Texas a linchpin in Biden's Super Tuesday strategy
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[December 16, 2019]
By James Oliphant
(Reuters) - With the first Democratic
nominating contests less than two months away, former Vice President Joe
Biden is already looking beyond to Super Tuesday in March, when some of
the biggest electoral prizes will be up for grabs.
Biden traveled to Texas on Friday, a state his campaign sees as crucial
to securing the nomination. While California looms as the main event on
March 3, when 16 states and territories cast ballots, Texas could be the
real difference-maker for him.
Opinion polls show the Democratic race fractured in California, which
has 416 delegates at stake. But in Texas, where more than 220 delegates
are in play, a CNN poll released this week showed Biden with a 20-point
lead.
Biden campaigned in San Antonio, on his first trip to the state since
September, amid signs his presidential bid has stabilized after a
stretch where he faced questions about his performance on the campaign
trail and fundraising.
"You're going to be seeing a whole lot of me between now and November,
God willing," Biden told the crowd.
While there, Biden picked up several endorsements from local elected
officials, including San Antonio's former mayor, Phil Hardberger.
He remains atop the 15-candidate Democratic field in national polling
while rivals have faded. U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren's bid has been
losing steam and U.S. Senator Kamala Harris, once considered the biggest
threat to Biden's grip on African-American voters, dropped out of the
race.
The exit of former U.S. Representative Beto O'Rourke of Texas from the
race also seems to have worked to Biden's benefit in that state.
Julian Castro, the former U.S. Housing secretary and himself an ex-mayor
of San Antonio, remains in the presidential race.
The nominating contests begin in February in Iowa and New Hampshire.
Biden trails Pete Buttigieg, mayor of South Bend, Indiana, and U.S.
Senator Bernie Sanders in those states, which offer just 65 pledged
delegates overall.
Given Biden's strength with African-Americans and, to a lesser extent,
Latino voters, his campaign has long focused on a strategy less reliant
on wins in those early states, which are overwhelmingly white, in favor
of a long-term effort to rack up delegates in larger, more diverse
states.
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Democratic 2020 U.S. presidential candidate and former U.S. Vice
President Joe Biden speaks while former 2004 Democratic presidential
nominee John Kerry sits during Biden's "No Malarkey!" campaign bus
tour in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, U.S., December 6, 2019. REUTERS/Shannon
Stapleton
More than 1,300 delegates will be awarded on Super Tuesday, and
Biden's campaign believes the delegate allocation method in Texas
gives him a leg up there.
Delegates will be awarded both by the result of the statewide
popular vote and the results in individual state senate districts,
which, analysts say, require a candidate strong both in urban areas
and in rural, working-class regions.
Biden continues to appeal to moderate, white voters as well. The
same CNN poll that showed him with a 20-point lead in Texas over
Sanders and Warren also showed him essentially tied with Trump in
the state in a potential general election matchup.
On the campaign trail, Biden often makes the point that he alone
among the field can deliver votes in states that went for Trump in
2016. His campaign said that is true for Texas – a state Democrats
have long sought to make competitive nationally.
That is part of Biden's pitch to potential endorsers in the state.
He has already gained a few notable ones, including U.S.
Representative Eddie Bernice Johnson, the senior member of the Texas
congressional delegation.
Jim Henson, a political scientist at the University of Texas-Austin,
said the race in the state remains fluid and that Biden's current
advantages could fade.
Sanders, for instance, shows considerable strength with Latinos, and
Warren is considered to have the biggest organization in the state.
"I wouldn't conclude (Biden) has this state sewn up," Henson said.
(Reporting by James Oliphant; Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Tom Brown
and Daniel Wallis)
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