Biden slows the Bernie surge and Bloomberg is ‘reassessing’

Joe Biden beat expectations on Super Tuesday, the biggest primary day in the Democratic presidential stakes, slowing the surge of Bernie Sanders.
U.S. Vice President Joe Biden MARC NOZELL PHOTO
Joe Biden (MARC NOZELL PHOTO)

Joe Biden beat expectations on Super Tuesday, the biggest primary day in the Democratic presidential stakes, slowing the surge of Bernie Sanders.

Mike Bloomberg, the former New York mayor, was reassessing his campaign after performing poorly the first time his name appeared on ballots. Sanders and Bloomberg, the Vermont senator, are Jewish.

The race now seems a clear choice between Biden, the former vice president, as its moderate flag-bearer, and Sanders leading among progressives.

Biden is now in the lead in the delegate count after 14 states, American Samoa and Democrats Abroad ran primaries. He has a total of 390 of the 1,991 delegates a candidate will need to win the nomination, according to a count by The New York Times. Sanders has 330 and Bloomberg has 12.

Biden won nine of the 14 states in contention, including a surprise win in delegate-rich Texas, where Sanders had set up a strong ground team. Sanders won three states and looked set to win California, the largest state voting Tuesday. Bloomberg, a media magnate who has spent at least $500 million on his campaign, came away with a clear win only in American Samoa, where he won half of his six delegates.

Sanders’ victories in New Hampshire and Nevada and his strong showing in Iowa, the first nominating contest, had seemed to put the wind at his back. But Biden swept South Carolina last week, a state where the majority of Democratic primary voters are African American. That win and the rapid-fire endorsements from three former presidential candidates who had dropped out set him up for his major upset victory. Bloomberg did not participate in the first four ballots before Super Tuesday.

Sanders was still very much in the race, but Bloomberg was meeting Wednesday morning with his staff to see whether he should stay in. Bloomberg has committed his resources to help whoever is the Democratic nominee to oust U.S. President Donald Trump.

Still in the race despite no outright wins are Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Tulsi Gabbard.

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