Los Angeles Times

Sanders sees his path narrowing

- By Melanie Mason

Biden’s big wins in three more state primaries cement his growing delegate lead.

Democracy in the time of a global pandemic is a messy thing — but it still marched on Tuesday.

Well, mostly marched on. With Ohio officials deciding in a dizzying series of lastminute orders to call off inperson voting, the focus turned to the remaining three states holding contests: Florida, Illinois and Arizona.

The coronaviru­s outbreak upended the process of voting, with volunteers scheduled to work the polls not showing up amid concerns about the disease.

But it did not dramatical­ly reshape the Democratic presidenti­al race, with former Vice President Joe Biden remaining the oddson favorite to clinch the nomination.

Here are some key takeaways from Tuesday’s results:

Sanders’ climb grows steeper

After two weeks of grueling losses, Bernie Sanders needed to significan­tly shift the trajectory of this race to justify his continued candidacy.

He failed to land a knockout blow in his one-on-one debate with Biden on Sunday.

And the crush of coronaviru­s news has drowned out much interest in the presidenti­al election.

The results from Tuesday’s balloting show the Vermont senator didn’t get what he needed.

Instead, Biden notched a decisive win in Florida, the biggest delegate prize of the evening, which landed in his win column as soon as all polls closed in the state. Biden later won in Illinois; the Associated Press projected his victory about 30 minutes after most polls closed there.

He then completed the sweep with a win in Arizona.

That means Sanders would need to win about 60% of the remaining delegates to win the nomination, an exceedingl­y uphill climb given the math and momentum in Biden’s favor.

Virus anxieties favor front-runner

“Which candidate would you trust to handle a major crisis?” is the type of question pollsters ask voters all the time, usually as a hypothetic­al exercise.

Now, that question has very real implicatio­ns — and voters appear to be siding with the former vice president.

A poll on Tuesday of Florida, Arizona and Illinois voters found that respondent­s in all three states picked Biden over Sanders as the leader they’d prefer in a disaster. It wasn’t even close — the slimmest margin was in Arizona, where voters sided with Biden on that question by 32 percentage points.

The poll was conducted for the major television news networks and surveyed voters prior to Tuesday’s vote. There were no in-person interviews at polling places, as are typical in exit polls, because of the coronaviru­s.

Biden improves his Latino support ...

Even as Biden improbably turned around his campaign, there was always a glaring gap in his coalition: his soft support among Latino voters.

Sanders prioritize­d winning the support of Latino voters in his campaign strategy, and in the early states it showed. In places like Nevada and Texas, Sanders racked up doubledigi­t leads over Biden among that demographi­c.

But Tuesday’s contests showed a notable improvemen­t for Biden on that front.

In Florida, analysis by UCLA’s Latino Policy and Politics Institute found that Biden outperform­ed Sanders in heavily Cuban American precincts in MiamiDade

County by 20 points, and racked up similar margins in neighborho­ods with large Venezuelan American population­s.

Biden was probably aided there by lingering anger over Sanders’ comments praising elements of Fidel Castro’s communist revolution in Cuba, even though he denounced the government’s “authoritar­ian nature.”

Farther west, where fewer Latino voters have a personal connection to Cuban politics, Biden also made some improvemen­ts. In Arizona, he tied Sanders among Latino voters, according to polling.

... But still has to woo young voters

Another weak spot for Biden has remained young voters, and that held true in the most recent contests.

Sanders won the support of 66% of voters younger than 45 in Illinois, 71% in Arizona and 52% of that group in Florida.

Biden, speaking from his Wilmington, Del., home after the bulk of the results rolled in, made a concerted effort to reach out to Sanders’ youthful supporters by acknowledg­ing his rival’s ideologica­l influence.

“Sen. Sanders and his supporters have brought a remarkable, passionate tenacity to all of these issues. Together, they have shifted the fundamenta­l conversati­on in this country,” Biden said. “So let me say, especially to the young voters who have been inspired by Sen. Sanders: I hear you. I know what’s at stake. I know what we have to do.”

Health concerns play out at polls

The scenes from the polling places on Tuesday were not a shining example of democracy in action. Some voters in Illinois waited in hours-long lines in cramped spaces, running counter to the social distancing recommende­d by experts to stop the coronaviru­s’ spread.

In some cases, polling places at nursing homes were moved to alternativ­e locations to protect residents, but the last-minute change made it too late for those voters to request mailin ballots.

The bumpy election day — marked by confusion over closed polling places — could leave some feeling like the results are a flawed glimpse into the preference­s of Democratic voters.

The Sanders camp depicted the decision to hold the contests as detrimenta­l to public health. The campaign did not do any traditiona­l get-out-the-vote efforts, and a spokesman said going to the polls amid the outbreak was a “personal decision,” hardly the usual language urging for every last vote.

In a livestream­ed address from Washington, D.C., before most polls closed, Sanders did not make any mention of the night’s contests and focused instead on proposals to combat the coronaviru­s, including a call for $2,000 in monthly cash payments for every household for the duration of the crisis.

“We can address this crisis,” Sanders said. “We can minimize the pain. Let us do just that.”

The Biden campaign, eager to wrap this primary up, sounded a different note. In a memo released Tuesday before polls closed, Biden’s deputy campaign manager noted the country had held elections during the Civil War, the 1918 flu pandemic and World War II. And, she added, a robust early vote in states like Florida, where nearly 1.1 million ballots were cast before Tuesday, showed that plenty of people got to express their choice.

In short, Team Biden’s message was that despite the unusual circumstan­ces, Tuesday’s results are still legitimate.

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