The most likely strategy for the Anybody-But-Biden contingent might be to persuade enough delegates to abstain, denying Biden a majority and demonstrating to him that he cannot win. To put it mildly, that is a tough road. (See: “You can’t beat somebody with nobody.”)
If Biden Stands Down
Suppose Biden takes the increasingly unsubtle nudge-nudge-wink-wink from Pelosi, Schumer and company and withdraws. At that point, the pledged delegates become free agents. They are under no obligation to follow whatever preferences Biden may express — whether endorsing his vice president or calling for an open convention with a “mini-primary” to decide his replacement on the ticket.
What happens at this point is up to the convention itself, which always has the power to adopt, amend or discard existing rules. And that could be key to what takes place next.
For instance: Without Biden, it’s a lot less likely that any one candidate will have an absolute majority when the elected delegates are polled — which means the 700 superdelegates would not be allowed to vote on the first ballot. But if the delegates want the voice of experience and party leadership heard when the balloting begins, that rule can be changed. That scenario could potentially lead to a quick coalescing around Harris as next in line.
On the other hand, if the “mini-primary” idea gains steam, that might be an effort to allow for a more open field of competitors. The convention can also adopt whatever process it chooses, up to and including ranked-choice voting, so that a nominee can be chosen within a few ballots. The party likely has very little desire to repeat the 103-ballot battle of 1924.
It’s impossible to predict the political consequences of an open convention, but the rules are certain to shape its outcome.
It could lead to the kind of divisiveness and chaos that descended on a previous Chicago convention in 1968; or it could present an electorate that was unhappy with the Biden-Trump sequel with fresh, younger faces and a jolt of excitement in a political process that has turned millions off.
It might even demonstrate that an institution almost 200 years old, one that had seemed to lose all semblance of relevance, might have the flexibility to accommodate a political landscape no one even imagined possible a few short weeks ago.
Source:politico.com