Clinton wins South Carolina, Sanders gets ready for New York
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton won the overwhelming support of black voters in claiming a commanding victory in South Carolina’s primary Saturday. As soon as Clinton took the Palmetto State, Bernie Sanders continued his campaigning elsewhere and gained a number of huge endorsements in the process. So our range for Tuesday in pledged delegates appears to be something like Sanders plus-1 to Clinton plus-151. As far as they’re concerned Palmieri says: wins are nice, but delegates are more important.
“Now, after listening to We, the People, I feel the Bern”, Mr. Grayson wrote. Bernie Sanders, according to the exit poll conducted for The Associated Press and television networks by Edison Research.
It is the former secretary of state’s third victory in four Democratic contests and confirms her place as the strong front-runner for the party’s nomination for the November 8 presidential election.
But Grayson said America need a revolution and Sanders “can make one”.
In a recent fundraiser email about him to supporters, she added: “I promise you that I will fight to make sure he never becomes president”.
In the past week it’s been more or less assumed that Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton had taken dominant positions in their respective parties’ race for the White House. Examining the turnout for Clinton, South Carolina civil rights activist and community organizer Kevin Alexander Gray is critical of how Sanders campaigned in the state’s black community. Ms. Clinton now leads the polls of all those states taking part on Tuesday apart from Mr. Sanders’ home state of Vermont.
The $36 million raised in February would bring the total raised by Sanders to roughly $131 million, and continue giving him the fuel needed to do battle with Hillary Clinton, even if a path to the nomination has narrowed greatly. She won nine of every 10 black voters – as well as women, men, urban, suburban, rural, very liberal and conservative voters. “We got decimated. The only positive thing for us is we won… the 29 years of age and younger vote”.
In 1996, the S&P 500 dropped 2.9 percent the week before Super Tuesday.