Democratic New Hampshire primary results thread (polls close @7pm and 8pm ET)
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Author Topic: Democratic New Hampshire primary results thread (polls close @7pm and 8pm ET)  (Read 29322 times)
Panhandle Progressive
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« Reply #500 on: February 10, 2016, 12:15:12 PM »

Hillary currently has a 15 to 13 delegate lead over Sanders, when including most delegates (4 still unallocated) from NH. I bet you won't hear the media speak of this.

Rightly so because that's superdelegates that weren't "won" last night.

The nomination is still ultimately a math game. You have to win those supers or your going down, hard.
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Comrade Funk
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« Reply #501 on: February 10, 2016, 12:16:34 PM »

Hillary currently has a 15 to 13 delegate lead over Sanders, when including most delegates (4 still unallocated) from NH. I bet you won't hear the media speak of this.
So the saving grace is you "won" through undemocratic means. #HillaryBelow40
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The Other Castro
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« Reply #502 on: February 10, 2016, 12:16:52 PM »

Hillary currently has a 15 to 13 delegate lead over Sanders, when including most delegates (4 still unallocated) from NH. I bet you won't hear the media speak of this.

Rightly so because that's superdelegates that weren't "won" last night.

The nomination is still ultimately a math game. You have to win those supers or your going down, hard.

If you have to point to superdelegates to show that you're winning, you're not winning.
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Panhandle Progressive
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« Reply #503 on: February 10, 2016, 12:18:06 PM »

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Gass3268
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« Reply #504 on: February 10, 2016, 12:19:55 PM »


Every single one of those projections is based on polls that were taken before New Hampshire and many before Iowa.
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cxs018
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« Reply #505 on: February 10, 2016, 12:21:32 PM »


Every single one of those projections is based on polls that were taken before New Hampshire and many before Iowa.

Not just that, but all of them have ridiculously low sample sizes.
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Gass3268
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« Reply #506 on: February 10, 2016, 12:22:56 PM »

Hillary currently has a 15 to 13 delegate lead over Sanders, when including most delegates (4 still unallocated) from NH. I bet you won't hear the media speak of this.

Rightly so because that's superdelegates that weren't "won" last night.

The nomination is still ultimately a math game. You have to win those supers or your going down, hard.

If Sanders ends up winning elected delegates and the superdelegates give Clinton the nomination, there will be protests equaling 1968 Chicago.
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Panhandle Progressive
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« Reply #507 on: February 10, 2016, 12:24:22 PM »

Hillary currently has a 15 to 13 delegate lead over Sanders, when including most delegates (4 still unallocated) from NH. I bet you won't hear the media speak of this.

Rightly so because that's superdelegates that weren't "won" last night.

The nomination is still ultimately a math game. You have to win those supers or your going down, hard.

If Sanders ends up winning elected delegates and the superdelegates give Clinton the nomination, there will be protests equaling 1968 Chicago.

He will never come anywhere close to that. It's all downhill now for Bernie.
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Starbucks Union Thug HokeyPuck
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« Reply #508 on: February 10, 2016, 12:29:46 PM »

Hillary currently has a 15 to 13 delegate lead over Sanders, when including most delegates (4 still unallocated) from NH. I bet you won't hear the media speak of this.

Rightly so because that's superdelegates that weren't "won" last night.

The nomination is still ultimately a math game. You have to win those supers or your going down, hard.

If Sanders ends up winning elected delegates and the superdelegates give Clinton the nomination, there will be protests equaling 1968 Chicago.

Lets not get ahead of ourselves.  Much still needs to happen.
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Gass3268
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« Reply #509 on: February 10, 2016, 12:31:18 PM »

Hillary currently has a 15 to 13 delegate lead over Sanders, when including most delegates (4 still unallocated) from NH. I bet you won't hear the media speak of this.

Rightly so because that's superdelegates that weren't "won" last night.

The nomination is still ultimately a math game. You have to win those supers or your going down, hard.

If Sanders ends up winning elected delegates and the superdelegates give Clinton the nomination, there will be protests equaling 1968 Chicago.

Lets not get ahead of ourselves.  Much still needs to happen.

Of course, I still think Clinton will be the nominee. Yet any talk of superdelegates right now is stupid and insulting.
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The Other Castro
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« Reply #510 on: February 10, 2016, 12:34:10 PM »

9 precincts left to report: Chesterfield, Landaff, Easton, Dorchester, Orange, Stoddard, Surry, Harrisville, and Durham.

