Press "Enter" to skip to content

Constitution Party Convention Update: Convention Numbers

There are 126 delegates representing 37 states and 403  votes. (Editor’s Note: these numbers have been corrected) (If I’m not mistaken the state chair gets to vote for all the unaccounted for delegate slots from his state.)

The states represented are: GA, VT, CA, CT, IL, LA, NJ, MN, ID, MD, NE, NV, OH, PA, MA, WA, IA, MI, IN, UT, MS, MO, SC, NC, TN, VA, CO, KS, KY, WV, WY, NY, AZ, FL, SD, OK, TX

16 Comments

  1. Jeannette Step April 26, 2012

    Cheers !

  2. Trent Hill April 21, 2012

    I updated to include PA and CT. If you see any other states missing–please post here and say so or email me, Citizen1.

  3. citizen1 April 21, 2012

    PA is present as is CT not mentioned. As for a states votes the chairman can either poll his delegates and cast them as winner take all or cast them proportionally according to the vote it is at his discretion.

  4. RileyDad April 21, 2012

    PA has a full delegation present.

  5. Trent Hill April 20, 2012

    …how? He has to earn a paycheck, doesn’t he? Is he retired or something?

  6. RedPhillips Post author | April 20, 2012

    Stufflebeam has indicated he will be a fulltime chairman IIANM.

  7. Trent Hill April 20, 2012

    NF–office probably won’t move. Not unless Stufflebeam or Fluckiger have one to offer.

  8. Trent Hill April 20, 2012

    NF–I doubt the office will move. A free law office is not something either other chairman candidate can likely offer.

  9. NewFederalist April 20, 2012

    Will the national office move from PA once the new national chair(man) takes office? Jim Clymer is a really nice guy but the CP has done pretty much zip in PA for the last several years. It hasn’t even made the ballot recently. Perhaps there is no PA delegation to the national convention!

  10. Jeff Becker April 20, 2012

    They are not really “proxy” votes. States get presidential nomination votes on a points-earned basis according to a formula. So many points for congressional districts, previous presidential ballot access, statewide candidates, attendance at national meetings, payment of “assessments”, etc. The formula is in the party ByLaws. But regardless of performance, I recall that each state has a baseline of three (3) votes. The votes are per delegation, so the delegation decides how to divvy them up between their delegates – with no influence from the national exec committee.

  11. Trent Hill April 20, 2012

    Yes, there are “proxy votes” in play. For example, if their Chairman of Mississippi is there alone, but he has 6 votes to cast–then he casts all 6.

    It makes sense, I think.

  12. Trent Hill April 20, 2012

    Yes, so would Gary Odom. Pretty sure that’s just a mistake…there should be some PA delegates in there somewhere.

  13. I’m confused as to 302 votes? Does that mean there are more proxy votes (controlled by the state chairs) in play than living breathing voters ??? If so that rule needs to be changed, doesn’t look kosher to me!

  14. RedPhillips Post author | April 20, 2012

    Jed, me too. Wouldn’t Clymer at least be a delegate?

  15. Jed Siple April 20, 2012

    Surprised there’s no Pennsylvania delegation, considering the party is headquartered in Lancaster.

Comments are closed.