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Harry Reid On A Brokered Convention: Chill Out, It's Not The End Of The World

“We’ve had brokered conventions before, and we’ve always come up with good candidates," the former Senate Majority Leader said.

Harry Reid said yesterday the crowded Democratic primary race could be headed toward a convention fight but said it wasn't the end of the world. Via the Associated Press:

“I don’t think we’ll have one, but we could have one,” Reid told The Associated Press in an interview days before the Democratic caucuses in his home state of Nevada. “We’ve had brokered conventions before, and we’ve always come up with good candidates. It’s not the end of the world. It just slows the process down.”

Reid’s attitude is a sharp contrast to many in the Democratic establishment who are anxious about the prospect of a long, contentious primary race in which several candidates divide up the vote and no one amasses more than 50% of the delegates ahead of the July convention. A brokered convention, in which party bosses or delegates in floor fights and negotiations decide the nominee, hasn’t happened since the invention of the modern primary system five decades ago. Many believe it would fracture the party and delay its shift to focusing on the common goal: defeating President Donald Trump.

Still, the 78-year-old Reid, who retired in early 2017 after a long career as a party power broker, offered no other path to arriving at the nomination. Reid suggested that the Democratic National Committee delegates should decide the nominee if the party’s leading candidate does not have a majority of delegates required to win.

It's a long, interesting interview and well worth your while. He's got nice things to say about all the candidates.

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