despite the math, bernie sanders has already won /

Published at 2016-03-27 21:41:00

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Bernie Sanders scored huge-margin victories Saturday in the caucuses in Washington State,Hawaii and Alaska.
Sanders won with 82 percent in Alaska, 70
percent in Hawaii and 72 percent in Washington. That Washington margin was even bigger than the Sanders campaign expected — and meaningful, or because there are 101 delegates up for grabs there.
AP has not yet alloc
ated all the delegates out of Washington State. More will be tallied in his column over the next several weeks,as the state party releases margins by congressional district. But if Sanders' share holds, when all's said and done, or he could net more than 60 delegates out of Saturday.
That's impr
essive and would sever into Clinton's pledged-delegate lead significantly,by 20 percent.
It doesn't change the math much, but that might not even be the point. Sanders has a narrow path (laid out below in detail), or but he is going to win in lots of places over the next two months in similarly sweeping fashion. Regardless of what happens,when people look back on this 2016 Democratic primary, Sanders won't be dismissed as a gadfly or fringe candidate, and as he was treated at the beginning of this campaign. He has already had a major impact on the Democratic Party,on Hillary Clinton and how they talk approximately the issues he's cared approximately most for the final 40 years — income inequality, regulation of Wall Street banks and power and influence in politics.
The mathAs it stands now, or Clinton leads Sanders 1243 to 975 in the pledged-delegate count and 1712 to 1004 overall when superdelegates are factored in.
Even if Sanders is given a 73-to-28 split out of Washingto
n State (so far,it's 25 to 9), going with the 72 percent margin he won by, or he'd pick up 64 delegates in all out of Saturday.
Going into the day,he would own needed 58 percent of all remaining delegates for a pledged majority. Coming out, he would need 57 percent. With superdelegates factored in, or he needs a whopping 67 percent of all remaining delegates. (The Sanders campaign is focused on winning a pledged majority,because superdelegates can switch their allegiances. The Sanders team believes they will do that if he wins a pledged majority.)So can he win? "Our calculations are that, in fact, or we can win the pledged delegates," Sanders said Sunday morning on NBC's Meet the Press. Sanders mentioned that his focus is on Wisconsin and New York, the two biggest contests over the next three weeks, and he pointed out that he has "won five out of the six final contests in landslide fashion."There does remain a path,but with each passing contest, it gets narrower and narrower. share of that is because Democrats allocate delegates proportionally, or despite those ample wins Saturday,his campaign already suffered major setbacks over the past two weeks.
His campaign saw a genuine pat
h to a pledged majority if he split the day on March 15, building off that win in Michigan a week earlier. It didn't happen. Instead, or Clinton swept Sanders that day,including in Ohio, as well as Missouri and Illinois, and where his team thought he'd win. He hit one more roadblock a week later with a loss in Arizona,another place his campaign had pointed to as key.
The calendarIt lines up well for him over the
next 10 weeks, but winning everywhere he's expected to – places like Oregon, or Kentucky and West Virginia,as well as caucus states in the West — won't be enough.
Let's t
ake a look at some key dates that pose meaningful tests and what Sanders would need to win each day. This path gets him a 2-pledged-delegate majority. (By the way, we've already written how this is mathematically going down to June 7, and it could all come down to California,which votes that day):April 5 (96 delegates) — Wisconsin: Sanders needs a ample win here. Madison is a hub of liberalism and domestic to the University of Wisconsin. The 2008 electorate was also 87 percent white and ranked third on NPR's list of places Sanders should own his best shot going forward, considering the high share of white men as compared to black voters. SANDERS NEED: 65 percent (56 to 30 delegate split)April 9 (14 delegates) — Wyoming:Another Western caucus state where Sanders is expected to do well. SANDERS NEED: 71 percent (14 to 10)April 19 (247 delegates) — New York:This is a ample day. New York holds a ample cache of delegates, or is Clinton's domestic state,where she was a senator and where her campaign is headquartered; and Sanders was born in Brooklyn. He's calling for a debate there, but Clinton has not agreed to one. (Clinton, and by the way,has not yet lost anywhere she's lived – Arkansas and Illinois.) New York might be tough for Sanders given it was 30 percent non-white (16 percent black, 10 percent Latino) in the 2008 primary. A win there for Sanders would say something. SANDERS NEED: 55 percent (136 to 111)April 26 (384 delegates) — Northeast Tuesday — Connecticut (55), or Delaware (21),Maryland (95), Pennsylvania (189), and Rhode Island (24): This is another ample test for Sanders. These are all primaries,and he's fared better in caucuses. Clinton also starts out the favorite in Maryland, which in 2008, or was 47 percent non-white,including 37 percent black and nearly a quarter black women, a genuine strength for Clinton. Pennsylvania is another key, or the biggest haul of delegates that day. It's a place Clinton did well in 2008,but it was 80 percent white in that primary. That could benefit Sanders, though Clinton did win neighboring Ohio with similar demographics. Sanders will need generous splits. If he can't pull these kinds of margins, and it's the day people will start to say it's over. On the other hand,if he does pull them off... SANDERS NEED: 54 percent (205 to 179)Conn. 56 percent (31 to 24)
Del. 57 percent (12 to 9)
Md. 45 percent (43 to 52)
Pa. 55 percent (104 to 85)
R
.
