Super Tuesday triumph for Biden sets up one-on-one battle against
Sanders
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[March 04, 2020]
By Trevor Hunnicutt and John Whitesides
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A resurgent Joe
Biden rolled to victories across the South, Midwest and New England on
the biggest day of voting in the U.S. Democratic presidential nomination
campaign, setting up one-on-one battle against Bernie Sanders who was
leading in California.
Biden, the former vice president whose campaign was on life support just
weeks ago, won nine of 14 states voting on "Super Tuesday", including
surprise wins in Texas and Massachusetts, in the race to face President
Donald Trump in November.
Just days after his campaign was resurrected by a thumping win in South
Carolina, Biden, 77, emerged as a consensus champion for the moderate
wing of the party against Sanders, 78, a left-wing senator with strong
support among the youth.
(Get all the Super Tuesday action: https://www.reuters.com/live-events/super-tuesday-id2923975)
"For those who have been knocked down, counted out, left behind, this is
your campaign," Biden told roaring supporters in Los Angeles. "We are
very much alive!"
In what would be the day's biggest upset, Biden was projected by Edison
Research to have won Texas, the biggest prize after California. Sanders
invested heavily in Texas and was counting on its Latino population to
propel him to victory.
Sanders, the one-time front-runner who had hoped to take a big step
toward the nomination on Tuesday, won Colorado, Utah and his home state
of Vermont, Edison Research said.
Biden, with overwhelming support from African-American, moderate and
older voters, swept to wins in Alabama, Arkansas, Massachusetts,
Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Virginia.
Fox News and AP projected Sanders won California, whose 415 delegates
represent the largest haul. Edison Research and other networks held off
declaring a winner there as results trickled in. Maine was a toss-up,
with both Biden and Sanders winning roughly a third of the vote with 73%
of the precincts reporting.
Without naming him, Sanders took direct aim at Biden during a rally with
supporters in Vermont, criticizing his 2002 vote to authorize war in
Iraq and his support for global trade deals that Sanders opposed.
"We're going to win the Democratic nomination and we are going to defeat
the most dangerous president in the history of this country," Sanders
said, referring to Trump.
It was a spectacular turn for Biden after poor showings in the first two
contests, Iowa and New Hampshire. Until a week ago he trailed Sanders in
most state and national opinion polls.
BLOOMBERG, WARREN LOSE OUT
But Biden's blowout win in South Carolina on Saturday provided a burst
of new momentum, fueling a wave of endorsements from Democratic
officials. Two big rivals - Pete Buttigieg, a former mayor of South
Bend, Indiana, and U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota - quit the
race and backed him.
The results left Michael Bloomberg, the billionaire former New York
mayor who plunged into the contest late, with virtually nothing to show
for more than half a billion dollars spent on advertising. With his only
victory coming in the tiny U.S. territory of American Samoa, aides said
he would reassess whether to stay in the race on Wednesday.
It was also a tough night for Senator Elizabeth Warren, who finished
well behind Sanders and Biden in most states and trailed them in her
home state Massachusetts, which Biden won despite having spent no money
and deployed no staff there.
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Democratic U.S. presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe
Biden appears at his Super Tuesday night rally in Los Angeles,
California, U.S., March 3, 2020. REUTERS/Mike Blake
Biden did not personally campaign in several of the states he
ultimately won, including Klobuchar's home state Minnesota. He
called Klobuchar Tuesday night to thank her for the Minnesota win, a
day after she dropped her own bid and endorsed him.
ONE-THIRD UP FOR GRABS
More than one-third of the delegates who will pick the eventual
nominee at a July convention were up for grabs on Tuesday, providing
clarity at last in a muddled race for the White House.
Just a week ago, Biden was hoping to stay within reach of Sanders,
to keep alive a chance to catch up as the race moved on. But initial
tallies showed him leading Sanders in delegates for the day 318 to
241, with hundreds more to be allocated.
To date, Biden leads Sanders in delegates 371 to 301. A candidate
needs 1,991 delegates to win the Democratic nomination on the first
ballot at the party's convention in July.
The campaign continues at an accelerated pace through the next two
weeks, when nearly another 1,000 delegates are up for grabs,
including the swing state of Florida on March 17.
BRIDGE
Biden also achieved his main Super Tuesday goal of muscling aside
Bloomberg and consolidating support from moderates.
Bloomberg bombarded Super Tuesday states with ads to jump into
position as a top moderate rival to Sanders, but saw his poll
numbers slide after coming under fire during debates. He was on
course to win 15% or more of the vote, the threshold to win
delegates, in Tennessee, Texas, Colorado, Utah, California and
Arkansas.
Biden is hoping to build a bridge between progressive Democrats'
desire for big structural change and more moderate Democrats'
yearning for a candidate who will be able to win over enough
independents and Republicans to oust Trump.
In Texas, which Biden unexpectedly won with 33% of the vote compared
to Sanders' 30%, 56% of voters said they favored a candidate who
could beat Trump over someone they agreed with on major issues.
Among those voters, nearly 40% chose Biden, over Sanders who had
26%, according to Edison Research exit polls.
Biden pulled off his victories despite being vastly outspent by
Bloomberg, who had spent $377 million on ads by Feb. 23, and
Sanders, who spent $20 million. Biden spent $4.7 million during the
same period, according to the Wesleyan Media Project.
The pace of the Democratic race begins to accelerate after Super
Tuesday, with 11 more states voting by the end of March, when nearly
two-thirds of the delegates will have been allotted.
The next contests, on March 10, will be in Idaho, Michigan,
Mississippi, Missouri, North Dakota and Washington state.
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt in Los Angeles and John Whitesides in
Washington, additional reporting by Jarrett Renshaw, Ginger Gibson,
Doina Chiacu, Sharon Bernstein and Zachary Fagenson; Writing by John
Whitesides; Editing by Soyoung Kim, Howard Goller and Peter Graff)
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