Hold 'em Accountable
Indiana trusts you to choose the President of the United States. Governor. Congress. State House. State Senate. But apparently, you are too fragile to choose your own Attorney General. In this episode of Hold ’em Accountable, we break down one of the least understood systems in Indiana politics: The convention delegate system. For some of Indiana’s most important statewide offices—including Attorney General, Secretary of State, Treasurer, Comptroller, and Lieutenant Governor—primary voters do not directly choose the party nominee. Delegates do. That raises a serious question: Why are Hoosiers trusted to choose the President, but not trusted to choose the Attorney General? This episode dives into how Indiana’s convention system actually works, who delegates are, why the system still exists, and why it deserves far more scrutiny than it gets. 📍 We break down: ✔️ Which statewide offices are chosen at convention instead of direct primary ✔️ How Indiana delegates are actually selected ✔️ Why most voters do not understand delegate races ✔️ The difference between representation and political gatekeeping ✔️ Why party insiders defend the current system ✔️ How smaller political rooms create institutional comfort ✔️ Why transparency matters in democracy ✔️ Why statewide offices should be chosen directly by voters This is not an attack on delegates themselves. In fact, Derrick Holder openly discusses being a delegate at the Democratic State Convention while still criticizing the structure of the system. Because the issue is not legitimacy. It is opacity. Most voters have no idea that delegate races can determine who becomes Attorney General, Secretary of State, Treasurer, Comptroller, or Lieutenant Governor. That matters. Especially when offices overseeing elections and public money are being decided through processes most voters could not explain without a whiteboard and a migraine. This episode also tackles a bigger philosophical question: America is a constitutional republic built on representation—but does every office really require a political middleman? Congress? Sure. Attorney General? That is a very different argument. 🎯 The core argument is simple: If an office affects every Hoosier, every voter should have a direct say in who gets on the ballot. No back rooms. No insider flowcharts. No democracy requiring advanced placement coursework just to understand how nominations happen. Because once the process becomes harder to understand than the office itself, the system stops serving voters and starts serving itself. And that is where trust dies. 🎥 Watch now and decide for yourself: Does Indiana’s delegate system protect democracy—or protect insiders? 🎙️ Hold ’em Accountable Real conversations. No spin. No scripts. Just the questions voters actually care about. You can also ask Alexa to play Hold ’em Accountable with Derrick Holder. #INDIANAPOLITICS #DELEGATESYSTEM #DEMOCRACY #INDIANADEMOCRATS #HOLDEMACCOUNTABLE
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