Re: Pledged delegates vs total delegates, part two.
by
dsimon
03/20/2008, 9:03 PM #
You know, I just checked CNN, on election scoreboard right here on
SLATE, and they said '131' lead NOT '171' cited by T--i. What happened?
Did you make a simple subtraction mistake, or did Hillary gain '41'
delegates in less than 2 days?
It sounds to me that the difference is because CNN is using total delegates (pledged delegates + declared superdelegates) while the Slate calculator is using ONLY PLEDGED delegates. Clinton's lead among superdelegates is usually considered to be between 35 and 40, so that sounds like about the right difference once you throw in slight variations that come up in determining the pledged delegate count. It's exactly what T--i was saying.
Next year, please DNC, let's have some system where everyone will have
the same numbers everyday and no states are excluded simply because a
new guy's followers do not like those states.
The varying totals have nothing to do with excluding states or favoring some states over others. States that have caucuses sometimes have multistage processes that don't formally decide the delegate counts for weeks or months after the vote. For a while, the NY Times refused to count those results at all until they were formally certified (now they have a "projections from nonbinding contests" column), while other news outlets used estimates that they were pretty sure would be right within a few delegates. As the processes continue, those estimates can change slightly, hence the differences in the pledged delegate count.
As for the superdelegates, some may answer some surveys and not others. Some may change their minds. Some may have said something that sounds like a definitive endorsement, some may think it wasn't a final commitment. So those numbers can vary too.
There is no conspiracy here. The Slate delegate calculator says it's only for pledged delegates and does not include superdelegates. The count of pledged delegates can change slightly according to various estimates for processes that have not been completed. Slate's numbers are well within everything else I've been able to find online.
When we're passionate about something, there's a tendency to see what we want to see instead of what's really there or not there. Let's try to keep a sense of objectivity when making these discussions.