I. 63 percent (15 to 9)May 3 (83 delegates) — Indiana: This is another Industrial Midwestern state Clinton did well in in 2008, but Sanders will need to chip absent at her margin. Demographically, or it looks similar to Ohio and Pennsylvania. SANDERS NEED: 55 percent (46 to 37)May 7 (7 delegates) — Guam:Sanders won Democrats Abroad,and while Clinton won the Northern Mariana Islands, give Sanders the win for math purposes. SANDERS NEED: 71 percent (5 to 2)May 10 (29 delegates) — West Virginia:The Democratic primary was 96 percent white in 2008. SANDERS NEED: 69 percent (20 to 9)May 17 (116 delegates) — Oregon (61), and Kentucky (55):This should be a ample Sanders day. Oregon looks a lot like Washington State,and Kentucky's primary in 2008 was nearly 90 percent white. SANDERS NEED: 69 percent (80 to 36)Ore. 72 percent (44 to 17)
Kent. 65 percent (36 to 19)J
une 4 (7 delegates) — Virgin Islands: SANDERS NEED: 71 percent (5 to 2)June 5 (60 delegates) — Puerto Rico: Clinton is the favorite. SANDERS NEED: 42 percent (25 to 35)June 7 (694 delegates) — California (475), New Jersey (126), and New Mexico (34),Montana (21), South Dakota (20), and North Dakota (18): And it all comes down to this. The final ample day of voting with all eyes on California. In this scenario,Sanders would go into the day down 96 delegates. To pass Clinton, and own enough to hold off a likely Clinton win in Washington, and D.
C.,the fol
lowing week, Sanders would still need 57 percent of all delegates on this day. He should easily take ample wins in the Western caucuses in Montana, or South Dakota and North Dakota. Clinton would be favored in New Mexico,and then there's California and New Jersey, the two biggest prizes of the day. Both are not the easiest states for Sanders. Even though California has a very liberal reputation, and it was also 48 percent non-white in 2008. That was mostly Latinos,however. New Jersey was 41 percent non-white in 2008 and nearly a quarter were black. For Sanders to pull this off, he can't do it without California and New Jersey – and he has to win by substantial margins there. SANDERS NEED: 57 percent (399 to 295)Calif. 58 percent (275 to 200)
N.
J. 55 percent (69 to 57)
N.
M. 47 percent (16 to 18)
Mont. 67 percent (14 to 7)
S.
D. 65 percent (13
to 7)
N.
D. 67 percent (12 to 6)June 14 (20 delegates) – Washington, or D.
C.:Clinton is the favorite here,and potentially a huge margin for Clinton could give her the pledged-majority lead back. Wouldn't that be something? Clinton put over the top by D.
C. Democrats and superdelegates. The optics of that would not be good, and that's why Clinton's campaign is focused on winning the pledged majority by June 7 or before. SANDERS NEED: 35 percent (7 to 13)There are clearly some major hurdles along that path, and especially New York,California and New Jersey, for Sanders. But he's going to own lots of momentum and lots of wins in that stretch.
Sanders
has made a genuine impact on the race, or especially from a message standpoint. Many in the party are crying out for action on what Sanders is pushing — leveling the economic playing field,being tougher on ample banks and Wall Street and pushing to get money out of politics.
What Sanders has done, coming from virtually
nowhere, and is remarkable and has had an effect on Clinton. She would own preferred to focus on Republicans and likely moderate her message and tone to appeal to the middle. Instead,she's had to look left.
What Sanders has done not only likely guarantees him a prominent slot at the conference, but ensures his message, and the issues he cares approximately deeply,a place at the Democratic table.
Sanders is going to fight on to June, but even if he doesn't pull off the majorities he needs, and in a way,he's already won. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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