Dictionary Definition
delegate n : a person appointed or elected to
represent others
Verb
1 transfer power to someone [syn: depute]
2 give an assignment to (a person) to a post, or
assign a task to (a person) [syn: designate, depute, assign]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- (noun)
- IPA: /ˈdɛlɪɡət/
- (verb)
- IPA: /ˈdɛlɪˌɡeɪt/
Noun
- a person authorized to act as representative for another; a deputy
- a representative at a conference etc
- an appointed representative in some legislative bodies
Translations
- Catalan: delegat , delegada
- Dutch: afgevaardigde , gedelegeerde
- Greek: απεσταλμένος (apestalménos), απεσταλμένη (apestalménē)
- Interlingua: delegato , delegata
- Japanese: 代表 (daihyō), 使節 (shisetsu), 代理人 (dairinin)
- Portuguese: delegado , delegada
- Spanish: delegado , delegada
Verb
Italian
Adjective
delegate- Feminine plural form of delegato
Noun
delegate- Plural of delegata
Verb
delegate- Form of Second-person plural present tense, delegare
- Form of Second-person plural imperative, delegare#Italian|delegare
Extensive Definition
A delegate is a member of a group representing an
organization (e.g., a government, a charity,
an
NGO, or a trade union)
at a meeting or conference between organizations of the same level
(e.g. trade
talks or an environmental
summit between governments; an arbitration over an
industrial dispute; or a meeting of student
unions from individual colleges at a national student union
conference).
Politics
United States of America
Delegates from the major political parties are
involved in the selection of candidates for
President of the United States by such assemblies as a
convention. Some of the officials involved in the process are
called superdelegates.
Delegate is the title of a person elected to the
United States House of Representatives to serve the interests
of an organized United
States territory, at present only overseas or the District
of Columbia, but historically in most cases in a portion of
North America as precursor to one or more of the present states of
the union. Delegates have powers similar to that of
Representatives, including the right to vote in committee, but have
no right to take part in the floor votes in which the full house
actually decides whether the proposal is carried. See:
Delegate (United States Congress).
A similar mandate is held in a few cases under
the style Resident
commissioner.
- Delegate is also the title given to individuals elected to the lower houses of the bicameral legislative bodies of the states of Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia (see House of Delegates).
- Members of other parliamentary assemblies, such as the Continental Congress or the New York State Constitutional.
- Members of a body charged with writing or revising a foundational or other basic governmental document (such as members of a constitutional convention are usually referred to as "delegates".
Democratic Party
The Democratic party of the United States of America uses pledged delegates and superdelegates. A candidate for the Democratic nominee must win a majority of combined delegate votes at the Democratic National Convention, to be held in Denver, Colorado in August 2008.Pledged delegates are elected or chosen at the
state or local level, with the understanding that they will support
a particular candidate at the convention. Pledged delegates are
however not actually bound to vote for that candidate, thus the
candidates are allowed to periodically review the list of delegates
and eliminate any of those they feel would not be supportive.
Currently there are 3,253 pledged delegates.
Of the 4,047 total Democratic delegates, 794 are
superdelegates,
which are usually Democratic members of Congress, governors, former
Presidents, and other party leaders. They are not required to
indicate preference for a candidate.
The Democratic Party uses a proportional
representation to determine how many delegates each candidate is
awarded in each state. For example, a candidate who wins 40% of a
state's vote in the primary election will win 40% of that state's
delegates; however, a candidate must win at least 15% of the
primary vote, or they win no delegates. If a candidate wins 14% of
the primary election, they receive zero delegates. There is no
process to win superdelegates, since they can vote for whomever
they please. A candidate needs to win a simple majority of total
delegates to earn the Democratic nomination.
Republican Party
The Republican Party of the United States of America utilizes a similar system with slightly different terminology, employing pledged and unpledged delegates. Of the total 2,380 Republican delegates, 1,719 are pledged delegates, who as with the Democratic Party, are elected at the state or local level. To become the Republican Party nominee, the candidate must win a simple majority of 1,191 of the 2,380 total delegates at the Republican National Convention, held in Minneapolis, Minnesota in September 2008.A majority of the unpledged delegates are elected
much like the pledged delegates, and are likely to be committed to
a specific candidate. Many of the other unpledged delegates
automatically claim the delegate status either by virtue of their
position as a party chair or national party committee person. This
group is known as unpledged RNC member delegates.
The process by which delegates are awarded to a
candidate will vary from state to state. Many states use a
winner-take-all system, where popular vote determines the winning
candidate for that state, while a few other use a proportional
representation. While the Republican National Committee does not
require a 15% minimum threshold, individual state parties may
however impart such a threshold.
The unpledged RNC member delegates are free to
vote for any candidate and are not bound by the electoral votes of
their state. The majority of the unpledged delegates (those who are
elected or chosen) are technically free to vote for any candidate;
however they are likely to be committed to one specifically.
Religion
- Apostolic delegate, one appointed by the Pope
References
delegate in Spanish: Delegado
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
accredit, agent, alternate, ambassador, appoint, ascribe, assign, authorize, buck, catchpole, charge, charter, choose, commend, commissar, commissary, commission, commissionaire, commissioner, commit, confide, consign, depute, deputize, deputy, designate, designate an agent,
detach, detail, devolute, devolve, devolve upon, emissary, empower, enfeoff, entrust, envoy, factor, give, give in charge, give in
trust, go-between, hand on, hand over, herald, infeudate, legate, license, mandate, messenger, minister, mission, mouthpiece, name, nominate, pass on, pass over,
pick, plenipotentiary,
post, proxy, relegate, remand, remit, replacement, representative, secretary, select, send out, spokesman, spokesperson, spokeswoman, stand-in,
substitute, surrogate, transfer, trust, warrant