ericlp
Diamond Member
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/seth-abramson/this-is-the-one-way-in-wh_b_10026870.html
After winning more than 60 percent of the pledged delegates through March 1st, Clinton is now likely to lose the majority of pledged delegates awarded between March 2nd and June 14th a two and a half month period that makes up roughly the final two-thirds of the Democratic nominating process.
But it isnt just this as striking a fact as it is that has caused real concern about whether Clinton can win in the fall. Its also that Clintons unfavorables have risen to historic levels; that Clinton performs consistently worse than Sanders against Donald Trump in both general election and battleground-state polling; that there are states (for instance, Georgia, Arizona, and Ohio) that polling shows Sanders would win and Clinton would lose in the general election, along with many others (among them New Hampshire and Pennsylvania) where Clinton is in a dead heat with Trump and Sanders wins handily; that Clinton loses independent voters to Trump while Sanders wins them overwhelmingly; that Clinton cant draw crowds with even a fraction of the numbers or energy that Sanders crowds routinely have; that Clinton isnt considered nearly as honest or trustworthy as Sanders, according to every poll of voters; and that a movement candidate will be needed to defeat Donald Trump, whereas, instead of a movement candidate, what Clinton is giving the Democrats is Al Gore 2.0.
The problem, in sum, is that Clinton is looking like a clear November loser, and Sanders a probable November winner.
There are only so many more times that Sanders supporters can blow the trumpet alerting you to the trap youve set for yourselves and, should Trump secure the presidency, the nightmare youve orchestrated for the rest of the nation...
Vote Wisely in California, don't muck it up!
If you given a provisional ballot, refuse it (as it's often not counted) and ask for a crossover ballot. 🙂
After winning more than 60 percent of the pledged delegates through March 1st, Clinton is now likely to lose the majority of pledged delegates awarded between March 2nd and June 14th a two and a half month period that makes up roughly the final two-thirds of the Democratic nominating process.
But it isnt just this as striking a fact as it is that has caused real concern about whether Clinton can win in the fall. Its also that Clintons unfavorables have risen to historic levels; that Clinton performs consistently worse than Sanders against Donald Trump in both general election and battleground-state polling; that there are states (for instance, Georgia, Arizona, and Ohio) that polling shows Sanders would win and Clinton would lose in the general election, along with many others (among them New Hampshire and Pennsylvania) where Clinton is in a dead heat with Trump and Sanders wins handily; that Clinton loses independent voters to Trump while Sanders wins them overwhelmingly; that Clinton cant draw crowds with even a fraction of the numbers or energy that Sanders crowds routinely have; that Clinton isnt considered nearly as honest or trustworthy as Sanders, according to every poll of voters; and that a movement candidate will be needed to defeat Donald Trump, whereas, instead of a movement candidate, what Clinton is giving the Democrats is Al Gore 2.0.
The problem, in sum, is that Clinton is looking like a clear November loser, and Sanders a probable November winner.
There are only so many more times that Sanders supporters can blow the trumpet alerting you to the trap youve set for yourselves and, should Trump secure the presidency, the nightmare youve orchestrated for the rest of the nation...
Vote Wisely in California, don't muck it up!
If you given a provisional ballot, refuse it (as it's often not counted) and ask for a crossover ballot. 🙂