Thursday, March 3, 2016

Super Tuesday
                 Super Tuesday took place on the Tuesday, March 1st. The results show over all that Both Donald Trump and Hilary Clinton were the winners of this Super Tuesday. These results show a massive over all favor to these candidates. Many of these states have over forty delegates which pushes both candidates closer to obtaining the nomination for their party.
                 Donald Trump pulled away with a win with Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Massachusetts, Vermont, Tennessee, and Virginia. That puts his number of delegates to 319 just for this Super Tuesday and doesn't count the other five states that have already had their polling. As far as other candidates, Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio were the only other ones to win any states during this election. Ted Cruz won Alaska, Oklahoma, and and Texas which is a huge win for the Cruz campaign winning 155 delegates alone from there and an overall 266 delegates from the race. Rubio only won one state which was Minnesota leaving him with a less but still big win of 110 delegates.
                 Clinton pulled away with more states and more delegates than Sanders did. Clinton captured Alabama, Alaska, Georgia, Massachusetts, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and left the elections with 1,052 delegates from this race alone. Sanders captured four states tough which gave him a good hold winning Colorado, Minnesota, Vermont, Oklahoma and gave him 427 delegates. Sanders needs to pick up his campaign because once Clinton get 1,237 she secures a spot in the actual race for the presidency. 
                 This relates to AP Gov and Politics because we are constantly learning how elections work. We also look at the polls avidly because obviously every state is important and so is every presidential election. Every day history is being made with today's society and now we access it instantly due to technology and the media.  

1 comment:

  1. what vocab terms, phrases or concepts can you tie into the article from what we have been learning about in class. This seems to broad and vague.

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