How Bernie Sanders Could Win Super Tuesday
Clinton made her oft used called for “love and kindness” at the two church stops, but did so with a more political bent by subtly knocking Donald Trump, the Republican front-runner, in front of the primarily black audiences.
“Despite what you hear, we don’t need to make America great again”, Hillary said to raucous applause as she took aim at Trump’s slogan.
Check out the graphic below to learn a little more about Super Tuesday, including a breakdown of the delegates up for grabs and the last candidate to win the respective states.
Black primary voters were more likely to say they trust Clinton over Sanders to handle race relations, with more than 4 in 10 saying they only trust her and less than 1 in 10 saying they only trust him.
So Hillary Clinton won the Democratic primary in SC. Seventy-four percent of the Democratic electorate said the next president should generally continue Obama’s policies, and Clinton won those voters 81 to 19 percent, per exit polls.
The same poll found that Trump’s supporters show a spike in election enthusiasm over past years. Clinton was on track to capture 84 percent of those votes.
Massachusetts, one of five states outside of the South to vote on Super Tuesday, may be the state to watch.
A total of 2167 registered Tennessee voters were surveyed and Trump and Clinton led by somewhat similar margins among potential Republican and Democratic primary voters.
It’s worth remembering that, in the busy schedule over the next few weeks, Sanders won’t have been able to spend much time on the ground, certainly not spending as much time as he did in Iowa or New Hampshire. She told her victory rally that “tomorrow this campaign goes national” as she and Mr Sanders compete for the Super Tuesday states.
Meanwhile, Republican Donald Trump who is all out to impress the anti-Islam constituencies as a safe and easy route to White House is working to build an insurmountable lead.
When the polls close for Democrats, expect Sanders and Clinton to be optimistic about their chances.
Sanders will be appearing at a rally Sunday night at the Moby Arena at Colorado State University.
“I think we’re going to do well on Super Tuesday, we’re going to do well in many states after that and we look forward to those state-by-state struggles”, he said in an interview on NBC News’s “Meet the Press“. Alabama has voted for GOP candidates who eventually lost their party’s nomination three times: Ronald Reagan in 1976, Mike Huckabee in 2008 and Rick Santorum in 2012.