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And then there were five

There were, predictably, few surprises in the Super Tuesday primaries and caucuses for both Republicans and Democrats.

Updated on: Feb 06, 2008 10:35 PM IST
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There were, predictably, few surprises in the Super Tuesday primaries and caucuses for both Republicans and Democrats.

HT Image
HT Image

After the initial round of single-state contests, Super Tuesday saw Americans voting in 24 states. This was probably the largest number of single-day nominating contests ever in the US elections, as voters chose more than half the Democratic delegates and almost half of the Republican delegates to attend party conventions in August and September. These meets will pick the final nominees for president.

On the Republican side, full-scale battle seems to have been joined: the contest for presidential nomination is now much clearer. Senator John McCain is in a commanding position after winning several key states, including California, New York, New Jersey and Illinois. This leaves his chief rival, Mitt Romney — who has done well in many western states — slugging it out with a resurgent Mike Huckabee who, expectedly, swept up several southern states in the ‘Bible Belt’. For Democrats, however, Super Tuesday has made little difference in the dramatic toe-to-toe fight between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama. Not that many people seriously expected a different outcome, given the complex Democratic delegate system that made a decisive win by either candidate highly unlikely. In that sense, it is remarkable that the vote appears to have split so dramatically, with Mr Obama taking some big states, including his home state Illinois, while Ms Clinton won major battleground states like California, New York and New Jersey.

 
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