Super Tuesday: Biden Seals Comeback with String of Victories
Joe Biden
has won nine of the 14 states that voted to pick a Democratic White House
candidate on Super Tuesday, a remarkable rebound for his campaign.
The former
US vice-president overturned predictions to narrowly take the key state of
Texas from his main challenger, Bernie Sanders.
However, Mr
Sanders is projected to win California - the biggest prize of the night - as
well as three other states.
They lead
the race to face Republican President Donald Trump in November.
Former New
York mayor Michael Bloomberg spent more than $500m of his own money on his
campaign, but did not win a single state. And Senator Elizabeth Warren, once
the frontrunner in the race, suffered a humiliating defeat to Mr Biden in her
home state of Massachusetts.
Super
Tuesday awards more than 1,300 of the 1,991 delegates needed to clinch the
Democratic White House nomination in July.
As things
stand, Mr Biden has 402 delegates and Mr Sanders 314. However, results from
California, which has 415 delegates, could affect the current standing.
Only last
month, Mr Biden's campaign was all but written off by some observers after he
finished a poor fourth in the Iowa caucuses and fifth in the New Hampshire
primary.
But on
Tuesday, Mr Biden won Texas - the second biggest state with 228 delegates -
along with Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Alabama, Tennessee,
North Carolina and Virginia.
Maine, which
has 24 delegates, is also yet to declare but partial results put Mr Biden
slightly ahead of Mr Sanders.
Virginia and
North Carolina are crucial because they are key swing states in the 2020
election.
Exit polls
across the board suggested Mr Biden - who was vice-president to Barack Obama -
attracted large majorities of African-American voters, a crucial bloc for the
Democratic party.
Mr Biden,
77, also appears to have won among the type of suburban voters who pollsters
say have been turning away from the current US president.
"We are
very much alive," Mr Biden told a crowd in Los Angeles. "Make no
mistake about it, this campaign will send Donald Trump packing."
If Mr
Sanders, 78, does win California, as the Associated Press news agency projects,
he will pick up the lion's share of the whopping 415 delegates that the Golden
State sends to the party convention.
The
left-wing senator also won his home state of Vermont, along with Colorado and
Utah.
Mr Sanders
had been heavily favoured to win Texas, but it was finally claimed by Mr Biden.
In a victory
speech, Mr Sanders lambasted Mr Trump, but also took a shot at Mr Biden.
"We're
taking on the political establishment," he said. "You cannot beat
Trump with the same-old, same-old kind of politics."
The next
primaries take place on 10 March in Michigan, Washington state, Idaho,
Mississippi, Missouri and North Dakota, with 352 delegates available.
Joe Biden
came into Super Tuesday hoping his momentum from a surprisingly big South
Carolina win would translate into a strong showing in some of the Super Tuesday
states and allow him to keep within sight of Bernie Sanders in the delegate
count.
By that
metric, his evening succeeded beyond his best expectations.
His support
among black voters, which was on display in South Carolina, was replicated
across the South and helped offset Bernie Sanders' strength with Hispanic
voters in Texas.
The
endorsements mattered too - in Dallas on Monday, he had the support of Amy
Klobuchar, Pete Buttigieg and Beto O'Rourke, and he ended up greatly
over-performing his polls in that state and winning Klobuchar's Minnesota.
But now the
hard work begins. He is in for a state-by-state slog against Mr Sanders that
could stretch all the way to the Democratic National Convention in July.
He'll have
to fundraise and organise rapidly to make up for the Vermont senator's
advantages. Meanwhile, Republicans are going to start training their fire on
him - again.
If he ends
up winning the nomination, after being left for dead just a few weeks ago, he
will have earned it.
Ms Warren,
70, lost to Mr Biden in Massachusetts despite the fact that he did not campaign
in the state or spent money advertising there.
Mr
Bloomberg, 78, could only pick up a consolation win in the tiny US territory of
American Samoa.
He has,
however, garnered enough votes in California and Texas to pick up delegates,
according to incomplete results.
Mr Bloomberg
was appearing on a presidential ballot for the first time after skipping all
four contests last month.
The
billionaire wildcard had lowered expectations for his performance ahead of
Tuesday. But on the eve of the vote, he indicated that he planned to fight all
the way to the party convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in July.
Mr Trump
could not resist taking repeated digs at his rival New York billionaire after
his disappointing results.
The
Democratic Party is at a crossroads as its voters decide which candidate has
the best chance of denying Mr Trump a second term in office this autumn.
Once a
crowded field of more than two dozen, celebrated for its women and candidates
of colour, the Democratic contest now increasingly looks like a two-man race
between two white male septuagenarians.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-
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