Quote by Scoopster:
Mornin' all!Some fun facts about the above graphic..
- In the five boroughs of NYC, with a population of 15 Million +, only ~107.5k votes were cast in the GOP primary.
- Hillary's margins outside of NYC came in areas not only with cities, but with high student populations (Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse) where you'd expect Bernie's base to clean up. The notable exception is Albany/Rensellaer.
- Clinton County (waaay upstate) was won by Sanders, while Pete Seeger's home county Rockland was won by Clinton.
Quote by wickedpam:
Morning![]()
Hm, New York looks like Virginia when it votes. NoVA seems to move the whole state like NY's major metro's move NY state.
Quote by Raine:Quote by wickedpam:
Morning![]()
Hm, New York looks like Virginia when it votes. NoVA seems to move the whole state like NY's major metro's move NY state.
Virginia is an awful lot like NYS. I tell that to a lot of people and I don;t think they quite believe me, The graphic above is proof!
Quote by Raine:Quote by Scoopster:
Mornin' all!Some fun facts about the above graphic..
- In the five boroughs of NYC, with a population of 15 Million +, only ~107.5k votes were cast in the GOP primary.
- Hillary's margins outside of NYC came in areas not only with cities, but with high student populations (Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse) where you'd expect Bernie's base to clean up. The notable exception is Albany/Rensellaer.
- Clinton County (waaay upstate) was won by Sanders, while Pete Seeger's home county Rockland was won by Clinton.
Spot on, Scoop!
Quote by BobR:Quote by Raine:Quote by Scoopster:
Mornin' all!Some fun facts about the above graphic..
- In the five boroughs of NYC, with a population of 15 Million +, only ~107.5k votes were cast in the GOP primary.
- Hillary's margins outside of NYC came in areas not only with cities, but with high student populations (Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse) where you'd expect Bernie's base to clean up. The notable exception is Albany/Rensellaer.
- Clinton County (waaay upstate) was won by Sanders, while Pete Seeger's home county Rockland was won by Clinton.
Spot on, Scoop!
Sorry - your graphic disappeared when I merged the blogs.
Nonetheless - I found it interesting that if you change Bernie's color to red, the map will likely look exactly like the presidential voting map
Quote by Will in Chicago:
I suspect that the primaries will continue for a while for both parties. First, candidates will want to influence the platform. (Bernie Sanders in particular may want to see how he can shape the party in the long run.) Secondly, the candidates still have a lot of money.
I do question the wisdom of a law to take voters off of a party's rolls after two years. I think that New Yorkers may want to take a look at that law.
As for the GOP, I fear nothing will be settled before Cleveland.
Quote by Mondobubba:
Yeah, I have seen the whining and whinging from the Bernie Bros who are Facebook friends about the voting laws in NYS and closed primaries. To them, I say, boo-freaking-hoo. Learn the laws, make sure your registration is correct. Make sure you made the change long enough in advance. Stop whining about how closed primaries are unfair. I always felt that registering as in independent was a waste of time. Make up you mind and join a party.
Quote by Scoopster:Quote by Will in Chicago:
I suspect that the primaries will continue for a while for both parties. First, candidates will want to influence the platform. (Bernie Sanders in particular may want to see how he can shape the party in the long run.) Secondly, the candidates still have a lot of money.
I do question the wisdom of a law to take voters off of a party's rolls after two years. I think that New Yorkers may want to take a look at that law.
As for the GOP, I fear nothing will be settled before Cleveland.
About Sanders & the Party - this article is pretty good laying out how the campaign should morph into a force to change the party from within (and perhaps all those rules they're so upset about can be tweaked as a result).
Donald Trump still has a chance to capture the Republican presidential nomination on the first ballot at the party’s national convention this summer, thanks in part to his commanding victory in New York on Tuesday.
Unlike past GOP nominees, however, he might not have carte blanche to pick his running mate.
Delegates at the convention in Cleveland will vote separately on the nominations for president and vice president, and there is a key difference in the rules governing each vote: Although most of the delegates will be bound by their states to vote for a certain presidential candidate on the first ballot, none of them are required to vote for any candidate for vice president.
Quote by Scoopster:
NPR brings up a REALLY good point.
