EDITOR'S NOTE
Hello,
Welcome to the most pivotal week of the presidential campaign – so far.
Super Tuesday, when 14 states hold their primaries, is still a day away. But so much has changed so quickly. Joe Biden is back and raking in much-needed campaign cash. Pete Buttigieg is gone. So is Tom Steyer.
But Democrats still face the stark reality that Bernie Sanders, a self-proclaimed democratic socialist, is still the front-runner for the party's presidential nomination heading into the biggest voting day yet in 2020. He is still a fundraising juggernaut, and polls show that he is an overwhelming favorite to win California's primary, the biggest delegate prize in the whole contest. His odds are probably helped because a large part of the state's electorate has already voted.
Biden's crushing victory in South Carolina on Saturday, however, shows that he probably isn't fading, despite the fundraising and organizational issues in his campaign. His support from black voters in the state was overwhelming, and it may well anticipate strong black voter turnout in southern states North Carolina, Alabama, Virginia, Tennessee and Arkansas – all of which head to the polls tomorrow.
Biden also needs to overperform in Texas, the day's second-biggest prize, if he truly wants this to be a two-person race between him and Sanders. Mike Bloomberg has been undercutting the former vice president in several Super Tuesday polls, however. Momentum is, in Biden's own words, "a big f----n' deal." His hope is that all those Bloomberg supporters might just see Biden as the more viable candidate after his dominance in South Carolina.
Visit CNBC.com tomorrow for full coverage of Super Tuesday all day. Thanks for reading.
Thoughts? Email me at CNBCPolitics@nbcuni.com.
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Senin, 02 Maret 2020
Super Tuesday is tomorrow. Are you ready?
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