From Wikipedia:
Delegates are the people who will decide the nomination at the Democratic National Convention. Delegates from the fifty US states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico have a single vote each, while some delegates from American Samoa, the Virgin Islands, Guam and Democrats Abroad have half a vote each. Thus, the total number of delegates is slightly higher than the total number of available delegate votes (4,048).
Social Democratic Party which is the oldest political party in Germany; the Christian Democratic Union; the Christian Social Party, which is the sister party of the CDU and is confined to Bavaria; the Greens; the far-rightist, The National Party; and the "new" Communist party of Germany.
They left the Democratic Party, to form the Dixicrat Party under white supremacy
In 1896, they nominated a Democrat, William Jennings Bryan, for president, which lost the Republican and southern Populists. By identifying with many of the ideals of the Democratic Party, they lost most of their their party identity.
12
39 delegates signed the US Constitution.
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According to an article in USA Today California has 440 delegates of the total number of the Democratic party's nominating convention's 4,361 delegates.
188 delegates total, with 30 of them uncommitted.
You can see a map of the democratic delegates by state at www.demconvention.com/delegate-map
New York has 247 delegates in the Democratic primary.
In the 2008 Presidential election, there were 23 Democratic delegates for South Dakota at the Democratic Convention. Currently, South Dakota will have 24 delegates for 2012.
84 delagates
Florida was supposed to have 210 delegates. However the Democratic National Convention stripped Florida of all of its delegates because it broke party rules by having its primary before February 5.
Michigan was supposed to have 128 delegates plus 29 superdelegates to the 2008 Democratic National Convention. However the Democratic National Convention stripped Michigan of all of its delegates because it broke party rules by having its primary before February 5. Hillary Clinton, who ran unopposed in Michigan, is insisting that the delegates be seated. Barack Obama, who kept his name off the ballot as party officials requested, insists that the delegates not be seated. If the primary remains so close that the vote totals from Michigan and Florida could tip the scales, the argument over these delegates may leave the losing side feeling that it was robbed of the election.
74 delegates plus 18 super delegates democratic. 40 delegates republican
Zachary Gordon
56 seats are in the Democratic Party