The Daily - How Super Tuesday Unfolded
Episode Date: March 4, 2020The results of Super Tuesday make clear that the race for the Democratic presidential nomination is increasingly a battle between former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and Senator Bernie Sanders. ...Today, we explore what happened on the biggest night of the race so far. Guest: Alexander Burns, who covers national politics for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: Mr. Biden is back as front-runner after sweeping states across the south thanks to moderates and African-American voters, while Mr. Sanders harnessed the backing of liberals and young voters to claim California, the biggest delegate prize of the night.Primary results are still coming in. Here are the latest updates and The Times’s live analysis.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Bavaro. This is The Daily.
Today, the results of Super Tuesday make clear that the Democratic race for president
is increasingly a battle between Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders. Alex Burns on how the biggest night of the primary unfolded.
It's Wednesday, March 4th.
Alex, tonight we're going to do things, I guess I should say, this morning.
We're going to do things a little bit differently given the tender hour.
I believe the concept known to audio people is live to tape.
So basically, I'm going to ask you perfectly formed questions,
and you are going to deliver perfectly formed answers.
That's the usual.
That's our usual routine.
Exactly.
Exactly.
I've never been edited.
You've never been edited.
No.
Okay.
At this point, the results are in for I, about 11 of the 14 states. We're waiting
on Maine. California has been called for Sanders, although I think about half the vote is still out.
And in Texas, about 90% of the vote is in. So let's start with the big picture. What is the
story that the results so far tell us about Super Tuesday? I think the very big picture of the results is that
the Joe Biden comeback is very, very real. And that in the space of just a couple of days,
he put together a really powerful coalition that won him states in virtually every part of the
country in a way that just a week ago would have seemed almost unimaginable.
In other words, the momentum that Biden started to pick up in South Carolina,
that really carried through here.
It really did. And he needed every bit of it because we may be headed for something of an
immovable object, unstoppable force situation with Biden building all this momentum and just colliding with the wall of
support that Bernie Sanders has built for himself that we saw on display in a pretty convincing way
in a number of states as well, most importantly, California. Okay, so what is the big picture on
Sanders? The big picture on Sanders is that his campaign had hoped that Super Tuesday would be
the day that he achieved real dominance in the Democratic race, and that didn't happen. What did happen is that you saw his progressive
coalition and especially his support among Latino voters really come to fruition in important ways
in a number of states that is going to keep him very competitive with Biden in the delegate count.
Let's focus in on the Biden resurgence, the Biden comeback.
I don't know what else you're calling it, but Biden's big moment.
Which of his victories on Tuesday night stand out to you?
And how did he pull them off?
You know, I think that early in the evening,
we saw signs that this was going to be a pretty good night for Joe Biden
when he carried Virginia and North Carolina, two of the
first states to finish voting. They were called for him almost instantly. And it's not just that
he won those states, it's that he won them by really big margins. He won, Virginia was about
30 points. It was about the same margin in Virginia as he won in South Carolina. A week or two ago,
Virginia was a very, very close race between Joe Biden
and Bernie Sanders and Mike Bloomberg. So the fact that you saw that kind of enormous shift
in his direction just at the very end is a testament to how Biden and other Democratic
Party leaders in these states and nationally were able to rally together a coalition of Black voters,
able to rally together a coalition of Black voters, moderate voters, suburban voters,
and to say to them in these swing states, Joe Biden is your guy.
And that coalition sounds a lot like the one you described as helping Joe Biden win in South Carolina, the victory that probably helped propel him towards victories in North Carolina and
Virginia.
That's right. And in some ways, it's an even more diverse coalition
in a number of respects because these are states that have larger communities of affluent suburban
voters. You have minority populations in a state like Virginia and North Carolina that are not as
represented in South Carolina. There are bigger Hispanic and Asian American communities, especially in Virginia.
The fact that Joe Biden was able to run away with that state is a testament to the broad appeal that he was able to achieve, at least on this one day.
Okay. So what about beyond those two states?
we really started to get the sense that this wasn't just quite a good night for Joe Biden,
but really an exceptionally good night for Joe Biden was when he pulled off a pair of upsets that I don't think was really on anybody's radar a couple of days ago. He won Minnesota,
Amy Klobuchar's home state. Of course, she dropped out of the race on Monday and endorsed him. But
even with that late development, he was pretty clearly an underdog there going into voting,
and he ended up
beating out Bernie Sanders and the rest of the Democratic field. I don't know that we have seen
that kind of late drastic shift in a presidential race. You're starting to hint at this, the power
of some of these moderate candidates dropping out of the race, endorsing Joe Biden, what that meant
for Super Tuesday. We've been talking, you and I, for weeks now about this concept of the race, endorsing Joe Biden, what that meant for Super Tuesday.
