… about the Democratic nomination race in the USA.
Hillary Clinton’s chances look to rely on bringing into the reckoning the Democrat delegates from Florida and Michigan, who for internal party reasons (as things stand) are excluded.
Byron York nails it:
Her demand was pooh-poohed in some circles of the commentariat, but the question for Democrats is: Why is that such a radioactive proposition? This is the party that got rather excited over 537 votes in Florida in 2000, the party that would like to pass something called the Count Every Vote Act, the party that has consistently favored greater enfranchisement over stricter enforcement of the rules (and sometimes the law) …
Why do so many in the party insist that millions of votes in two key states be counted only if they don’t matter — that is, if the result is a fait accompli — and not be counted if they do?
That’s one Question.
The other Question: how far will Hillary dare go to force it on to the table?










