I have seen quite a lot about this but have not known whether to take it seriously, or not.
The chaos scenario for Democrats
19
March, 2016
It’s
the scenario that Republicans dream of and Democrats believe is all
but impossible: Hillary Clinton being forced to drop out of the
presidential race due to criminal charges over her email server.
Any
bombshell findings in the FBI’s investigation of Clinton could
plunge the Democratic race into chaos.
Bernie
Sanders could stand to gain. As the only other candidate in the
Democratic race, the party could quickly coalesce around him in an
effort to halt the bedlam. But that’s far from a sure thing, with
many in the party fearful he would be a weak general election
candidate.
Democrats
insist there’s virtually no chance that Clinton will be indicted
over her server. The candidate has said repeatedly that no laws were
broken, and that classified information was never sent over the
server. Asked about an indictment at the last Democratic debate,
Clinton responded: “That's not going to happen.”
In
the event that Clinton stepped aside after winning the nomination at
the convention, the Democratic National Committee could decide on the
replacement on its own.
If
an indictment came before the convention, the path would be more
difficult.
Unlike
the Republican Party, which binds most of its delegates to candidates
regardless of delegates’ personal preferences, Democratic
candidates have input on who represents them on the convention floor.
“There
are no Clinton-bound delegates who would prefer voting for Sanders,
for example,” delegate expert and University of Georgia professor
Josh Putnam, told The Hill.
“Those
folks are essentially hand-picked to be loyal. They are unlikely to
stray.”
Then
there are the superdelegates, the 712 Democratic Party leaders,
including members of Congress, who have the freedom to support any
candidate at the convention.
The
superdelegates are supporting Clinton in droves right now — 95
percent of those who have expressed a preference have chosen Clinton.
But they could desert Clinton just as emphatically if her candidacy
came to the brink of imploding, some say.
“The
superdelegates would flee first because they are politicians,” said
one Democratic strategist who has worked on presidential campaigns.
“They
are most likely to feel the pressure not to cast their ballots in
favor of a nominee under indictment.”
If
enough pledged Clinton delegates and superdelegates went to Sanders
and delivered him 2,383 delegates, he would win the nomination.
But
delegates could also coalesce around a new candidate not in the race.
One likely fallback would be Vice President Biden, who came very
close to running for president last year.
But
denying Sanders the nomination could come with a heavy price,
potentially alienating the millions of Democrats who cast ballots for
him in the primary process.
“Superdelegates
do not necessarily vote as a bloc in a contested situation … there
would be superdelegates going any number of ways in this scenario,”
Putnam said.
“Politically,
though, it would be difficult for them to vote as a bloc against
someone like Sanders who has won a significant amount of votes in
primaries and caucuses.”
Should
the party be forced to leave Clinton, one thing that could work
against Sanders is his late arrival to the Democratic Party. He’s
spent his entire 30-year career in Congress as an Independent, and
recently said he ran for president as a Democrat for media coverage.
“Most
of these other politicians and political leaders in the community,
they don’t really know Bernie Sanders because he’s never been a
national Democrat,” the Democratic strategist said.
“They
know Joe [Biden], they know John Kerry. It’s completely conceivable
that they would turn from somebody they know and respect — Hillary
— to somebody else they know and respect and bypass Sanders.”
So
if the Democratic race ends up with its own contested convention, all
bets are off on how it would conclude, since the final decision
ultimately rests on the whims of the 4,765 delegates.
“It
would be a s--tshow of the first order,” the Democratic strategist
said.
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