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As the major presidential candidates are biting and scratching their way to get a majority of the delegates, let’s take a closer look at how those delegates are doled out.  Simply put, a presidential candidate has to get a majority of the delegates to become the party’s nominee.  But it’s not always quite that simple, as we’re seeing today.  

We only pay attention to how a candidate wins the nomination when the contest is close and the competition for delegates is fierce.  The more you look into the nominating process, the more convoluted and ridiculous it appears.  The simplest way I’ve found to think of this, is that the political parties aren’t government institutions, they’re more like strange political clubs that can do whatever they want.  They could nominate a slice of swiss cheese if they changed their rules.

Each state has different rules and delegates are awarded in different ways depending on where you win and by how much you win.  The entire nominating process reminds me of the housing market before the ’08 implosion, “our entire economy is based on this?!”  Our nation’s leadership is based on this?!  The more you look, the weirder it gets.  (It all matters less, though, the more a frontrunner pulls ahead.)

Citations

[1] Ted Cruz and John Kasich team up in deal to stop Donald Trump | US elections 2016 | The Guardian ➤ https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/apr/25/ted-cruz-and-john-kasich-team-up-in-deal-to-stop-trump[2]https://www.bustle.com/articles/143094-how-would-superdelegates-affect-a-contested-convention-the-gop-rules-are-really-really-complicated[3]https://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/12/opinion/campaign-stops/the-not-so-super-delegates.html?_r=0[4]https://www.newsday.com/news/nation/gop-presidential-race-how-a-brokered-convention-would-work-1.11724765[5]https://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/27/us/politics/donald-trump-hillary-clinton.html