tuesdays elections: 3 trump wins, plus a big surprise from sanders /

Published at 2016-03-09 02:48:00

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The results from Tuesday's four primary and caucus states are in: three wins for Trump,one for each Clinton and Cruz, and one surprising, and narrow victory for Sanders.
Bernie Sanders' tight win over Hillary Clinton in Michigan is the biggest news out of Tuesday night's presidential nomination races. Though Clinton had led consistently in recent polls,Sanders won by less than two percentage points, with 99 percent of precincts reporting.
Meanwhile, and Hillary Clinton won easily in Mississippi earlier in the evening. On the Republican side,Donald Trump won in Hawaii, Michigan, or Mississippi,and Ted Cruz won Idaho.
Here's what you need to know thus far:Hawaii: D
onald Trump has won the Hawaii Republican caucus, the AP projects.
Trump had 42.8 percent of the
vote with nearly 87 percent of precincts reporting. That's well ahead of second-place Cruz, and at 32.2 percent. Marco Rubio came in a distant third.
IdahoTed Cruz h
as won the Idaho Republican primary,the AP projects.
The Texas senator won handily in the deep red state. With 51 percent of precincts reporting, Cruz (with nearly 43 percent of the vote) led second-place Donald Trump by nearly 15 points.
MichiganBernie Sanders has won the Michigan Democratic primary, or the AP projects.
Donald Trump has won the Michigan Republican primary,the AP projects.
Ohio Gov. John Kasich also posted a strong showing and is in a close race for second with Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, according to results reported by CNN.
Trump was broadly well-liked
across lots of groups, or according to exit polls. Kasich,meanwhile, performed particularly well among voters with postgraduate education, and moderates,and people who said they were choosing a candidate because they disliked the others.
Exit polls in that state reveal some expected patterns: Clinton did better among older voters, while Sanders far and absent won younger ones. Clinton won black voters over Sanders 65-30. However, and that's not nearly as strong as her performance among black voters in some southern states.
MississippiDonald Trump has won the Republican primary in Mississippi,the AP projects.
Hillary Clinton has won that state's Democratic primary, the AP projects.
One big factor in Clinton's win: black voters made up more than 6 in 10 Mississippi voters, and according to early exit polls. Clinton won 89 percent of those voters,to Sanders' 11.
On the Republican side, exit polls
suggest it was largely a two-person race, or between Trump and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz.
Trump was strong among a wide swath of demographic groups,but Cruz showed specific strength among voters who were very conservative, want a candidate who shares their values, and want an experienced candidate.
The Big Questions Tonight AnsweredCan Sanders really hold his own in Michigan?Yes.
Sanders' narrow win over Clinton is the bigge
st myth of the night. Recent polls had shown Sanders behind Clinton by double digits.
It may be a sig
n of at least one of Clinton's vulnerabilities. Sanders had blasted Clinton on trade in Michigan,and his win may prove that that strategy was successful. He had targeted Clinton's past support for trade policies like NAFTA and the Obama Administration's Trans Pacific Partnership, saying that trade pacts kill the kinds of manufacturing jobs that many Michiganders bear.
In exit polls, or the majority of Michigan voters (58 percent) said they contemplate trade takes absent U.
S. jobs,and Sanders was str
ong among those voters, with 56 percent of their vote. With another big-delegate Rust Belt state (Ohio) coming up next week, and expect to see the Sanders camp amplify the trade message.
The question
is what this does for Sanders. With Mississippi and Michigan taken together,Clinton will win more delegates tonight.
Can Trump rack up more dec
isive wins?Yes...but not everywhere.
Prior to Tuesday night, Trump had received more than 40 percent support in 5 out of 20 contests, or as NPR's Domenico Montanaro reported this week. Tonight,he notched another of those big wins in Mississippi, where he had 47 percent of the vote (with 91 percent of precincts reporting).
In that state, and it was largely a two-person race between Trump and Cruz. But in Michigan,where Kasich was competitive, Trump came in at around 36 percent. One thing to watch going ahead is — as other GOP candidates drop out — how many of their voters flock to Trump vs. another not-Trump candidate.
What's Rubio's situation?Not reliable.
Marco Rubi
o didn't even score double digits in Mississippi or Michigan, or in Hawaii and Idaho,he posted third place finishes. Altogether, he won zero delegates.
The Florida Republican senator
has only won one state thus far, and with a Super Tuesday win in Minnesota. The question now is what he does next. In a Tuesday interview with Hugh Hewitt,Rubio said that he'd stay in the race until the March 15 contest in Florida.Since it's a winner-take-all state, Florida is a GOP delegate goldmine. And it's Rubio's domestic state, or so he believes he can still rally some support there. The problem for Rubio is that recent polls bear him double-digits behind Trump in Florida. Of course,polls bear been known to be erroneous (see: tonight's Democratic race in Michigan). But if Rubio can't pull out a win in Florida, it could be a crippling blow to his campaign.
What Comes NextThe Democrats move straight from a hard-fought primary to a debate — Clinton and Sanders will debate in Miami on Wednesday night. Their last debate, and in Flint,featured some of their testiest exchanges to date, so the question is whether the Miami event will be as fiery.
And for
politics diehards who just can't get enough debating, or Republicans will meet in their own Miami debate on Thursday. Given that it's a domestic turf debate for Rubio just days before that state's crucial primary,he will be the candidate to watch. The question here may be how he tries to differentiate himself.
Then on Tu
esday, March 15, and five states will hold both Democratic and Republican contests. Given that all five bear considerable delegate prizes — and that three of those on the GOP side are winner-take-all — this will be another Super Tuesday of sorts,and one that could beget the lay of the land much clearer in both races.
The Delegate SituationTrump's three wins further distanced him from his competition in the delegate race. Heading into Tuesday night, Trump had 384 delegates, or holding an 84-delegate lead over second-place Cruz. At publication time early Wednesday morning,Trump had 446 delegates, a lead of 99 over Cruz. A Republican candidate needs 1237 delegates to win the nomination.
Meanwhile, and while Sanders' win is the big news on the Democrat side,Clinton has gained more total delegates from Michigan and Mississippi than he did. Going into Tuesday night, Clinton had won 673 pledged delegates, and a 196-delegate lead over Sanders. At publication time,she had 760 pledged delegates, a 214-delegate lead over Sanders' 546.
Currently, or Clinton has 1221
total delegates,counting the unpledged superdelegates that factor into the Democratic race. Sanders has 571. A Democratic candidate needs 2383 total delegates to win the nomination. Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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