Bernie Sanders
Related: About this forumUpdated: New Hampshire in a nutshell:
Last edited Wed Feb 10, 2016, 02:50 PM - Edit history (1)
237 towns ----- Sanders = +226 Clinton = +5 Not reported = 6
(Several towns have fewer than 25 voters)
11 counties --- Sanders = +11 Clinton = +0
Edit: The five towns that Clinton won:
By:
1
1
1
2
39
http://www.cnn.com/election/primaries/states/nh/Dem
Art_from_Ark
(27,247 posts)mhatrw
(10,786 posts)In 2004, over 120 people voted in Democratic primary in Croydon.
Here were the results:
69 Obama
46 Clinton
18 Edwards
6 Richardson
2 Kucinich
There is no possible way Clinton won 17-0 in Croydon this primary. In fact, my guess is that when these results get corrected, Bernie will take Croydon in a landslide.
Contrary1
(12,629 posts)Croydon:
Sanders - 107
Clinton - 17
swilton
(5,069 posts)How can that be?
they are including super delegates to try to make it look like she is winner ehen untill convention they are ilrelvent and could
change as they did In 2008.
swilton
(5,069 posts)I'm trying to find out. Anyone know?
Contrary1
(12,629 posts)Bernie Sanders defeated Hillary Clinton in New Hampshires primary with 60 percent of the vote, but thats not the end of the story. Because of a peculiarity in the Democratic Partys nominating system, Clinton will likely receive more delegates from the state.
New Hampshire has 24 pledged delegates that are assigned based on the proportion of the popular vote received. Sanders received 60 percent of support in New Hampshires Democratic primary, giving him 15 pledged delegates. Hillary Clinton received 38 percent of the votes, putting her pledged delegate count at nine.
This seems simple enough, but Democratic National Committees method of assigning delegates complicates the matter. There are eight superdelegates, party officials that are free to support any candidate they please even if that support does not align with the wishes of voters. Six of those superdelegates have committed to Clinton, giving her a total of 15 delegates from New Hampshire as of Wednesday afternoon. The two remaining superdelegates have not committed for either candidate yet.
Clinton had a razor-thin victory in Iowa followed up by a crushing defeat in New Hampshire, putting her pledged delegated of 32 behind Sanderss 36. However, Clinton has an imposing lead over Sanders thanks to her 45-to-1 superdelegate advantage. She now has 431 delegates of all types supporting her, while Sanders only has 52, according to CNN.
There are 712 superdelegates in the DNC primaries. A Democratic presidential candidate needs 2,383 delegates of any type out of the 4,763 total to win the nomination.
https://www.rt.com/usa/332071-hillary-delegates-new-hampshire/