We've been talking, you and I, for weeks now about this concept of the moderate split,
this pattern whereby whether it was Amy Klobuchar or Pete Buttigieg or Mike Bloomberg,
they all seemed to kind of trip all over Joe Biden and no one could ever rise to the top of that pile.
And, of course, over the past few days, two of those candidates dropped out. They both endorsed Joe Biden. And they seem to be doing it quite deliberately to end that phenomenon of the moderate split in the name of stopping Bernie Sanders. How powerful was that in some of the states that you're mentioning here. I think there's no question that in a place like Minnesota, it was extremely powerful. And the fact that you even saw that phenomenon manifest itself in states where Biden didn't
get some big breakthrough late endorsement.
Look, Joe Biden is a guy who most Democratic voters like and have liked all along.
And they've just been really unsure about how strong he is as a candidate for a lot
of pretty valid reasons.
And to have the last few days before Super Tuesday defined by events that cast him as a big winner was clearly really valuable for him.
This phenomenon was particularly evident in Texas, which was one of the most important states of the night, the second largest number of delegates after California. This is a state that I think all the campaigns expected would be close
in the end. Wasn't clear whether it would be close between two candidates or three candidates. This
was a state where for a while Mike Bloomberg seemed to be doing fairly well. But it's also
one of a couple states on the map that allows voters to cast their primary ballots early so that you have plenty of Texans going and voting for primary candidates significantly before the actual day of the primary.
And this allowed us to track in a sort of unusual way the late shift in support towards Joe Biden.
a sort of unusual way, the late shift in support towards Joe Biden. When we started getting the first waves of election returns from Texas, they looked pretty good for Bernie Sanders,
and they stayed pretty good for Bernie Sanders. But in those early results, we saw higher support
for Mike Bloomberg because those votes were cast when he was doing better as a candidate. We saw
votes cast for candidates who are no longer in the race
because when some people went in to vote early, Pete Buttigieg and Amy Klobuchar were still
running really active campaigns. Once the election day vote started to come in, we saw Joe Biden
steadily rise and eventually overtake Bernie Sanders. Right now, he's ahead by a small but by a meaningful
margin. And that really does capture how the vote moved towards him at the last minute,
and especially after that big final rally that he held in Dallas on Monday.
So this was tangible evidence that the victory in South Carolina, the endorsements,
those had impact
because you could literally see that there were a group of voters who probably cast their votes
before those two events. And it was a group that cast them afterwards. Exactly. And if you're the
Biden campaign, you're pretty happy with how Texas turned out. But you probably also wonder
how well could we have done in Texas if all those votes hadn't gone to Pete Buttigieg,
Amy Klobuchar, Michael Bloomberg, if all of those people who were inclined to vote for a moderate
in the early voting period had voted on election day, would we have gotten them to?
So, Alex, is Biden's performance tonight the story of the kind of great moderate coalescence?
Did this plan from the moderate candidates to basically plead with moderate
voters to speak with one voice on Super Tuesday, did that work?
I think it did. The only word that I might adjust there is plan, right? That there was so much of
this that seemed to come together on the fly and pretty organically after Biden's South Carolina
landslide that it sort of remains to be seen whether you are going to continue to have an effective, well-orchestrated coalescing of the moderate wing of the Democratic Party or whether this is a phenomenon that we will have seen really take shape over a short period of time and that Biden might then have difficulty replicating later on.
Okay, let's turn to Bernie Sanders and how he did this evening.
Okay. We've just called Texas.
Oh. So just for those who couldn't hear you, what just happened?
They just called Texas. I just saw the push alert on my phone that we have now called Texas for Joe
Biden.
Okay. So that's a big development.
That's a really big one.
The second biggest. A's a big development. That's a really big one. The second biggest.
A Texas-sized development.
So perfectly timed,
let's turn to Bernie Sanders
and how he did tonight.
Look, I think now
with the added context of Texas,
that's really a disappointment
for Bernie Sanders.
That was a place where he
really hoped he could show
the strength of his coalition
and his support among Latino voters.
It's where he spent the night of his landslide victory in Nevada. He was in Texas trying to
look forward to the next state on the calendar. So that's certainly a setback. But you saw Sanders
hold his own in a number of the states that Joe Biden won. It's not as though he was getting
completely crushed in states like Massachusetts or Minnesota.
And you saw him win a number of important contests of that you will see enduring support for Bernie Sanders in those places.
Remind us why Bernie Sanders has such an appeal in the west.
that he had real appeal in the West four years ago when he ran against Hillary Clinton,
that there is a real strength to his outsider message,
to his populist message,
to just his general approach to politics.
And in the intervening four years,
he and his campaign have put an enormous amount of effort
in reaching out to the Latino community.
And you saw that pay off for him
in a really big way in California, especially.
How is it possible to win California
and still have anything approaching a disappointing night,
given the scale of the delegates there?
