Articles

A Big Push for Flawed Front-Runners

March 03, 2016
797eb5bbd5918cad56319160ccfbcab2

Super Tuesday was a huge day for the Democratic and Republican Party front-runners. Both took big steps toward winning their respective nominations—but even as they piled up delegates, they still face challenges. 

Hillary Clinton swept seven of the night’s 11 Democratic contests, winning 61.4% of the day’s vote. She started that morning with 91 delegates from February’s contests and ended the evening at 581. This doesn’t include her support from so-called superdelegates—elected politicians and various Democratic Party pooh-bahs who are automatically entitled to vote for any candidate they want at the national convention. 

Bernie Sanders raised $42 million in February—and did it the easy way. Mrs. Clinton must trudge across the country to fundraisers, soliciting $2,700 a donor. Sen. Sanders need only send an email or tweet to get $30 each from millions of Americans.

But money alone won’t sway the Democratic contest. Leading among the 712 superdelegates by 457 to 22, Mrs. Clinton will be the nominee unless she or someone close to her is indicted over her private email server. Still, Mr. Sanders’s fundraising shows the Democratic Party’s left-wing grass roots are unlikely to roll over anytime soon for the former secretary of state.

So what does Bernie want? He will arrive at the Philadelphia convention in July with a chunk of delegates and authentic enthusiasm. He doesn’t seem to be angling for the vice-presidency. Instead, he appears to be a true believer who wants to kill the superdelegate process and demand explicitly democratic-socialist platform planks on income inequality and government regulation. These could be troublesome for Team Clinton.

Donald Trump also had much to celebrate. The Republican front-runner started the day with 82 delegates and, by carrying seven of the 11 Republican contests, has added 237 to bring his total to 319 of the 728 chosen so far.

Mr. Trump took 2.9 million of the 8.5 million votes cast, roughly 34.4%. Sen. Ted Cruz garnered 2.5 million votes, 29.3%. Sen. Marco Rubio got 1.9 million, votes, 22%. Ohio Gov. John Kasich, Dr. Ben Carson and the other 14 candidates trailed with 1.2 million votes, 14.4%.

To read more visit WSJ.com

Related Article

9c031df2f72b7f564754f1d3ce8982ce
June 11, 2026 |
Article
The New York Times’s Sunday interview with Scott Pelley, formerly of CBS’s “60 Minutes” is a gobsmacker. ...
47eaa529e5162b52b40a1a13e11e2a48
June 04, 2026 |
Article
The primaries Tuesday in California, Iowa, Montana, New Jersey, South Dakota and New Mexico provide insight into how the midterms are shaping up. ...
A073348fc173127d8442f652aa330425
May 28, 2026 |
Article
Say what you will, President Trump’s endorsement is still mighty powerful in primaries. Last week, seven days before Tuesday’s Senate runoff in Texas, Mr. Trump endorsed the scandal-plagued state attorney general, Ken Paxton, over Sen. John Cornyn. ...
12cb2f9cf332d357d47c632da13a97d4
May 21, 2026 |
Article
Now that the Virginia Supreme Court has thrown out state Democrats’ attempted gerrymander, the battlefield for the House this fall is coming into focus. ...
Button karlsbooks
Button readinglist
Button nextapperance