What websites do you visit? Blech!
That's not how you make babies.
It is an assembly sanctioned by the first amendment, they can do what they want.
The only candidate in the history of the United States that never received one primary vote to be able to run for president.
How is that even lawful?
I think when most say this they are thinking modern times and current party rules. I guarantee you if someone really wanted to run in her place they could make a big legal stink over this crap.That is simply not true. For much of our history there were no primaries.
I don't think they would get very far. Federal law wouldn't apply, and the USSC appears to have ruled in the past that States really have no say over how a party runs things. At most they could contest some minority of votes, which would do nothing to stop the nomination.I think when most say this they are thinking modern times and current party rules. I guarantee you if someone really wanted to run in her place they could make a big legal stink over this crap.
Courts have forced organizations, when an injured party presents evidence the organization has violated their agreed rules and procedures, to abide by them.I don't think they would get very far. Federal law wouldn't apply, and the USSC appears to have ruled in the past that States really have no say over how a party runs things. At most they could contest some minority of votes, which would do nothing to stop the nomination.
State election law and delegates to national conventions
Ballotpedia: The Encyclopedia of American Politicsballotpedia.org
Courts have forced organizations, when an injured party presents evidence the organization has violated their agreed rules and procedures, to abide by them.
Eye bleach........
They could win IF they had enough money and could stand a barrage of bullets.I think when most say this they are thinking modern times and current party rules. I guarantee you if someone really wanted to run in her place they could make a big legal stink over this crap.
What rule did they supposedly break though? Let's not be all vague here.Courts have forced organizations, when an injured party presents evidence the organization has violated their agreed rules and procedures, to abide by them.