Delvo
Дэлво Δε&#
(Also, we don't know that she hasn't been paying attention... to issues & policies.)
I have no idea. Having been involved in caucus held in my state, I know that isn't how they worked in Washington. The caucuses elected delegates to attend the state convention and the delegates at the State convention decided the allotment of delegates to the National convention. Horse trading can and does take place. I don't like the primary system. I'd rather return to caucuses in all the states.
I don't knowbybut my wife is currently applying for a job as a one. Seems to be what software companies call client managers.
Democrats face-plant on impeachment, then immediately pivot to a face-plant on counting their own caucus votes due to "coding problems". LOL.
It is?!?!?!
Holy **** !!!
Now I totally hate it and/or love it, depending on how you need me to react, in order to satisfy whatever need prompted you to post this inanity.
I hope this helps. Have a nice day!
It seemed important enough for you to post it. What was the importance?I think it's pretty apparent in my lastpointpost. But I'll repeat it: Iowa Republicans also use the caucus. Why you think there is more than just that, I have no idea.
Translation: "****, got caught. Try to blame it on the guy who caught me!"
We can perch upon our moral and political mountains and argue from them all day, but nothing will change the fact that a system, regardless of its qualities, where a tipping point of people aren't happy with how the decision is reached is only slightly better at best then a system where a tipping point of people aren't happy with the decision being reached.
A smoke and mirrors act that gets the "right" answer isn't ideal.
Caught? What do you imagine is going on here?
Oh, I think it's quite evident.
How can a state pass a law requiring other states to do something?
Equal rights for LGBT folks isn't an issue?(Also, we don't know that she hasn't been paying attention... to issues & policies.)
The law requires that if some other state moves up their primary date, the government of New Hampshire is required to move theirs up to be earlier. It doesn't prescribe actions for other states. It prescribes responses to actions for the state of New Hampshire.
So, a pissing match can ensue?
If Indiana moves their primary to the last Thursday in January...then NH must move theirs?
Answered already, but clarifying.I've been AWOL.
I'm just jumping into this thread now, so if this has been discussed, I'm sorry.
Iowa state law requires that the caucuses take place at least eight days before any other nominating contest.
New Hampshire state law requires that its primary must be the first in the nation.
What if Ohio were to pass a law requiring that its primary must be the first in the nation.
Or North Carolina?
Or Texas?
From my basic knowledge of things, can't Ohio pass a law requiring it to be first and then tell NH to take its "we're first" law and to cram it because NH laws can't influence how Ohio works, right?
It might be tradition, but tradition is peer pressure exuded on you by dead people.