Super Tuesday is the Super Bowl of the primary
schedule. First, a few facts and
figures. There are 12 states in play on
the Democratic side, and 799 delegates, 17% of the total delegate pool. On the GOP side, it is 14 states, 623
delegates, and 25% of their total delegate pool. These are very large numbers indeed.
While most of the states involved are in the South, there
are a few in the Northeast and Midwest. There
are both primaries and caucuses, and delegates will be awarded proportionately
(rather than winner-take-all) for the Democratic races. On the GOP side, about 70% of the delegates
are awarded on a “winner-take-most” basis, in which the leader must have 50%+
of the vote to take most of the delegates, otherwise they are allocated
proportionately. The other 30% of the
delegates at stake will be awarded proportionately. And some races on both sides have some
minimum thresholds required to be awarded delegates, from 5% to as high as 20%,
which could be important on the GOP side.
Confusing enough? There are
plenty of other minor wrinkles, but that’s the gist. (Note, here is a wrinkle: Colorado is having a caucuses for both parties, and Wyoming is for the GOP. But delegates will not actually be awarded as yet; they have a complex process including state conventions so I am not including their delegate totals in this analysis.)
The stakes are obviously huge. Simply stated, both Hillary Clinton and
Donald Trump are poised to, for all intents and purposes, put away their
parties’ nominations.
For each party I will endeavor to explain as efficiently as
possible where we are now, what will happen on Super Tuesday, and where it will
go from there, first with the Democrats, and then the Republicans.
THE DEMOCRATS
Where
we are now. On the Democratic
side, based on the four contests held to date, Hillary Clinton and Bernie
Sanders are relatively close in delegates (91-65). But there are also Democratic “superdelegates”
who are free to make personal commitments to the candidates they choose, and an
overwhelming number are going with Hillary Clinton. Unlike delegates earned in the primaries or
caucuses, who are by and large committed to vote with their candidate in the
first ballot at the convention, superdelegates can switch their allegiance at
any time. But they are unlikely to switch
if their candidate is doing well, indeed they have every incentive not to,
because politicians have very long memories.
Don’t expect any of those superdelegates to jump ship given the way
things are going. Clinton thus can count
a total of 544 delegates while Sanders has only 85. This is Bernie’s big math problem, and it
means that he cannot simply match Clinton from here on in, he has to win by
huge margins. More on this later.
|
|
DEM 2,382 to Win
|
||
|
Primaries/ Caucuses
|
Dels.
|
Clinton
|
Sanders
|
|
Total >>>
|
4763
|
544
|
85
|
|
Super Del.
|
712
|
453
|
20
|
1-Feb
|
44
|
23
|
21
|
|
9-Feb
|
24
|
9
|
15
|
|
20-Feb
|
35
|
20
|
15
|
|
27-Feb
|
53
|
39
|
14
|
Super
Tuesday. Polling for Super
Tuesday is a mixed bag. There are many
recent (that is, February) polls in Georgia, Massachusetts, Texas and Virginia,
and one or two in all the others (save American Samoa, in which there are
none). None of these polls as yet reflect
the full effect of Clinton’s enormous win in South Carolina (some even pre-date
Nevada) and consequently there are many moving parts. There are also a few caucuses in there, and
they are notoriously difficult to predict.
That aside, for
Super Tuesday, BTRTN projects a
major triumph for Hillary Clinton, with sweeping wins in the South (Alabama,
Arkansas, Georgia, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia), closer calls in Colorado,
Massachusetts and Minnesota and a big win in tiny American Samoa, offset only by
Sanders wins in Oklahoma and his home state of Vermont.
South Carolina is a bellwether, and in each of the
Southern states I have bumped up her polling margins to account for a South
Carolina bump. Sanders has more or less
given up in these states, which will contribute to the rout, of course.
Sanders has been putting effort into Colorado,
Massachusetts and Minnesota (in addition to Vermont and Oklahoma), but I see
him coming up short in each one. The
polling in these states favors Clinton, and, again, does not yet reflect the
momentum from the South Carolina massacre.
