The talks reveal rising anxiety over the Vermont senator's momentum on the eve of voting.
DES MOINES, Iowa — A small group of Democratic National Committee members has privately begun gauging support for a plan to potentially weaken Bernie Sanders’ presidential campaign and head off a brokered convention.
In conversations on the sidelines of a DNC executive committee meeting and in telephone calls and texts in recent days, about a half-dozen members have discussed the possibility of a policy reversal to ensure that so-called superdelegates can vote on the first ballot at the party’s national convention. Such a move would increase the influence of DNC members, members of Congress and other top party officials, who now must wait until the second ballot to have their say if the convention is contested.
“I do believe we should re-open the rules. I hear it from others as well,” one DNC member said in a text message last week to William Owen, a DNC member from Tennessee who does not support re-opening the rules.
Owen, who declined to identify the member, said the member added in a text that “It would be hard though. We could force a meeting or on the floor.”
Even proponents of the change acknowledge it is all but certain not to gain enough support to move past these initial conversations. But the talks reveal the extent of angst that many establishment Democrats are feeling on the eve of the Iowa caucuses.
Sanders is surging and Joe Biden has maintained his lead nationally, but at least three other candidates are widely seen as viable. The cluster raises the specter of a convention requiring a second ballot.
If Sanders wins the Iowa caucuses on Monday and continues to gain momentum, it is possible he could arrive at the convention with the most delegates — but without enough to win the nomination on the first ballot. It is also possible that he and Elizabeth Warren, a fellow progressive, could arrive at the convention in second and third place, but with more delegates combined than the frontrunner.
If, on the second ballot, superdelegates were to throw their support to someone else, tipping the scales, many moderate Democrats fear the upheaval that would cause could weaken the...
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democrats fail. that is their saving grace. they fail bigger as their time in power goes on. sooner or later, they fail so huge, we call it a depression and people jump out of skyscraper windows because they see no way out.
ReplyDeletedemocrats fail so well, that the expression "we're from the government and we're here to help" has become the joke of the century. show me ten things the democrats have been in charge of that has not been an abject failure for the taxpayer and the country. they get us into wars, they raise our taxes to pay for bridges to nowhere, they send son's and daughter's future earnings down the toilet with deficit spending to pay for programs that did not and cannot work as predicted.
democrats fail. why do people still believe the shit coming out of democrats mouths is something worth hearing?