Superdelegates Still Super, Say Superdelegates
Democrats keep superdelegates but make them slightly less influential.
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Democrats keep superdelegates but make them slightly less influential.
Is there really a good reason for her to stop, other than widespread impatience with the primary process? According to the pundits, there are a lot of good reasons!
We look into the issues and pressures that they are mulling over this week.
Clinton's second wind may last only until the next primaries are decided or it may have come too late to change the end result of the race, no matter what happens on May 6. Either way, right now she's psyched.
No mere man can control the will of the superdelegates, a rogue and fractious species if ever there was one. Especially because, as a group, they really have no idea what to do.
One would assume that insulting a large block of swing voters is not a good thing, but perhaps they've been too busy hunting, praying, and hating immigrants to really care.
To do so, the junior senator from New York must make the right pitch, or gain enough momentum, to win over the superdelegates, those now-omnipotent stars of the Democratic party who will have to push one candidate over the top.