Tom Mann and Norm Ornstein have written this insightful oped for the NY Times. Its conclusion (“In this case, the nomination could come down to a difficult and complex credentials battle over whether to seat delegates from Michigan and Florida. To have a nomination settled in this way is a bit like having an election settled by a 5-4 vote of the Supreme Court. Averting this kind of disaster is just what superdelegates are supposed to do.”) is an interesting counterpoint to the conclusion of my recent Slate article (“The Supreme Court has left such delegate fights to the political process before, and it is likely to do so again. That may be a blessing for the Democrats. They don’t really want the court resolving whether Obama or Clinton will run in November, do they?”).