Well, as a pure matter of delegate math,
this might not be a bad night for Bernie Sanders.
I don't think it is a bad night for Bernie Sanders.
But if we were having this conversation
on the day after the Nevada caucuses
about what Super Tuesday might look like for Sanders, I don't think that we would have said that it would be a really big
win for him to get just California and a couple other states while Joe Biden reassembles this
broad coalition across most of the rest of the country. Now, again, in fairness to Sanders,
winning California is an enormous development for him. It may take us a little time to figure out exactly how important a development it is for him because California does a lot of voting by mail. And there are many, many hundreds of thousands of ballots that is going to take a long time to count that will shape what the ultimate delegate picture is out of California. The difference between Bernie
Sanders winning California by 15 points and winning California by seven points will tell us a whole
lot about who has an overall advantage in the delegate race. And we're not even going to know
the answer to that question for a while. The fact that Bernie Sanders came out as the number one
candidate, though, is a real validation of the strategy he has taken in that state.
It was a real bitter disappointment to his campaign four years ago when he did not defeat Hillary Clinton there.
So it is something of, I think, a particularly important vindication for him.
So what does Super Tuesday ultimately mean for Bernie Sanders?
Well, it means that he's now one of two frontrunners for the Democratic nomination.
Sanders. Well, it means that he's now one of two frontrunners for the Democratic nomination. There are only two candidates in this race now who have a realistic path to winning a majority of the
delegates needed to claim the nomination. He's one of them. Joe Biden is the other one. The trickier
thing for Sanders about Super Tuesday is that he has now seen what Joe Biden is capable of on a
really good night. And I do think that it is something of a reality check
for him and his campaign
about just how difficult it might be
for him to become the nominee
and the scale of resistance that he might face.
They were really hoping to be able to put in
a much more dominant performance on Super Tuesday
that would send a clear signal
to reluctant Democratic Party leaders
about his strength in this contest. If Bernie
Sanders is going to be the Democratic nominee, it is pretty clear right now that it will only
be after a very long fight. In which he has to somehow defeat state after state after state,
Joe Biden. That's right. You cannot beat Trump with the same old, same old kind of politics.
And in his speech on primary night, you have already heard from Sanders what that case is going to sound like.
One of us in this race led the opposition to the war in Iraq. You're looking at him.
Another candidate voted for the war in Iraq. You're looking at him. Another candidate voted for the war in Iraq.
It was a scathing critique of Biden's record
and a real sign of just how intense
and how confrontational this race may be about to get.
One of us stood up for consumers
and said we will not support a disastrous bankruptcy bill.
And another candidate represented the credit card companies and voted for that disastrous bill.
So here we are.
We'll be right back.
There are two people we didn't talk all that much about tonight, and that may be pretty telling.
And that, of course, is Mike Bloomberg and Elizabeth Warren.
What did we learn tonight about these candidacies?
and Elizabeth Warren.
What did we learn tonight about these candidacies?
Well, I think for Elizabeth Warren,
we saw a continuation of a lot of the disappointment that she has faced over the last month
since the Iowa caucuses.
She is going to come out of Super Tuesday
with a whole bunch more delegates,
but she will not have carried a single state
and she will have lost her home state of Massachusetts.
So her path forward-
Which is a pretty stinging defeat.
And I think in some ways, all the more so
because the state ended up rallying at the last minute
around Joe Biden, who was not working hard to win there.
Mike Bloomberg is in a lot of ways
a far more dramatic story.
This was the first time that Bloomberg's name
was actually on a primary ballot anywhere.
He spent hundreds of millions of dollars contesting these states after totally skipping
the four early states in February. And in a lot of these places, he looked for weeks or months
like he had a pretty decent shot of winning outright. And the only contest he carried was the caucus in American Samoa. That is not typically
seen as a bellwether for who is going to win the Democratic nomination. These states where he had
been a pretty formidable contender, places like Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Arkansas,
Oklahoma, California, he did not come in first in any of these places he did not come in second in these
places he fell far far short and when you talk to people who are aligned with him and with his
general wing of the party there's just this consensus that first that debate with elizabeth
warren hurt him badly and that then the last couple days probably nobody suffered more as a
result of this late movement towards Joe Biden than Mike Bloomberg.
That it turned out that a lot of those moderate voters, a lot of those African-American voters who were intrigued by Bloomberg based on his advertising ultimately reverted to Joe Biden.
They were just more comfortable with him.
And whatever bond they had formed with Mike Bloomberg was pretty fleeting.
whatever bond they had formed with Mike Bloomberg was pretty fleeting.
There's word this morning that Bloomberg's campaign is going to reassess whether they should stay in this race,
which may mean he's going to drop out.
We're not sure.
If Bloomberg does drop out, does that, as you suggested, just further benefit this kind of coalescence around Biden as he tries to capture more and more of the moderate vote?
