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In March 2016, voters in Minnesota caucused for both Democrat and Republican candidates. Senator Bernie Sanders won the Democratic vote by a double-digit margin: At the same time, discussions and debates were raging among voters and pundits about superdelegates, a suddenly relevant aspect of the candidate selection process. High-ranking party officials (senators, for example) counted as superdelegates, and made up about 15 percent of delegate votes to be counted during the July 2016 Democratic National Convention. On 30 March 2016, Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) appeared on CNN to discuss (among other things) his perspective on the presidential campaign and his intent to break from his state and cast his vote for Hillary Clinton, which — as an unpledged delegate, or a superdelegate — is his right: CNN also provided a transcript of the exchange: Although Franken did confirm that he would vote differently than the majority of his constituents, at no point did he specifically state his judgment was more important than that of his constituency. The Democratic nomination process uses superdelegates, who (unlike ordinary delegates) remain unbound to any presidential candidate, and can switch their support at any time up to the actual nomination of a presidential candidate to represent the Democratic party.
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