Subject: Pelosi refines comments on superdelegates
Time: 1:24:00 PM EDT
Author: ddawncrawford71
Mood: Chillin'
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Does the voice and vote of the people really matter? When it comes to superdelegates, democracy and the will of the people go out the window. High profile politicians are always preaching the American democratic way of life in foreign lands. Our government even tries to force our culture and system of government on others. However, it's clear that our vote and voice don't really matter right here in a America. Here our votes don't decide it's the vote and voice of the Superdelegates, So much for the voice and vote of the people. Who picks the superdelegates anyway? Democracy in America is a joke but it's know laughing matter. Something needs to be done to ensure the will of the people and to make sure that every vote counts. Instead, superdelegates do the opposite. A lawsuit needs to be filed when the superdelegates decide who will win the nomination and not the vote of the American people. I don't understand why they even have us vote anyway if they are just going to use their unjust power to over turn the will of the people anyway. Oh yeah, we vote to give a false impression world wide that we have democracy. I'm outraged and you should be as well. InAmerica we give a false impression that we have democracy. The superdelegate process slaps democracy right in the face and shows the world that we don't have democracy. As a country we need to practice what we preach. Welcome to America and welcome to the land of bull S---. Help Support Students Against Corruption | ||||
Pelosi refines comments on superdelegates
Both Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Barack Obama campaigned today in Pennsylvania where the next Democratic primary will be held on April 22. Sen. John McCain, the presumptive GOP nominee, campaigned in Virginia.
Speaking on ABC's "Good Morning America," Pelosi said that the Democratic superdelegates have a right to vote their consciences rather than just be bound by the results of the contests in their home districts or states.
Previously, Pelosi (D-San Francisco) had said she thought the votes of the superdelegates should follow the results of the contests during the primary and caucus season. That view seemed to support the position of the Obama campaign and was immediately criticized in a letter by 20 key fund-raisers for the Clinton campaign.
The issue focuses attention on the power that the almost 800 superdelegates will wield in the Democratic nomination process. Obama is about 130 pledged delegates and superdelegates ahead of Clinton, according to the Associated Press. But with 10 contests remaining, neither candidate seems likely to reach the 2,024 needed for the nomination.
Clinton is ahead with just the superdelegates, but about 40% of them have yet to announce their choice. That means that the superdelegates -- office-holders and party officials -- will likely cast the deciding votes in the nominating process.
Both campaigns have made strong pitches to the superdelegates. Obama has argued that since he is ahead with the popular vote, pledged delegates and money raised, he should get the superdelegates' support. Clinton has argued that she has won the major states, with the most electoral votes in the November general election. Both claim they can beat McCain.
There have been calls by Obama supporters to end the current battles by having Clinton withdraw. She, supported by Obama, has rejected those requests.
Speaking to labor leaders in Philadelphia, Clinton compared herself to Rocky Balboa, the chump boxer who redeems himself in the movie "Rocky" and its sequels. She compared the state of the nomination race to a famous movie scene, in which Balboa races up museum steps to get into shape for a championship bout.
Dropping out now, she said, would be as if "Rocky Balboa had gotten halfway up those art museum steps and said: 'Well, I guess that's about far enough.' "
"Let me tell you something -- when it comes to finishing a fight, Rocky and I have a lot in common. I never quit. I never give up. And neither do the American people," Clinton said in excerpts of her prepared remarks.
She also announced plans to create 3 million jobs by increasing funding for infrastructure.
Obama, in an interview taped Monday and aired today on NBC's "Today Show," said Clinton "has certainly earned the right to stay in this race as long as she wants. . . . I think she deserves to be able to run and make her case."
Pelosi this morning repeated her past comments that, in her view, it would hurt the party's chances in November if voters believe that superdelegates were overturning the will of the people as demonstrated in the primaries and caucuses.
"I think the election has to run its course," Pelosi said today. "I think that for all that I have said about respecting the will of the people, that the inference to be drawn from that is that we have to continue the election in terms of hearing from the people.
"I do think that it is important for us to get behind one candidate a long time before we go to the Democratic National Convention if we hope to win in November," Pelosi said.
With the GOP nomination all but assured, McCain has concentrated on reintroducing himself to audiences. He has been talking about the key influences on his life.
Today he campaigned at his alma mater, Episcopal High School in Alexandria, Va., where he praised a former teacher, William B. Ravenel, the subject of a Web ad distributed by the campaign.
"His influence in my life was more important and more benevolent than that of any person outside my family. Mr. Ravenel was head of the English department, and coached the junior varsity football team, on which I played. He had been a star running back at Davidson College and had a master's degree in English from Duke. Like most men of his generation, he had known far greater danger than that posed by a tough defensive line. He had served in Patton's tank corps during the Third Army's aggressive advance across Europe, and had survived hard encounters with Hitler's Panzer divisions. He was a lieutenant colonel in the Army Reserve, the only master at school who still served in the military.
"He seemed to his students to be as wise and capable as anyone could expect to be," McCain said.
michael.muskal@latimes.com
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