Connecticut Post (Sunday)

Mail ballots help Biden clinch Dem nomination

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As the states that voted Tuesday updated their results, a team of analysts at The Associated Press parsed the votes into the correct congressio­nal districts so the delegates could be allocated between Biden and Bernie Sanders.

The process led the AP to allocate 21 delegates to Biden late Friday, after it completed an analysis of votes released by election officials in the three states earlier in the evening. The AP later added seven more to Biden’s total, after the release of additional results in New Mexico and the completion of Guam’s Democratic caucuses on Saturday.

The former vice president now has a total of 2,000 delegates. It takes 1,991 delegates to win the nomination on the first ballot at the Democratic National Convention.

Biden became the party’s presumptiv­e nominee two months ago, following decisive wins over Sanders in several March primaries and in Wisconsin on April 7. The Vermont senator, the final major challenger in the race, dropped out the next day.

Biden would have wrapped up the Democratic nomination much earlier, if not for the coronaviru­s pandemic — 15 states, along with Guam and Puerto Rico, postponed their nominating contests due to the outbreak.

The formality of reaching 1,991 was also delayed by a deal Biden’s campaign cut with Sanders in an effort to build Democratic Party unity and avoid the bitter feelings that marred the party’s 2016 convention and helped lead to Hillary Clinton’s defeat. The agreement allowed Sanders to keep about 300 delegates he would have otherwise forfeited under party rules after suspending his campaign.

It’s not unusual for a Democratic nominee to clinch the party’s nomination in early June. That’s when Barack Obama in 2008 and Clinton in 2016 reached the milestone.

Both Obama and Clinton still had active opponents when they did so, although they were helped by superdeleg­ates. Those are the Democratic Party leaders and elected officials who can vote for any candidate, regardless of the outcome of the primaries.

While superdeleg­ates have never overturned the will of primary voters, their power was greatly reduced ahead of the 2020 election in a concession to Sanders supporters who saw them as undemocrat­ic.

About 800 superdeleg­ates can still participat­e in this summer’s convention, but they won’t be able to vote on the first ballot unless their votes would have no effect on the outcome.

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