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Democrats Will Take Their First Step Towards a Digital Conference


WASHINGTON — The Democratic Nationwide Committee on Tuesday will take its first formal step towards permitting a digital conference, a last-resort measure that get together officers have tried to keep away from however that seems more and more doubtless because the coronavirus’s menace persists.

The get together’s guidelines committee will vote Tuesday on whether or not to provide conference officers the authority to change the occasion’s key processes — like switching to distant voting for delegates.

Tuesday’s vote, which is widely expected to pass the party’s Rules and Bylaws Committee, would shift authority to make decisions on issues like remote voting to officials in charge of producing the quadrennial convention. D.N.C. officials emphasized Monday that no decisions had been made about canceling any in-person elements of the convention.

While committee officials have publicly insisted the show will go on, there has been plenty of unsolicited advice from interested parties about how to conduct the convention. In a Friday interview on C-SPAN, Speaker Nancy Pelosi proposed holding the convention in a football stadium so 16,000 people could participate while honoring social distancing requirements of remaining six feet apart.

There is no such stadium in Milwaukee, though nearby football stadiums in Madison and Green Bay could suffice.

In Milwaukee County, which includes Wisconsin’s largest city, 4,022 people had tested positive for the coronavirus as of Monday night, and 231 had died, according to data from the Wisconsin Department of Health Services. Milwaukee County has the second-highest rate of coronavirus cases in Wisconsin and 56 percent of coronavirus deaths in the state.

While Democrats have publicly discussed the idea of alternatives to a traditional convention, Republicans have said no such planning has taken place for their nominating event, scheduled for the last week in August in Charlotte, N.C.

The D.N.C.’s rules committee is also expected to approve waivers for five states, including New York, that have moved presidential primaries past June 9, which the party had set as the final day for holding nominating contests.

New York will hold its presidential primary election on June 23, the state’s Democratic Party informed the Democratic National Committee on Monday.

New York’s board of elections had canceled the state’s presidential primary, but last week a federal judge ordered it restored to the June 23 ballot after a lawsuit from the former Democratic presidential candidate Andrew Yang.

Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont and his supporters vehemently objected to New York’s cancellation of its presidential primary. Sanders supporters can win key slots at the Democratic National Convention if he wins at least 15 percent of the vote statewide or in each congressional district.

New York Democrats formalized the June 23 primary date Monday in a submission to the D.N.C. The waivers the rules committee is expected to approve do not enact any delegate penalties to New York or four other states that have moved past June 9: Delaware, Kentucky, Louisiana and New Jersey. Connecticut officials moved their state’s primary to August but have not yet sought a waiver from the D.N.C., officials said.



www.nytimes.com

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