Washington — Three weeks ago, Joe Biden was left for dead by the proverbial side of the highway after his dismal finishes in Iowa, New Hampshire, and Nevada. Now, with his Tuesday sweep of the Arizona, Illinois, and Florida primaries, Biden has won 18 out of 26 primary elections. He is almost sure to be the Democratic Party’s next presidential nominee. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) trails Biden by nearly 300 delegates; a Sanders comeback, given past performance and the states still to vote, is nearly mathematically impossible at this point.
Biden and Sanders now face uncomfortable questions.
Biden and Sanders now face uncomfortable questions.
- 3/18/2020
- by Andy Kroll
- Rollingstone.com
Washington — Senator Bernie Sanders was well on his way to winning the Democratic Party nomination … and then black voters had their turn.
It began with Joe Biden’s decisive victory in the South Carolina primary, where a strong turnout by a predominantly black electorate performed life support on Biden’s flatlining campaign. The pattern continued on March 3rd, Super Tuesday, when Biden swept the southern primary states including Virginia, North Carolina, Alabama, and Tennessee. He even eked out a victory in Texas thanks in part to widespread support from black voters there.
It began with Joe Biden’s decisive victory in the South Carolina primary, where a strong turnout by a predominantly black electorate performed life support on Biden’s flatlining campaign. The pattern continued on March 3rd, Super Tuesday, when Biden swept the southern primary states including Virginia, North Carolina, Alabama, and Tennessee. He even eked out a victory in Texas thanks in part to widespread support from black voters there.
- 3/11/2020
- by Andy Kroll
- Rollingstone.com
Election night is upon us, and cable or satellite subscriptions are strictly optional if you’re looking to watch the results pour in in real time on the big day. For what is being called the first “cord-cutter election,” PBS will be hosting live coverage via their individual streaming networks as well as social platforms like Facebook and YouTube. PBS NewsHour will kick off its coverage at 8Pm Et on television, as well as YouTube, Facebook, and uStream. The evening’s coverage includes panels with names like Obama campaign pollster Cornell Belcher, Scholar Andra Gillespie and former Romney campaign chief strategist Stuart Stevens.
- 11/8/2016
- by Catrina Dennis
- The Wrap
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