This afternoon, I went to the local stationery store to get a document notarized and faxed. My local stationery store happens to be run by Hasidism, members of an orthodox Jewish sect. I asked Moishe, “How do you feel knowing that a Brooklyn Jew is running for president?” He responded that Bernie can’t win because of the super-delegates. He informed me that Hillary won more delegates in New Hampshire than Bernie, even though Bernie won the popular vote by a wide margin.

 

How could this be? I went home, and googled the “super delegates Democratic party.” I came across this article which explains why the Democratic party has super delegates, who the super delegates are (members of Congress and bigwigs in the party), and how they tilt the field towards the establishment candidate. Moishe was right that Hillary won more delegates in New Hampshire than Bernie.  She won 15 delegates in New Hampshire and Bernie won 13. 

 

The author, Shane Ryan, writes that there will be 4,763 delegates in total at the Democratic convention. Of that number, 712 are “super delegates,” about 15 percent of the total. To win the nomination, a candidate needs 2,382 delegates.

 

Right now, Hillary has 394 delegates, and Bernie has 42.

 

Who are the super delegates?

 

Every Democratic member of Congress, House and Senate, is a Superdelegate (240 total). Every Democratic governor is a Superdelegate (20 total). Certain “distinguished party leaders,” 20 in all, are given Superdelegate status. And finally, the Democratic National Committee names an additional 432 Superdelegates—an honor that typically goes to mayors, chairs and vice-chairs of the state party, and other dignitaries.

 

Shane says that a candidate–be it Hillary or anyone else–could theoretically lose the  popular vote yet have the most delegates. Yet, he believes—and this is what I told Moishe, that no candidate can win the general election unless they are clearly the choice of the party.

 

Which is why the super delegates will not determine the party’s candidate for the general election. The voters will decide.

 

In case you are wondering, I do not favor either candidate. I believe that either Democrat would be far preferable to those running for the GOP nomination. Sitting at home is not an option. This election is far too important to sit home.

 

Vote in the primary, vote in the general.