Posted on 04/18/2016 2:51:08 AM PDT by markomalley
Representative Republic to be precise. There is far more to the meaning of that than you seem willing to admit. We The People decide who will be our representatives in the Republic. The decisions on who is supposed to be done democratically by voting.
BTW, It is the Democrat Party, not the Democratic Party.
A representative republic means that the delegates represent the voters. There were no voters in Colorado or Wyoming. Starting the process with anything but a private vote in a primary by registered voters is absurd.
US Constitution
Article IV
Section 4
The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government....
We all grew up being told we'd have flying cars by now, too.........
and your point is?
Demagogue.
“A representative republic means that the delegates represent the voters.”
Which is what a caucus does. You elect a slate of delegates.
And yet, when Gore argued that he won the popular vote over Bush, we all sided with the election rules. This is no different. If you don’t like the rules, change them next time around, but you have to win the game under the rules in effect.
I was disappointed (again) that Trump didn’t make the minimal effort that would have earned him the Wyoming delegates. Does anyone think Trump could not have found 1,000 registered Republican supporters in Wyoming who would have attended the Wyoming Caucuses if he had tried? Anyone? I don’t like caucus rules, but I blame Trump for not trying.
I’m embarrassed for you that you’d want to debate this with people without having ever opened a book on political philosophy.
>Which is what a caucus does. You elect a slate of delegates.
Which you have no way of knowing who they support or if they’re lying about their support. Ya, no thanks. It takes very little effort to have a presidential preference poll and then binding delegates to the results and the only reason not to do is to rig the process.
It’s not a pure democracy in that every issue isn’t a direct vote. It’s a democracy in the sense that power comes from the consent of the governed. That’s why Anton Scalia routinely referred to our country as a democracy. Not all republics are democratic. Not all democracies are republics. But they aren’t exclusive.
The "system" Trump is complaining about actually are multiple state systems, and were set up by state GOP organizations, not the RNC. In fact, the RNC passed a rule requiring that if a straw poll vote is held, it must be binding on delegates.
And if you still are trying to wrap your mind around it, remember that the form of government that the founders feared more than anything was democracy.
Read the Federalist Papers.
The Donald is a textbook case for showcasing the founders fears.
uh we live in a democratic republic, DT. go back to “Go”
We have it here in Mn. Our straw poll went Rubio, but that tide shifted to Cruz when we started electing delegates. Next round of delegate selection is this weekend. I’m an Alternate.
Don’t like the system? Try getting involved and work to get changes implemented.
B*tching about the rules half-way through the game is what liberals do.
Spoken like someone who has never been to a caucus.
>The caucus systems set up by a lot of states emphasize that aspect. People attend caucus, and elect delegates who then attend other meetings, elect the next layer of delegates, etc..
Nice theory but actual results show that party bosses chose who gets the delegates.
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