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To: Publius

But...aren’t there time limits as to when a candidate has to declare so they can be on the ballot?


726 posted on 05/27/2020 9:42:22 PM PDT by blu (Bagster's ping on the side)
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To: All

From voat:

Is the death of George Floyd too perfect, too emotional, too theatrical? (GreatAwakening)

I know this sounds crazy, but so much of this death seems too perfect.

The camera is far away, yet you can hear the moans of George crystal clear. The bystanders are begging the cops to check his pulse for 8 minutes but the cops do nothing.

The cops could have put George in the car, instead they prefer to have him slowly die in front of cameras and screaming people.

It all feels like something the DS would love to orchestrate to rile up the blacks in election year.

They do not want the blacks to vote for a white President. Guess what, they’ll replace Biden with a black candidate.


727 posted on 05/27/2020 9:44:39 PM PDT by MNDude
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To: blu

https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/what-happens-if-a-presidential-nominee-can-no-longer-run-for-office/

....”If something were to happen to the presumptive nominee before the convention, the parties have a plan — they’d proceed as normal and use the convention to pick the nominee. And if something happened after the convention but before the election, there’s a plan for that, too — national party committees would step in. After the election, though, things get murkier, as it’s uncertain how the result would work out in the Electoral College.

Let’s tackle that first scenario — something happens to either Biden or Trump before their respective conventions. In the case of the Democratric nomination, that would all of a sudden open up the race, according to Lara Brown, director of the Graduate School of Political Management at George Washington University. The delayed primaries would become far more relevant, and this could create a free-for-all with Sen. Bernie Sanders and the other candidates. “Let’s face it, none of the candidates have officially withdrawn,” said Brown. “They’ve all just suspended [their campaigns].”

But if tragedy didn’t strike until the convention, Biden delegates would have to choose someone else to support.1 Richard Pildes, a constitutional law professor at the New York University School of Law, stressed, however, that even under normal circumstances, the Democratic delegates are technically free “on the first ballot to vote their conscience.” As for the GOP convention rules, Pildes told me they specifically bind the delegates, and as Trump is the only candidate who will really have delegates, the party might need to issue an “interpretation” of the rules or even vote to change them to deal with this unforeseen situation.

Brown and Pildes said it wouldn’t necessarily prevent a drawn-out convention battle, but if Biden had picked a running mate, that might go a long way in limiting the intraparty fighting because Democrats would already have someone to rally around rather than being split among a host of alternatives. On the other hand, Vice President Pence would automatically ascend to the presidency should something happen to Trump, giving the Republicans a pretty straightforward pick if disaster struck before their August convention.

If something happened after the conventions but before the election, the national party committees would pick another nominee. Under Republican rules, the Republican National Committee could reconvene the national convention, although Pildes told me it’s hard to imagine that being feasible. So in both parties, national committee members would vote to elect a new nominee.2 Pence would once again be the obvious choice for Republicans, although the GOP would also have to pick a new vice presidential nominee (as would the Democrats if this situation arose for them). And while Democrats could try to back a former candidate or an outsider who didn’t run — say, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo — Brown said a crisis like this would likely push the Democratic National Committee to put the vice presidential nominee at the top of the ticket. “I assume that the Democrats would attempt to follow that same pattern [as the GOP],” she said.”


736 posted on 05/27/2020 10:06:00 PM PDT by bitt ('Tyranny' is when you restrict the movement of healthy people.")
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To: blu

No. In a presidential election, you aren’t voting for president directly. You are voting for electors pledged to the presidential candidate of a political party. If a candidate dies or is rendered too ill to function after ballots are printed, the national committee of the party can tell electors by registered letter to vote for a different candidate. Something similar happened in 1872 when the losing candidate died before the Electoral College voted.


758 posted on 05/27/2020 11:25:36 PM PDT by Publius ("Who is John Galt?" by Billthedrill & Publius available at Amazon.)
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