Quote:
Originally Posted by Itse
Those superdelegate endorsements don't really mean much. Most if not all of them will eventually just go with the more popular candidate. They will only matter if it's really close.
So really the 200 delegate gap that's the result of actual votes is more relevant.
I will be surprised if Sanders can cover that gap, but I won't be totally shocked either.
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Superdelegates won't vote against popular unless they want another 70s DNC revolt. Basically it comes down to the margin Sanders potentially loses/wins by. He's got to outperform in the remaining non-southern states.
Clinton is being formally investigated by several different government agencies. If an indictment comes from a DOJ/FBI investigation you could see support drop in the remaining states pretty fast or hand Drumpf the presidency. That's a big if though.