I think it does.
The difference
between how Bloomberg performed in early voting and how he performed on Election Day really does
suggest that his support moved directly from him to Joe Biden for the most part. So going forward
to other states that now will have the information that we have based on Super Tuesday, Bloomberg is
probably going to face a very, very tough fight
if he wants to hold on to
even the support he has right now,
let alone the support
that he hoped he would have.
And on the other hand,
should we assume,
although we should never
make any assumptions,
but should we assume that
if Warren were to leave the race,
that that would help Sanders?
You know, the Sanders campaign certainly thinks so. I am
personally not as convinced about that because while Elizabeth Warren is a liberal candidate,
a progressive, a populist who shares a lot of ideas with Bernie Sanders, much of her support
also comes from more educated voters who have tended to be wary of Bernie Sanders in the past. And much of her
support also comes from progressive women specifically who are motivated not just by
pure matters of ideology, but by Warren's biography and identity and outlook on politics
and the specific policy concerns that she's speaking to that aren't necessarily at the core of Bernie Sanders' daily message. So, look, if Joe
Biden is coalescing support from basically every important moderate constituency in the Democratic
Party, there's going to be a great, great desire from the Sanders campaign to be able to do the
same thing on the left. I don't know that they or anyone else is going to have too much leverage
over Elizabeth Warren
at this point because she had been running this sort of underdog guerrilla campaign for a while
now. And the friction that we have already seen between her and Bernie Sanders may make it pretty
tough for them to put pressure on her. I have a bit of a cosmic question about the Biden resurgence phenomenon we saw tonight. How much of that
is about Joe Biden? And how much of that is about many Democratic voters' anxieties
around Bernie Sanders? It's something we have talked about in this primary.
You know, I think it's both, but I think that those fundamental strengths that Joe Biden has in this race didn't get him nearly as far as they suddenly have when they are being viewed by Democratic voters
in light of their anxieties about Bernie Sanders. So when this was months ago and voting was a
distant task and Democrats were able to review a field that included not just the candidates we're
talking about tonight, but people like Kamala Harris and Beto O'Rourke and Cory Booker. They
were able to imagine a whole lot of alternatives to Joe Biden, who gave them a lot of reasons for
concern. We have not seen Joe Biden suddenly become a really clear, crisp, disciplined politician in
debates and on the stump. We have not seen
that his campaign organization has suddenly become incredibly sophisticated and operationalized all
over the country in an impressive way. We've not seen any of those things. What we have seen
is that as this field has narrowed and as Bernie Sanders has gotten stronger and stronger,
a lot of Democratic voters are looking back at the things they essentially liked
about Joe Biden all along,
that they think he's a decent man,
that they think he's a safe bet in the general election,
and they associate him with the Obama administration.
And when the choices have already narrowed
to the point that they have now,
those are pretty considerable assets in a
Democratic primary and in a Democratic primary electorate that is consumed more than anything
else with the question of who can beat Donald Trump. Alex, as of tonight, correct me if I'm
wrong, about a third of the delegates will have been awarded in this nomination fight.
How close are we now to actually having a nominee? I mean, beyond the obvious mathematical
answer of we're about a third away. I think we're still a ways off. I have sort of two big questions
for the coming days. One is whether Biden can really sustain this moment, whether he can
consistently go out there in front of the Democratic electorate and look as formidable as he
has in the last couple of days, because it's one thing to look strong and impressive when you are delivering your victory
speech. And it's another thing to just do it day in, day out in the ordinary experiences of being
a presidential candidate. The other question for me is whether Bernie Sanders can expand his appeal
beyond where it is so far. There was that moment after the Nevada caucuses,
which he won by just an enormous margin,
where it really looked like he had cracked the ceiling
on his political support.
And maybe his coalition was about to get much larger
than it had up to that point.
We didn't see that happen on Super Tuesday.
And in a contest between somebody who has a hardcore
progressive coalition and somebody who has a looser but more diffuse moderate coalition in
the Democratic Party, the moderate usually wins in the end. So if you're Bernie Sanders,
you have to be looking at where you can reach people who aren't with you already. And that's
not something that we've seen him do a whole lot of in the last couple weeks.
But he could.
But he could.
Thank you, Alex.
Thank you. We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
The death toll from the coronavirus in Washington state,
the site of the first major outbreak in the U.S.,
rose to nine on Tuesday,
as authorities said that the virus may have been spreading there
for longer than they had realized.
In New York, officials identified a second infection,
a man who was treated
at a hospital
just outside New York City
for days
before he was diagnosed.
Health officials
are now trying
to track down
doctors and nurses
who the man
may have infected.
As of Tuesday night,
there were at least
115 confirmed cases of the virus in the U.S.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Bavaro. See you tomorrow.