The Democratic Party began the formal vote to nominate Vice President Kamala Harris for president on Thursday.
The Democratic Party began the formal vote to nominate Vice President Kamala Harris for president on Thursday, kicking off a virtual roll call that will cement her status as the party's standard-bearer heading into November.
The Democratic National Committee opened the vote to the delegates who will decide the party's nominee at 9 a.m. Delegates are emailed a personalized and watermarked form, and they can either send the form back or have the DNC call them to cast their vote. Ballots are being sent on a rolling basis, and the process is expected to take several days, with the voting window closing at 6 p.m. on Aug. 5.
I'll always complain about my lack of a choice. I was pissed when they essentially anointed Biden during the primary cycle. I, like so many others, were rightly concerned about his age being a negative. But no...
I hope Kamala wins, I'm voting for her barring some cataclysmic fuck up, but we deserve to select our candidates.
There is some truth to this. I voted for Biden in good faith in the primaries. While I support Harris I did not vote for her. That is somewhat worrisome to me. That said, I am all in for Kamela. Fuck trump.
I do think that's an issue, tbf, I don't like the DNC playing king maker like this, but I recognize the unique situation they're in with this election.
That said, Biden belonging in a home not on a ballot isn't really a new issue, just one they put off until the very last minute, so I'm a bit bitter.
I dunno. Overall it feels like the importance of the voter is becoming less and less and its shifting towards the power of the party, but maybe that's the death of the innocence of youth and not a real change in how US elections work.
It's always been about the power of the party. Can you name a presidential candidate the DNC didn't want once they got the nomination? I sure can't. Not in my 47 years.
Biden was the one who forced the democrats' hand here. Besides, Kamala was picked by hundreds of elected democrats from across the country, independent of party pressure. I honestly see it as a bit of parliamentarianism how they picked the next candidate now.
I would love to see primary reform and election reform that makes elections more fair and democratic, though. No reason why we have to decide the candidate in January at the whim of Iowa and New Hampshire, and no reason why only two candidates should have a viable chance at winning.
The illusion of choice. We get to choose nothing that matters. But you do get to choose from over 25 brands of fast foods to make you fat and sick. So many choices of insurance companies and doctors to mask symptoms. -- George Carlin basically.
Can they nominate Biden, again? Then have Biden 'become ill', again? Then have Kamala replace him, again? Then have Republicans who just bought $100s of anti-Biden merch complain, again?
I live in Canada and I have never and never will get to vote for the head of the executive or my head of state. And yet parliamentary systems are still considered democracies.
Parliamentary systems are clearly fucking better - it's insane that president is a directly elected office in the US... That all said - it is a directly elected office so an election should happen.
I'll vote for Harris if she wins the roll call but I'm still disappointed there wasn't a mini-primary or at least an open convention.
Not sure about Canada specifically, maybe you could shed some light, but the US president has a lot more power than in a typical parlimentary system. This is typically why it's seen as essential that they are voted in directly. Would the US be better under a parlimentary system? Very valid debate.
Couldn't you join a party and then you get to vote for the parties leader ? Don't see much of a difference between that and the primary system other then you have to officially join the party, which I'm not sure what that entails, as opposed to just registering to vote for it.
I would never bother. Party membership isn't common. About 1 to 2 percent of Canadians are registered since there are usually fees and other requirements. Justin Trudeau was elected party leader in 2013. Around. 104,000 party members voted.
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