And, remember, this isn't a government thing. These are just party events. Each party sets the rules for this stuff. There's nothing in our Constitution that requires it. If the Democratic party wanted to pick a name out of the phone book, we could.
I'm sure this has been covered, but assuming this does end up in a brokered convention situation, is there ever a time where it becomes too late for Trump to go independent and form The Great Party? Like, if the GOP scheme works, he's not somehow prohibited from changing parties is he?
Has there ever been a case where a party's nominee didn't get the required number of delegates?
Not in the modern era. There hasn't been a brokered convention since primaries became a thing. The last time was in 1952. However, the party has to vote until someone is nominated. I think the record is 102 ballots.Has there ever been a case where a party's nominee didn't get the required number of delegates?
Will the dem race still be viable by Washington's caucus at the end of March?
Will the dem race still be viable by Washington's caucus at the end of March?
Will the dem race still be viable by Washington's caucus at the end of March?
Is it still a race now?
Unless something big and unexpected happens on the 15th the Dem race is over.
Probably the biggest no-no: He's used the Tea Party Reps in the house in ways that have overrided the establishments' wishes, threatening government shutdowns on his terms when the leadership had already worked out a compromise with dems.
Everyone in the GOP leadership hates his guts.
Never caucused before, willing to do it for Hillary, but I know our area will be majority sanders supporters.
Thanks for the info, no wonder he is considered an outsider
Whoever you caucus for, expect a shitshow. It's basically subjecting people to peer pressure for the better part of an hour or two. Why it's still a thing I couldn't tell you.
For some reason, it's cheaper than a primary.Whoever you caucus for, expect a shitshow. It's basically subjecting people to peer pressure for the better part of an hour or two. Why it's still a thing I couldn't tell you.
Great.....
For some reason, it's cheaper than a primary.
Whoever you caucus for, expect a shitshow. It's basically subjecting people to peer pressure for the better part of an hour or two. Why it's still a thing I couldn't tell you.
Not all states are WTA, I'm pretty sure California and New York are still proportional.States on and after March 15th become winner take all. Some huge delegate states like New York, California, Jersey, Pennsylvania fall into that category. Florida is the first winner take all state and why Rubio is hanging around. If he wins, he continues, if he loses, he is gone.
If all the states were proportional, the odds of a brokered convention would be higher I think. Winner take all states should make it less likely but certainly still possible.
I went to a republican caucus and it was tame and no one spoke. There were about 100 people there. So not always true.
A primary is typically paid for by the state. A Caucus is a party function. It's cheaper for the state. Still a disaster though.Some people actually like it, we had some Iowan on here who really had a bunch of fun doing it. It probably helps if both sides are fairly even.
I'd say go and give it a shot. Worst comes to worst and you find it sucks, start a movement to get your state on a primary system instead.
No shit? Just from how it works I'd assume it would be more expensive.
I would agree with this. Might as well give it a try to see what it is all about. I caucuses in Iowa for Hillary and I had a good time, for the most part. I can see why some people wouldn't like it.Some people actually like it, we had some Iowan on here who really had a bunch of fun doing it. It probably helps if both sides are fairly even.
I'd say go and give it a shot. Worst comes to worst and you find it sucks, start a movement to get your state on a primary system instead.
Cruz will probably now have to spend money in Florida. Rubio is probably not happy. Rubio desperately needs to win his home state.
I'm trying to see a path that gives Cruz enough delegates to outright win the nomination. Cruz needs to win some winner take all states like Florida, Ohio, New York and such. NY seems slim with the values attack a month or so ago. He really needed to have some big wins in the SEC states. Still possible I guess, but losing so many southern states is making his path very difficult.
These look very solid. I second all of them.oh this thread doubles as a march 8-15 super tuesday thread? cool
my predictions:
March 6:
Primary Open - Puerto Rico - Rubio
Caucus Closed - Maine - Sanders
March 8th
Primary Open - Mississippi - Clinton & Trump
Primary Open - Michigan - Clinton & Trump
Primary Closed - Idaho - Cruz
Caucus Closed - Hawaii - Cruz
It was a troubling night for Trump. I think he hit all of his delegate targets to still be on track for 1237, but Cruz performed much better than expected. Whether that was due to the nature of the contests (3/4 were caucuses and all of them were closed), the geographical location, or indeed a surge of support for Cruz, it's hard to say... but it does appear that Rubio is fading and Cruz is picking up his scraps, which is bad news for Trump.So, I was drinking tonight and missed the results. But as far as I can tell, Bernie and Clinton had good nights. And Trump and Cruz did as well?
So, I was drinking tonight and missed the results. But as far as I can tell, Bernie and Clinton had good nights. And Trump and Cruz did as well?
These look very solid. I second all of them.
Question is, will Cruz reach 50% in Idaho? Will Donald "When did we beat Japan at anything?" Trump meet the 20% threshold in Puerto Rico? Does Kasich finish second or even challenge for first in Michigan? It will be interesting to see if Rubio is collapsing and support is indeed coalescing behind Cruz... if so, Mississippi may be in play for Cruz.
It was a troubling night for Donald "When did we beat Japan at anything?" Trump. I think he hit all of his delegate targets to still be on track for 1237, but Cruz performed much better than expected. Whether that was due to the nature of the contests (3/4 were caucuses and all of them were closed), the geographical location, or indeed a surge of support for Cruz, it's hard to say... but it does appear that Rubio is fading and Cruz is picking up his scraps, which is bad news for Donald "When did we beat Japan at anything?" Trump.