2016 Postmortem
In reply to the discussion: Question about weak candidates. [View all]BainsBane
(54,796 posts)You get one vote. You don't determine the voters of others. The majority disagreed with your assessment of Clinton. If you think the lesson is that you get to control their votes and decide the primary, you understand nothing. You do not pick the nominee. You cast one vote like everybody else, and the voters as a whole decide.
The candidate you consider so weak won the primary by 3.8 million votes. That means her opponent was even weaker. As much as you may believe that Democratic votes matter less than Republicans, the constitution does not allow you to decide whose votes count. The fact is no candidate can run as a major party nominee without first winning the primary.
If you are to learn anything from the election, including the primary, it should be that you need to figure out how to help your preferred candidate get more votes-- votes from citizens, not tweets or insults on social media, but votes.