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[parent] [thread] 3 comments
1. jswny+(OP)[view] [source] 2016-07-27 19:50:25
I don't really understand the outrage. The parties are not part of the government, they aren't held to the same requirements for fairness. The caucuses of the parties are supposed to help them gauge the public perception of their candidates, to help them make a better decision as to which candidate is most likely to win the presidential election. In fact, I expect each party to be biased towards a certain candidate. I expect the party to come together to back the strongest candidate to prevent any possible party fractures. Just look at what happened this time, maybe if the Democrats had gone full-force behind Clinton from the beginning Sanders wouldn't have supporters protesting outside the convention for his very party. Maybe I'm wrong here but I never expected either party to go above and beyond what's required of them and act like they are part of the government.
replies(3): >>Miner4+72 >>alasda+0n >>Damien+GL
2. Miner4+72[view] [source] 2016-07-27 20:07:19
>>jswny+(OP)
They do receive funding from the government though, which comes from taxpayers. Also, the DNC's rules specifically ban bias towards a candidate in the primaries.
3. alasda+0n[view] [source] 2016-07-27 23:50:13
>>jswny+(OP)
One obvious issue is that taxpayers money goes to holding these elections. This seems ridiculous.
4. Damien+GL[view] [source] 2016-07-28 07:50:09
>>jswny+(OP)
Election officials still need to respect election law and the National Voters Right Act which hasn't been the case in many instances according to the report.
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