Former U.S. Vice President Joe Biden won three states — Virginia, North Carolina and Alabama — while Senator Bernie Sanders captured his home state of Vermont in the first results from Tuesday’s Democratic presidential nominating contests in 14 states.Biden’s victories, projected by cable television networks as the polls closed in the early evening, were his third and fourth in four days, after his resounding win in South Carolina Saturday that was forged with robust support from African American voters.Biden’s victories projected new strength in his third run for the presidency, after his resounding win in South Carolina on Saturday that was forged with robust support from African American voters.Sanders, a self-declared democratic socialist, had been widely expected to win his small Northeastern state.Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., arrives to vote in the Vermont Primary near his home in Burlington, Vt., March 3, 2020.As in South Carolina, Biden captured a large share of black voters in Virginia, 63%, compared to 18% for Sanders and 10% for former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, according to CNN exit polling. On the question of which candidate was best equipped to defeat Republican President Donald Trump in November’s national election, 58% picked Biden, compared to 19% for Sanders and 11% for Bloomberg. Exit polling in North Carolina showed similar overwhelming African American support for Biden and confidence that he would be best able to topple Trump.The Associated Press is projecting Jow Biden will win the Alabama, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma and Virginia primaries, and that Bernie Sanders will win Colorado and Vermont. Mike Bloomberg has one the American Samoa primary.Voting was spread across the United States on Tuesday, the single biggest day of balloting in the race to pick a Democratic nominee to oppose Trump as he seeks a second term in the White House.Last month’s contests in Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina were conducted on different days. But the 14 states voting Tuesday spanned the U.S. from coast to coast and presented the candidates with a wide mix of diverse voters, from more liberal bastions in Vermont and Massachusetts, to conservative enclaves in Alabama, Tennessee and Texas, and to the polyglot Pacific coastal state of California, with its heavy Hispanic vote.According to pre-election polling, Sanders was expected to win the largest share of the delegates Tuesday to the party’s national convention in July, particularly if he does well in California, the country’s biggest state, which alone controls a fifth of the delegates to the quadrennial conclave.In all, a third of the national convention delegates are being picked Tuesday.But Sanders faced stiff competition in several states from Biden, who after the South Carolina vote, was later endorsed by former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, and former Texas Congressman Beto O’Rourke — three of his opponents who dropped out of the race.Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., speaks during a primary election night rally, March 3, 2020, at Eastern Market in Detroit.Sanders and Biden also had to contend with two other opponents, Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a one-time Harvard law professor, and Bloomberg, who has spent more than $500 million of his personal fortune funding his presidential campaign.Bloomberg was entered in his first party contests after choosing to skip the first four in February.The states of Arkansas, Colorado, Maine, Minnesota, Oklahoma and Utah also voted, along with the U.S. territory of American Samoa and Democrats living abroad. CNN projected that Bloomberg won five of the six delegates from American Samoa while Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard of Hawaii winning one.In CNN exit polls, voters in both Virginia and North Carolina widely said it was more important for them to pick a candidate who could beat Trump rather than to find a presidential choice who agreed with them on issues. In Alabama, Maine and North Carolina, voters said their overwhelming feeling about the presidential race is that they are angry at Trump, not just dissatisfied with his performance.Pre-election polls showed Biden winning the most Super Tuesday states, but with Sanders winning the all-important delegate count for the day, largely because of California.Democrat Jamie Wilson gets a sticker after voting in the Super Tuesday primary at John H. Reagan Elementary School in the Oak Cliff section of Dallas, March 3, 2020.A total of 1,991 delegates to the national convention is needed to secure the party’s presidential nomination. No candidate is anywhere close to that number as yet.Delegates to the national convention are awarded state by state on a proportional basis according to the vote count in each state’s primary election, but candidates have to clear a 15% vote threshold in order to win any delegates in states as a whole or in individual congressional districts.The key question in California is whether any of Sanders’ challengers clears the 15% threshold to keep him from winning a massive haul of national convention delegates. Pre-election polls also show Sanders doing well in the second-biggest prize of the day, in the Southwestern state of Texas, with Biden ahead in smaller states with a fewer number of delegates at stake. Early returns show Biden trailing Sanders, but with a chance to claim some delegates.Bloomberg has advertised heavily in the Super Tuesday states, but his halting performance and controversy over his tenure as mayor and as a business tycoon in two nationally televised debates raised questions about whether he would be able to amass wide voter support.Warren once was near the top of Democratic favorites for the party’s presidential nomination, but she has yet to win a state nominating contest, and could even lose her home state of Massachusetts to Sanders on Tuesday.She is hoping to win the nomination at a brokered national convention with no candidate clinching the nomination ahead of time, which has not occurred since 1952.U.S. President Donald Trump answers questions in front of the West Wing of the White House as he departs to attend a briefing at the National Institutes of Health Vaccine Research Center, March 3, 2020.Trump has commented almost daily about the Democratic race, dishing out negative nicknames to all of his would-be Democratic opponents, calling Sanders “Crazy Bernie,” Biden “Sleepy Joe” and Bloomberg “Mini Mike” for his short stature.The president said Tuesday he would gladly debate any of the Democrats in the weeks before the Nov. 3 election, when the party’s nominee has been selected.”Whoever it is, I don’t care. We’ll take them on,” Trump told reporters. “I’ll debate any of them, gladly. Very gladly.”He said there is “no question the Democratic establishment is trying to take it away from Sanders. No question in my mind.”
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