Bernie won 18 delegates and got 2 superdelegates (20 total). Clinton won 11 delegates and got 6 superdelegates (17 total). Bernie won WV.
If you argue that superdelegates are unfair, I agree. There was enough pushback against them that, in 2018, the DNC changed the rules so that superdelegates can’t vote on the first ballot anymore.
This is really getting into the weeds, and there are many other ways that the Democrats are not ideal, but none of it changes the fact that allowing Republicans to obtain power is the worst case scenario. We’re seeing how that plays out right now.
Where are you seeing that Bernie got any superdelegates or unpledged delegates? I’m seeing that Clinton got 8 and nobody else got any in WV. Meaning that Clinton won the state 19-18 when Bernie won every single county and almost 40k more votes.
Edit: I see now that there is a discrepancy between the WV article and the national one. In the first article, the table shows Clinton getting all 8 superdelegates like you said, while the map in the second article shows it as 20-17 for Bernie
You’re right. I just edited my previous comment. The articles don’t agree. I’m inclined to think the WV specific article is the accurate one, in which case, you’d be right: Clinton got 19 delegates total to Bernie’s 18
Well shit, that settles it. I’m never voting again. Let MAGA burn it all down.
You’re right though as well. In your 2nd link, it does show Bernie getting two superdelegates, though it’s the first time I’ve seen that mentioned and I’ve used that example plenty of times. Somethings fishy here.
In any case, the specific states from which the superdelegates come is arbitrary. They were an unfair practice regardless, and I hope they remain inconsequential from now on.
I voted for Bernie too, and was disappointed (especially in 2020), and angry that the party clearly wanted to put their thumb on the scale for Clinton and Biden. On the other hand, Bernie didn’t come close to winning the popular vote across all states in the 2016 primary, and there was no way I wasn’t going to vote for Clinton against Trump that November.
How many delegates did Clinton win? How many superdelegates did Clinton win? How many is that total delegates?
Bernie won 18 delegates and got 2 superdelegates (20 total). Clinton won 11 delegates and got 6 superdelegates (17 total). Bernie won WV.
If you argue that superdelegates are unfair, I agree. There was enough pushback against them that, in 2018, the DNC changed the rules so that superdelegates can’t vote on the first ballot anymore.
This is really getting into the weeds, and there are many other ways that the Democrats are not ideal, but none of it changes the fact that allowing Republicans to obtain power is the worst case scenario. We’re seeing how that plays out right now.
Where are you seeing that Bernie got any superdelegates or unpledged delegates? I’m seeing that Clinton got 8 and nobody else got any in WV. Meaning that Clinton won the state 19-18 when Bernie won every single county and almost 40k more votes.
Wikipedia. The second one has a “Maps” section where you can see the total delegate count for both of them in every state.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_West_Virginia_Democratic_presidential_primary
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_Democratic_Party_presidential_primaries
Edit: I see now that there is a discrepancy between the WV article and the national one. In the first article, the table shows Clinton getting all 8 superdelegates like you said, while the map in the second article shows it as 20-17 for Bernie
Check on your first link in the “results” section :/
You’re right. I just edited my previous comment. The articles don’t agree. I’m inclined to think the WV specific article is the accurate one, in which case, you’d be right: Clinton got 19 delegates total to Bernie’s 18
Well shit, that settles it. I’m never voting again. Let MAGA burn it all down.
You’re right though as well. In your 2nd link, it does show Bernie getting two superdelegates, though it’s the first time I’ve seen that mentioned and I’ve used that example plenty of times. Somethings fishy here.
One of them has to be wrong.
In any case, the specific states from which the superdelegates come is arbitrary. They were an unfair practice regardless, and I hope they remain inconsequential from now on.
I voted for Bernie too, and was disappointed (especially in 2020), and angry that the party clearly wanted to put their thumb on the scale for Clinton and Biden. On the other hand, Bernie didn’t come close to winning the popular vote across all states in the 2016 primary, and there was no way I wasn’t going to vote for Clinton against Trump that November.