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“ It is curious, ” said Dr. David Bridsell, Dean of the School of Public Affairs at Baruch College. “ You do n’t want the award of delegates to come down to heads or tails. ” LUPICA: PRESIDENT CRUZ? BETTER CHANCE WITH PENELOPE, NOT TED
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The coin tosses describe rumbles on social media . A “ virtual tie ” between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders resulted in mint tosses in several Iowa precincts. ( Justin Sullivan/Getty, RICK WILKING/Reuters ) “ It ‘s dainty to know that America is a break nation and we decid our adjacent President with a coin flip, ” Tweeted Nick Zaxowski, echoing the sentiments of many others on social media. In Des Moines, a mint landed tails up at the Weeks Middle School gymnasium following a rent. “ That ‘s how it works, ” one voter sporting Sanders stickers said, referring to the rules set forth by the Iowa Democratic Party, which allows a coin chuck in the subject of a tie. “ It was very, identical close. Remember this is a caucus. ” FULL COVERAGE: THE 2016 PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
This is how the # IowaCaucus works. A tie is solved tossing a coin @ HillaryClinton wins pic.twitter.com/yZDTUKFJXQ— Fernando Peinado (@FernandoPeinado) February 2, 2016
Another coin flip awarded Clinton extra delegates during a precinct tie in Davenport. Ames, where 60 voters disappeared in the center of the caucus, saw the same consequence, according to the Des Moines Register.
Read more: How to send your Coin Master link?
The tinkle of a mint ruled against Sanders in the Des Moines East High School library. After the democratic votes were logged, Clinton and Sanders were separated by less than a percentage point — Clinton at 699.57 submit delegate equivalents, Sanders at 697.77.
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S.E. CUPP: AFTER IOWA, ORDER IS RESTORED
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In an implausible victory after breaking apparently every principle of presidential campaigning, Donald Trump defeats Hillary Clinton and becomes the forty-fifth president of the United States. ( New York Daily News ) But do n’t credit the lucky tosses for Clinton ‘s reduce star. James McCormick, a professor of political science at Iowa State University, said the impact of the flips is minimal. The mint flips secured extra delegates to the party ‘s county conventions, not statewide delegate equivalents. “ It ‘s a long stride between the caucuses and the actual people selected to attend conventions, ” McCormick said.
With Dan Good nhensley @ nydailynews.com
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