No, the GOP does not have superdelegates in their nomination process.
No, Republicans do not have superdelegates in their party's nomination process.
Republicans do not have superdelegates in their nomination process because they believe in a more democratic approach where delegates are allocated based on the results of primary elections and caucuses, rather than giving certain party insiders and officials extra voting power.
No, the Republican National Committee does not have superdelegates. Superdelegates are a feature of the Democratic Party's nominating process, not the Republican Party's.
A superdelegate in the Republican Party is a party leader or elected official who is not bound by the results of primaries or caucuses. They have the freedom to support any candidate they choose at the party's national convention. Superdelegates can impact the nomination process by potentially influencing other delegates and voters, as their support can carry significant weight in the decision-making process.
Yes, there are Republican superdelegates in the upcoming election. Superdelegates are party leaders and elected officials who can vote for the candidate of their choice at the party's national convention.
No, Republicans do not have superdelegates in their party's nomination process.
All of the superdelegates are party leaders. They, along with the delegates from the states, determine the nominees.
Republicans do not have superdelegates in their nomination process because they believe in a more democratic approach where delegates are allocated based on the results of primary elections and caucuses, rather than giving certain party insiders and officials extra voting power.
No, he cannot.
No, the Republican National Committee does not have superdelegates. Superdelegates are a feature of the Democratic Party's nominating process, not the Republican Party's.
Republican party candidate nominated for for presidency
A superdelegate in the Republican Party is a party leader or elected official who is not bound by the results of primaries or caucuses. They have the freedom to support any candidate they choose at the party's national convention. Superdelegates can impact the nomination process by potentially influencing other delegates and voters, as their support can carry significant weight in the decision-making process.
Sarah Palin Former Governor of Alaska.
QUESTION: What is a superdelegate?ANSWER: Party activists and elected officials who have a vote at the Democratic National Convention that is equal to a single delegate. A candidate for president needs 2,025 to win the nomination. S.C. awards 54 delegates. During the primary, 45 delegates were awarded based on the vote. The remaining nine will be awarded by the state's eight superdelegates and a delegate who will be named later.QUESTION: Why were superdelegates created?ANSWER: The Democratic National Committee created the superdelegates as a quality-control mechanism after George McGovern's failed bid for the presidency in 1972. These delegates are party activists whose job it is to prevent an unfavorable candidate from winning the nomination.QUESTION: Will superdelegates ultimately decide the Democratic nomination?ANSWER: The race is historically close, meaning each delegate counts. Superdelegates do not have to decide until the August convention. Those who have pledged can change their minds. The primary system could decide the nominee before then. The superdelegates could decide to back the candidate who has the most delegates awarded by voters once all the states have held their preference contests. Or the superdelegates could split, which would take the process into unknown territory.QUESTION: What is a superdelegate?ANSWER: Party activists and elected officials who have a vote at the Democratic National Convention that is equal to a single delegate. A candidate for president needs 2,025 to win the nomination. S.C. awards 54 delegates. During the primary, 45 delegates were awarded based on the vote. The remaining nine will be awarded by the state's eight superdelegates and a delegate who will be named later.QUESTION: Why were superdelegates created?ANSWER: The Democratic National Committee created the superdelegates as a quality-control mechanism after George McGovern's failed bid for the presidency in 1972. These delegates are party activists whose job it is to prevent an unfavorable candidate from winning the nomination.QUESTION: Will superdelegates ultimately decide the Democratic nomination?ANSWER: The race is historically close, meaning each delegate counts. Superdelegates do not have to decide until the August convention. Those who have pledged can change their minds. The primary system could decide the nominee before then. The superdelegates could decide to back the candidate who has the most delegates awarded by voters once all the states have held their preference contests. Or the superdelegates could split, which would take the process into unknown territory.
Herman Cain, candidate for GOP presidential nomination.
Who and how are the superdelegates selected?
No. Delegates only count in the nomination process and there are ways that the conventions have to choose the proper person. Think of them as men on a chessboard and they can be traded or moved around. Delegates don't chose the president only the person running for the office.