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rudy-Diiriye

Supper Tuesday Tomorrow!!

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Why 'No comment' Ms. Cynicism!

 

Doesn’t the state of European political affairs sicken you! America might be invading other countries around the world. But it’s a much better society to live in. I don’t feel wanted in Europe anymore.

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Europe sucks! i feel your pain homie marcus!!

 

well, neck to neck with obama and chillary!! lool

 

hes won 13 states and shes won 8..but she has 1006 delagates and he 935... but hes got more states coming for him like dc, va, the crip states, wa and utah...lol

 

shes got texas and ohio..we depending on u nomads vote in ohio for obama...rock it!!!

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The Zack   

Obama won 13 states, Clinton won 8 states including the big prizes of California and New York. Their delegate tally was almost even, propelling the fight toward the next round of seven Democratic contests in the next six days.

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here is the outcome. jb, may be u should pay attention to american politics and learn how democracy works...lol

 

 

Super Tuesday by the Numbers

It’s been more than 24 hours since the Super Tuesday polls closed, but analysts are still sifting through the reams of data to come out of the 22 Democratic and 21 Republican primaries and caucuses. Here’s a quick rundown of the Feb. 5 numbers that matter, drawn from various news sources as well as our own calculators.

 

Turnout

 

 

27 percent of eligible citizens voted.

Dems: At least 15,417,521

GOP: At least 9,181,297

Source: Time

 

 

Delegate Count

 

After tearing our hair out over how media outlets can’t agree on the post-Super Tuesday delegate count, we’ll go with the Associated Press delegate tracker. It's super-detailed, updated frequently, and seems to get the most deference from news organizations. Here’s its most recent estimate:

Dems

Clinton: 832

Obama: 821

Delegates needed for the nomination: 2,025

 

GOP

McCain: 698

Romney: 278

Huckabee: 192

Delegates needed for the nomination: 1,191

 

Meanwhile, Obama’s campaign predicts he will end up with 847 delegates to Clinton’s 834. Clinton’s team has not released a specific prediction.

 

Superdelegate Count

Total superdelegates: 796

Supporting Clinton: 213

Supporting Obama: 139

Source: AP

State Count (Feb. 5)

Dems

Clinton: Ariz., Ark., Calif., Mass., N.J., N.M., N.Y., Okla., Tenn. (9 states)

Obama: Ala., Alaska, Colo., Conn., Del., Ga., Idaho, Ill., Kan., Minn., Mo., N.D., Utah (13 states)

 

GOP

McCain: Ariz., Calif., Conn., Del., Ill., Mo., N.J., N.Y., Okla. (9 states)

Romney: Alaska, Colo., Mass., Minn., Mont., N.D., Utah (7 states)

Huckabee: Ala., Ark., Ga., Tenn., W.Va. (5 states)

Source: CNN

 

Caucus Count (Feb. 5)

Clinton: 1 (American Samoa)

Obama: 7 (Alaska, Colo., Idaho, Kan., Minn., Mont., N.D.)

 

Huckabee: 0

McCain: 0

Romney: 5 (Alaska, Col., Minn., Mont., N.D.)

 

Popular Vote

Dems

Clinton 48.97 percent (6,967,302)

Obama 48.04 percent (6,835,447)

Difference in terms of actual votes: 131,855

Source: NBC

 

GOP

 

McCain: 43.2 percent (3,657,444)

Romney: 35.5 percent (3,001,607)

Huckabee: 21.4 percent (1,809,404)

Source: Calculated using data from NBC

 

Relative Turnout

In the 19 states holding both Democratic and Republican primaries and caucuses, more than 14 million people voted for Obama or Clinton. More than 8 million people voted for McCain or Romney or Huckabee. Thus, you could say about 73 percent more Democrats turned out than Republicans.

Source: Time

 

In Missouri, Democratic turnout beat GOP turnout by 70 percent. In 2000, when the state also held two primaries, the opposite was true: Republican turnout trumped the Dems’ by 56 percent.

Source: HuffPo

 

Exit Polls

Obama won 82 percent of the black vote; Clinton won 53 percent of whites and 64 percent of Hispanic voters. Clinton and Obama split white men, while Clinton won white women overwhelmingly.

 

McCain won the majority of self-identified Republican moderates; Romney won 38 percent of self-identified Republican conservatives. Huckabee won 38 percent of evangelical Christians; McCain came in second among these voters, with 30 percent to Romney’s 27 percent.

 

Among Republicans who rated the economy as their top concern, McCain won with 42 percent. Clinton beat Obama among voters who said the economy is in poor condition, while Obama won among those who rated the economy good or excellent.

 

Obama won the youth vote nationwide, with 59 percent of voters under 30, compared with Clinton’s 38 percent. But Clinton won that demographic in California and Massachusetts.

 

Source: AP

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