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If most of the party supports a moderate candidate but multiple moderate candidates compete so that a radical candidate wins, is that a better representation of the voters?
Why is moderate / radical the only axis in your scheme? Who's to say that all flavors of "moderate" are equal to all voters?
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my comment is to dispute the claim the Biden nomination was "easy" and/or inevitable using my memory of events as well as specifics of what happened during the 2020 nomination to support that dispute
I'm not claiming Bernie should have won the nomination or that it would be "better" or that any of the agenda driven policy choices which changed the way Democrat primaries were done were "good" or "bad," but that they were driven by the disputed and messy 2016 nomination debacle specifically in to undermine a candidate like Bernie. Bernie's 2020 loss wasn't inevitable or "easy," it took quite a bit of scheming and planning and tactics to avoid another 2016 debacle.
In those terms, no, but what does this have to do with the topic at hand? If you're attempting to make a comparison between the above hypothetical to the real world in the 2020 primary with the real 2020 candidates I would dispute both your characterizations and the simplification of candidate preference.
Which candidates were "moderate" and why? Which were "radical" and why? "Radicals" and "moderates" are not interchangeable which is why they typically have differing supporters. Is it true that a person who prefers a "moderate" when asked would prefer any moderate compared to any particular "radical"? No, this can be seen in pretty much any polling cross-tab. If we ask people specific policy positions and then graft that onto candidates, do they prefer the "moderate" or "radical" candidate (labels used with agendas)? It's an easy hypothetical which appears to have a simple answer, but I think when we apply it to real world politics it doesn't accurately predict voter preferences.
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