Super Tuesday contests offer big rewards, challenges in Democratic
presidential race
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[February 28, 2020]
By Ginger Gibson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Fourteen states and
one U.S. territory host Super Tuesday primaries next week, a flurry that
could bring more clarity about which Democratic presidential contender
voters prefer to challenge Republican President Donald Trump in
November.
More than a third of delegates will be doled out in Tuesday's nominating
contests, compared with less than 5% awarded from the four states voting
in February. A candidate needs 1,991 delegates to win the Democratic
nomination at the party's national convention in July.
The votes will test the front-runner status secured by Senator Bernie
Sanders after wins in New Hampshire and Nevada and a near-tie in Iowa.
Former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg will be on ballots for the first
time, potentially further splintering the field of candidates
campaigning as a moderate alternative to Sanders, a self-described
democratic socialist.
Here is what you need to know about this key day in the Democratic
presidential nominating battle.
What is Super Tuesday?
After a month of states holding nominating contests one by one, Tuesday
marks the first time a group of states hold primary elections on the
same day. Historically, the batch of primaries has further winnowed the
field.
California and Texas are the day's biggest prizes, with 415 and 228
delegates, respectively. California, the most populous U.S. state, held
its primary in June during the 2016 presidential race but opted to
return as a Super Tuesday state this cycle to try to increase its
influence.
The other states with primaries on Tuesday are Alabama, Arkansas,
Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma,
Tennessee, Utah, Vermont and Virginia.
Votes will also be conducted in American Samoa, a U.S. Pacific
territory, and among a newly formed group of Americans living abroad.
What is at stake?
On Super Tuesday, 1,357 delegates will be awarded, a significant chunk
of the 3,979 pledged delegates at stake in the nominating race.
In order for candidates to win any delegates in a state, they must
finish with at least 15% of the vote, either in the statewide total or
an individual congressional district.
North Carolina, with its 110 delegates, could give the winning candidate
bragging rights about success in a general election battleground state.
Sanders, Elizabeth Warren and Amy Klobuchar will be tested in the
respective states they represent in the Senate - Vermont (16 delegates),
Massachusetts (91 delegates) and Minnesota (75 delegates).
The other states' delegate counts are as follows: Virginia (99),
Colorado (67), Tennessee (64), Alabama (52), Oklahoma (37), Arkansas
(31), Utah (29) and Maine (24). Additionally, 13 delegates will be
awarded for "Democrats Abroad" and six in American Samoa.
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A Vote sign directs voters to an early polling station for the March
3 Super Tuesday primary in Santa Ana California, U.S., February 24,
2020. Picture taken February 24, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
Who is best positioned to win?
To be competitive on Super Tuesday, candidates cannot simply invest
time and money in one place to try to win votes. Instead, they must
have the infrastructure and fundraising to air television ads and
have staff in states across the country.
Sanders tops opinion polls in California, where he is hoping to
capitalize on his momentum to build a large lead. Former Vice
President Joe Biden has seen his position there slide after failing
to win any of the first three state votes.
Biden hopes to gain ground in South Carolina, where he leads polls
ahead of its primary on Saturday. But he and former South Bend,
Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg have struggled to match Sanders in
fundraising, making it harder for them to compete on a broader
scale.
Bloomberg, a billionaire businessman, skipped the early states and
has spent more than $500 million running ads in Super Tuesday states
as he looks to surpass Biden and Buttigieg as the front-runner among
moderates.
Bloomberg appears to be taking moderate voters from Biden in Texas,
where both men are hoping to best Sanders.
The trio of states represented by candidates still in the running
will also be closely watched. Sanders is the easy favorite in
Vermont, but Warren and Klobuchar face tougher fights in their home
states.
When will we know results?
With the exception of a single caucus in American Samoa, the rest of
the Super Tuesday states are holding primaries, meaning they should
be able to avoid the problems that led to reporting delays after
caucuses in Iowa and Nevada.
But with so many states voting, the full picture of Super Tuesday
results could still take days to emerge.
Several states in the Eastern time zone will be the first to close
their polls on Tuesday at 7 p.m. EST (0000 GMT). Results should
start to trickle in soon afterward, although it will likely take
hours for all the votes to be tabulated and winners declared.
California's polls close last at 8 p.m. PST (0400 GMT Wednesday). In
2016, because the race was so close, it took a month for California
Democratic officials to count all of the votes and declare Hillary
Clinton the winner over Sanders.
State officials are hoping that even with a tight race and bigger
field this year, the Democratic nominating battle is settled more
quickly. If the margins are close, the state could take a while to
reach a conclusion as it waits to count absentee ballots postmarked
by Election Day.
(Reporting by Ginger Gibson; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Peter
Cooney)
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