However, Decision Desk currently has numbers for Orange (46-25), Harrisville (241-151), Surry (113-55), Chesterfield (599-249)

Still waiting on: Landaff, Easton, Dorchester, Stoddard, Durham
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Panhandle Progressive
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« Reply #511 on: February 10, 2016, 12:35:11 PM »

Hillary currently has a 15 to 13 delegate lead over Sanders, when including most delegates (4 still unallocated) from NH. I bet you won't hear the media speak of this.

Rightly so because that's superdelegates that weren't "won" last night.

The nomination is still ultimately a math game. You have to win those supers or your going down, hard.

If Sanders ends up winning elected delegates and the superdelegates give Clinton the nomination, there will be protests equaling 1968 Chicago.

Lets not get ahead of ourselves.  Much still needs to happen.

Of course, I still think Clinton will be the nominee. Yet any talk of superdelegates right now is stupid and insulting.

A delegate is a delegate is a delegate, super or not. She needs 2382 of them to win and currently has 431 or 18% necessary to clinch the nomination. YUUUGGGEEE!
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Gass3268
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« Reply #512 on: February 10, 2016, 12:36:18 PM »

9 precincts left to report: Chesterfield, Landaff, Easton, Dorchester, Orange, Stoddard, Surry, Harrisville, and Durham.

However, Decision Desk currently has numbers for Orange (46-25), Harrisville (241-151), Surry (113-55), Chesterfield (599-249)

Still waiting on: Landaff, Easton, Dorchester, Stoddard, Durham

I wonder what's taking them so long?
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The Other Castro
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« Reply #513 on: February 10, 2016, 12:37:56 PM »

9 precincts left to report: Chesterfield, Landaff, Easton, Dorchester, Orange, Stoddard, Surry, Harrisville, and Durham.

However, Decision Desk currently has numbers for Orange (46-25), Harrisville (241-151), Surry (113-55), Chesterfield (599-249)

Still waiting on: Landaff, Easton, Dorchester, Stoddard, Durham

I wonder what's taking them so long?

Durham is in on Decision Desk, (2884-1185)
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The Other Castro
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« Reply #514 on: February 10, 2016, 12:42:14 PM »

Adding those additional precincts to the NYT map, we currently have

Sanders: 151,174
Clinton: 95,108

4 precincts left to report.
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Torie
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« Reply #515 on: February 10, 2016, 12:43:33 PM »

Hillary currently has a 15 to 13 delegate lead over Sanders, when including most delegates (4 still unallocated) from NH. I bet you won't hear the media speak of this.

Rightly so because that's superdelegates that weren't "won" last night.

The nomination is still ultimately a math game. You have to win those supers or your going down, hard.

If Sanders ends up winning elected delegates and the superdelegates give Clinton the nomination, there will be protests equaling 1968 Chicago.

Lets not get ahead of ourselves.  Much still needs to happen.

Of course, I still think Clinton will be the nominee. Yet any talk of superdelegates right now is stupid and insulting.

A delegate is a delegate is a delegate, super or not. She needs 2382 of them to win and currently has 431 or 18%. YUUUGGGEEE!

Yeah, given that everything is proportional in the Dem party, that is a really heavy loading of the dice for Hillary. Really heavy. But if Bernie has a clear majority of the delegates that were elected, and then is denied the nomination, Hillary will be even more wounded than she is now, and the Sanders supporters will feel that the game was rigged, the nomination stolen, and some might abandon Hillary one way or the other. This assumes however that the indictment thing is put to bed sometime during the process.
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Antonio the Sixth
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« Reply #516 on: February 10, 2016, 01:25:55 PM »

Hahaha omg, now Hillbots are resorting to talking about superdelegates? Clearly they are more insecure than they let on.
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Gass3268
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« Reply #517 on: February 10, 2016, 02:37:05 PM »
« Edited: February 10, 2016, 02:47:12 PM by Gass3268 »

All precincts reporting:

Bernie Sanders 151,573 (60.4%)
Hillary Clinton 95,242 (38.0%)
Other 4,147 (1.7%)

Clinton only won 5 townships.
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madelka
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« Reply #518 on: February 10, 2016, 02:46:45 PM »

Hillary currently has a 15 to 13 delegate lead over Sanders, when including most delegates (4 still unallocated) from NH. I bet you won't hear the media speak of this.

Rightly so because that's superdelegates that weren't "won" last night.

The nomination is still ultimately a math game. You have to win those supers or your going down, hard.

If Sanders ends up winning elected delegates and the superdelegates give Clinton the nomination, there will be protests equaling 1968 Chicago.

...LOL? I guess?
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Filuwaúrdjan
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« Reply #519 on: February 10, 2016, 03:11:23 PM »

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indysaff
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« Reply #520 on: February 10, 2016, 03:13:36 PM »

Sanders 151,578 60.4%
Clinton 95,249 38.0%
100% reporting
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