Quote by TriSec:
See now, Massachusetts has a partially open primary. Registered party members have to take a party ballot, but unenrolled voters can pick any party ballot they like.
We only had a couple of folks at my precinct have issues; mostly registered Dems that wanted to vote Trump but weren't allowed to do so.
Manafort says Trump wants Republicans and independents, “not the party bosses,†to choose the nominee. Lewandowski complains that in some states, delegates are chosen based on “whether they run for statewide office and how much volunteering they have done,†while other applicants are slighted “because they haven't been involved the last 25 years. That’s everything that’s wrong with the party system.â€
Everything that’s wrong with the party system? Dude, that is the party system. A party is an organization. It has every right to award clout based on how much work you’ve put in over the years. Why should drive-by independents get more say than party bosses? I should know: I was one of those independents. In 2000, the Maryland Republican Party allowed people like me to vote in its presidential primary. I voted for John McCain over George W. Bush. McCain was a better fit for people like me. But was he a better fit for the party? And isn’t that the point of a Republican primary—to choose a candidate who will represent the GOP?
Quote by Mondobubba:
Primaries Aren't Suppose to be Democratic.Manafort says Trump wants Republicans and independents, “not the party bosses,†to choose the nominee. Lewandowski complains that in some states, delegates are chosen based on “whether they run for statewide office and how much volunteering they have done,†while other applicants are slighted “because they haven't been involved the last 25 years. That’s everything that’s wrong with the party system.â€
Everything that’s wrong with the party system? Dude, that is the party system. A party is an organization. It has every right to award clout based on how much work you’ve put in over the years. Why should drive-by independents get more say than party bosses? I should know: I was one of those independents. In 2000, the Maryland Republican Party allowed people like me to vote in its presidential primary. I voted for John McCain over George W. Bush. McCain was a better fit for people like me. But was he a better fit for the party? And isn’t that the point of a Republican primary—to choose a candidate who will represent the GOP?
Quote by Raine:Quote by Mondobubba:
Primaries Aren't Suppose to be Democratic.Manafort says Trump wants Republicans and independents, “not the party bosses,†to choose the nominee. Lewandowski complains that in some states, delegates are chosen based on “whether they run for statewide office and how much volunteering they have done,†while other applicants are slighted “because they haven't been involved the last 25 years. That’s everything that’s wrong with the party system.â€
Everything that’s wrong with the party system? Dude, that is the party system. A party is an organization. It has every right to award clout based on how much work you’ve put in over the years. Why should drive-by independents get more say than party bosses? I should know: I was one of those independents. In 2000, the Maryland Republican Party allowed people like me to vote in its presidential primary. I voted for John McCain over George W. Bush. McCain was a better fit for people like me. But was he a better fit for the party? And isn’t that the point of a Republican primary—to choose a candidate who will represent the GOP?
I will admit in advance, I have not read the articelm but I have long held the belief that primaries are not democratic. Federal elections are. Primaries are run by oganizations.
I know people don;t like to hear it, but it is what it is.
Quote by Scoopster:
So.. changing the subject here for a moment...
Who's been keeping up with Better Call Saul this season?
Quote by Mondobubba:Quote by Scoopster:
So.. changing the subject here for a moment...
Who's been keeping up with Better Call Saul this season?
Me! Oh me! Meeeee! What do you think Chuck is going to do with Jimmy's confession?
Quote by trojanrabbit:
Every day I get closer to the day that I fucking pull the plug on Facebook because of the squabbling. Either that or every news organization's pages get blocked.
Quote by Scoopster:Quote by Mondobubba:Quote by Scoopster:
So.. changing the subject here for a moment...
Who's been keeping up with Better Call Saul this season?
Me! Oh me! Meeeee! What do you think Chuck is going to do with Jimmy's confession?Before I begin... ![]()
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Definitely ruin his partnership/relationship, attempt to get him disbarred but fail somehow. Now that we're starting to see some of the forecasting to Breaking Bad, I'm guessing it'll be a connection to Papa Salamanca or yet-to-be-seen Gus.
Quote by livingonli:
One interesting note, in two districts in Westchester County, Ted Cruz got fewer votes than Ben Carson.![]()