Our specific state-by-state projections are as follows:
Super Tuesday
Democrats
|
ALAB
|
AmSo
|
ARK
|
COL
|
GA
|
MAS
|
MN
|
OK
|
TN
|
TX
|
VT
|
VA
|
Delegates >>
|
53
|
6
|
32
|
66
|
102
|
91
|
77
|
38
|
67
|
222
|
16
|
95
|
Primary/Caucus
|
P
|
C
|
P
|
C
|
P
|
P
|
C
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
Clinton
|
73
|
65
|
70
|
51
|
72
|
53
|
60
|
48
|
68
|
69
|
13
|
67
|
Sanders
|
27
|
35
|
30
|
49
|
28
|
47
|
40
|
52
|
32
|
31
|
87
|
33
|
Where
to from here. I
believe Hillary Clinton will have all but sewn up the nomination based on the
Super Tuesday results, and the explanation is pretty simple.
She should emerge from Super Tuesday with somewhere north
of 1,050 delegates, since the Super Tuesday delegates (and in the races that
follow) are allocated proportionate to the vote (pending hitting some minimum
thresholds in some states). She would
need to win about 1,330 or so of the remaining 3,096 delegates at stake in the
remaining primaries and caucuses (excluding the remaining uncommitted
superdelegates).
Here is where the proportional (rather than
winner-take-all) allocation really hurts Bernie. He would thus have to win 57%-58% of the
remaining delegates to deny her the nomination, and even more if you believe
the remaining uncommitted superdelegates will go to Clinton. You have to keep in mind that he won New
Hampshire 60-39, a state in which 96% of the voters are white (the highest in
the nation after West Virginia) AND he is from neighboring Vermont. He would have to win by New Hampshire-esque
margins in states that have much higher minority representation, much less
familiarity with him, and in the face of enormous Super Tuesday Clinton
momentum. You don’t even have to look at
any polls to know that this is simply not going to happen (barring any cataclysmic
new revelation).
Sanders will stay in the race, I assume, for some time, but
he will basically be tilting at windmills.
He is in a worse position than Hillary Clinton herself was in 2008, and while
she did reasonably well in the remaining primaries, she could never catch up to
Obama, or even seriously threaten him.
The proportional allocation guarantees that the kind of huge delegate
margins that he needs to lessen the gap are simply not available.
THE REPUBLICANS
Where
we are now. On the GOP side,
very few delegates have been awarded, only 125 (or about 5% of the total), and
Donald Trump has taken about two-thirds of them. The GOP has superdelegates as well, but it is
customary for them to vote along with their state delegations, so most remain
uncommitted at this juncture. That, of
course, makes a huge difference and makes the GOP race seem, at least on the
surface, to be more competitive as of this moment. I believe, though, that semblance of a race
is illusory.
|
GOP 1,237 to Win
|
|
|
||||
|
Primaries/ Caucuses
|
Dels.
|
Trump
|
Cruz
|
Rubio
|
Kasich
|
Carson
|
|
Total >>>
|
2470
|
82
|
17
|
16
|
6
|
4
|
|
Super Del.
|
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
1-Feb
|
30
|
7
|
8
|
7
|
1
|
3
|
|
9-Feb
|
23
|
11
|
3
|
2
|
4
|
0
|
|
20-Feb
|
50
|
50
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
0
|
|
23-Feb
|
30
|
14
|
6
|
7
|
1
|
1
|
Super
Tuesday. There is even less
polling for GOP Super Tuesday races than for the Dems. Once again there are multiple polls in
Georgia, Massachusetts, Texas and Virginia.
There are one to three February polls in Alabama, Arkansas, Oklahoma,
Tennessee and Vermont. But there are no
recent polls at all in Alaska, Colorado, Minnesota, North Dakota and Wyoming.
But what polling exists is pretty darn clear.
BTRTN projects
that
it will be a very good day for Donald
Trump. We see a Trump sweep, aside for
Cruz’s home state of Texas. The
state-by-state is as follows:
Super Tuesday
GOP
|
ALAB
|
ALSK
|
ARK
|
COL
|
GA
|
MAS
|
MN
|
ND
|
OK
|
TN
|
TX
|
VT
|
VA
|
WY
|
Delegates >>
|
50
|
28
|
40
|
37
|
76
|
42
|
38
|
28
|
43
|
58
|
155
|
16
|
49
|
29
|
Primary/Caucus
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
C
|
P
|
P
|
C
|
C
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
P
|
C
|
Trump
|
45
|
40
|
34
|
41
|
42
|
46
|
44
|
41
|
36
|
43
|
31
|
42
|
42
|
41
|
Cruz
|
18
|
30
|
33
|
27
|
28
|
11
|
21
|
27
|
27
|
24
|
42
|
13
|
20
|
27
|
Rubio
|
22
|
20
|
26
|
25
|
22
|
21
|
23
|
25
|
24
|
23
|
20
|
22
|
28
|
25
|
Kasich
|
5
|
4
|
2
|
2
|
2
|
18
|
6
|
2
|
5
|
3
|
3
|
19
|
6
|
2
|
Carson
|
10
|
6
|
5
|
5
|
6
|
4
|
6
|
5
|
8
|
7
|
4
|
4
|
4
|
5
|
Where
to from here. The
GOP scenario beyond Super Tuesday differs from the Democrats in one important
way: the delegate allocation methodology
more frequently is “winner take all,” particularly after March 15, which
theoretically would make it easier for a challenger to make up ground.
