- Both President Biden and former President Trump are focused on the November general election.
- But first they must win over voters in a number of primaries and caucuses on Super Tuesday.
- Former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley is continuing her vigorous campaign against Trump in the Republican primary.
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Super Tuesday, March 5th, is perhaps the most important day on the presidential nominating calendar, with the results of races in 16 states and one territory giving both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump substantial stakes. is poised to give it an insurmountable delegate lead.
Heading into Super Tuesday, Trump had won nearly every Republican race against his party’s main remaining challenger, former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley. The former president won key races in the Iowa caucuses, New Hampshire primary, South Carolina primary and Michigan primary, and Haley won her first primary in Washington, D.C., on Sunday.
President Trump aims to continue his dominant performance against Haley on Super Tuesday as he inches closer to winning the 1,215 delegates needed to win the Republican nomination. But Haley continued to criticize Trump on everything from his chances of winning to his judgment on foreign affairs, arguing that Republicans must turn the page from the former president.
Meanwhile, although Biden easily won early Democratic races, he faced a backlash in last week’s Michigan primary, where more than 100,000 Democratic primary voters rejected his call for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza. I chose “irresponsible” to protest. (He won the state primary with 81% of the vote.)
Democratic challengers Dean Phillips and Marianne Williamson have so far garnered minimal support among party voters.
Here are the states (and territories) where voters will head to the polls on Super Tuesday.