In some states, only registered members of the party that organises the caucus may participate in the caucus, in others, non-members of the party or members of the opponent party may also participate and vote.
The Convention is attended not only by state delegates but also by super-delegates, important party personalities who can vote for whomever they want, sometimes reversing the situation.
The voters do not directly elect the President but a Grand Elector representing the nominated candidate.
Each Great Elector represents the party to which he/she belongs, but the US Constitution does not require him/her to vote for the presidential candidate chosen by his/her party.
The assignment of a Grand Elector based on a number of inhabitants changes from state to state and sometimes leads to the Presidency of United States candidates who received fewer votes in the general election.
The Voting Mechanism 1) There is no federal law requiring the identification of voters.
The Governor of California, a member of the Democratic party, has introduced a law that prohibits requiring identification of those who show up at polling stations to vote.
3) A 2002 law requires the presence of an electronic voting machine in all polling stations.
4) About a fourth of the voters will vote with machines that issue paper ballots.
The remaining ones will vote by electronic machines that store the votes, and may or may not generate a paper record of the vote.
Electronic voting machines can be manipulated by loading them with programs that falsify the results.
https://www.globalresearch.ca/us-elections-mechanism-fraud/5871706
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