By my predictions and rough math, the GOP will stand
approximately as follows after Super Tuesday:
Trump
|
Cruz
|
Rubio
|
Kasich
|
Carson
|
|
February
|
82
|
17
|
16
|
6
|
4
|
Super Tuesday
|
275
|
177
|
158
|
11
|
2
|
TOTAL
|
357
|
194
|
174
|
17
|
6
|
Trump will have about 160-180 or so delegates more than
both Cruz and Rubio, which hardly seems insurmountable, since over 1,700
delegates will remain.
Where do we begin?
Trump will have incredible momentum out of Super Tuesday. If he wins 13 out of 14 of the races, or close
to that number, it will certainly be viewed as a huge day for Trump. This will affect everything: the money, the
resources, the media coverage, the narrative as well as future turnout. If Trump will have won every contest but two,
the question in the air will be, why would he not keep winning?
Let’s say the field narrows. Well, that does not really help much. As you can see from the delegate totals
above, Carson and Kasich are not really making much of an impact anyway. And if they exited, Carson’s supporters would
like go to Cruz, while Kasich’s would likely go to Rubio.
What if either Cruz or Rubio lose, reducing it to a two-person
race?
The question is, why would one of them drop out any time
soon? Look at Cruz’s and Rubio’s
delegate counts post-Super Tuesday…pretty close, right? And they could easily be reversed. You can bet that each desperately want to
finish second if they cannot finish first.
The GOP is the “next in line” party, right? They have crowned the runner-up in every
cycle as the nominee in the following cycle in every recent campaign except
2000 (George W. Bush) and 2012 (but while Mitt Romney had come in third in
2008, he was extremely close behind Mike Huckabee, and Huckabee chose not to
run in 2012). Both Cruz and Rubio are
young (44) and have much terrain ahead of them, and they would both surely want
to be Mr. Runner-Up this year. Why would
either cave?
And apart from the runner-up goal, Cruz hates the
Washington establishment, so he won’t drop out to please them. And Rubio now IS the Washington
establishment, and their Great Hope, so he is not going to drop out. See the problem?
It gets worse.
Even if one of them dropped out, it is not clear that this
would narrow the gap. Part of their constituency would head for Trump…not the
majority but some proportion. Look at
what happened to Chris Christie, who shocked the world by endorsing Trump last
week. I’m not sure if his followers took
his advice, but you cannot take it for granted that Cruz and/or Rubio followers
would all go the non-Trump route.
And…for Rubio to have a chance, he needs to win his home
state, Florida (as Cruz will likely do in Texas on Super Tuesday). The polls in Florida now show that Trump has
a solid lead over Rubio, by 14 points on average. And this is BEFORE a Super Tuesday field day
for Trump. Why would Florida voters
change their minds between March 1 and March 15 if the only news is more Trump
victories?
The fact is, “winner takes all” favors, um, the
“winner.” And Trump has been
winning. Winning everywhere. North, South, East, West. Men. Women.
Tea Party. Mainstream.
Want more?
Along with Florida and its 99 delegates, Illinois,
Missouri, North Carolina and Ohio are winner-take-all contests on March 15. Right now Trump is ahead, on average, by 15 points
in Illinois, 12 in North Carolina and five in Ohio (over John Kasich, in his
home state). There has been no polling
in Missouri but I doubt the pattern is any different there. Again, these polls are before the big Super
Tuesday results and the resulting Trump momentum.
So, America, recognize that if Super Tuesday goes the way I
predict, or anything close to it, the nominations will be basically set. By March 16, everyone else will realize this
as well. And while the primaries will
carry on, Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump will re-set their sights…on each
other.
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