The Day

BIDEN WINS FLORIDA, ILLINOIS PRIMARIES AMID PANDEMIC

- By MARK Z. BARABAK

Joe Biden won the Florida primary in a landslide Tuesday, seizing the biggest prize on a day voters in three states cast ballots in a presidenti­al contest shadowed by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

He also won the Illinois primary. Arizona voting ran late.

The former vice president was seeking to all but clinch the Democratic nomination while Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders hoped an upset victory or two could breathe new hope into his flagging campaign.

There were 219 delegates at stake in Florida, nearly half the day’s total. (It takes 1,991 to win the nomination.)

Ohio postponed its primary hours before the polls were set to open after the state’s health director, acting at the behest of Gov. Mike DeWine, declared a public health emergency. Even so, some voters turned out only to find their usual polling place locked up tight.

Where voting was underway, election officials worked to balance safety with business as usual.

In Illinois, Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough urged poll workers to use painter’s tape to mark the floor in 6-foot increments, so those in line would stand far enough apart to avoid spreading the virus. “This picture can save lives,” she said in how-to instructio­ns posted on Twitter.

Still, there were reports of missing disinfecti­ng supplies, shuttered voting centers that were supposed to be open and other mishaps throughout the country.

The crisis surroundin­g the coronaviru­s introduced an element of uncertaint­y into a contest that has seemed largely settled.

Joe Biden won the Florida and Illinois primaries Tuesday, taking two big strides toward clinching the Democratic presidenti­al nomination on an election day shadowed by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The former vice president prevailed over Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders in convincing fashion, forging a now-familiar coalition of party moderates, older and electabili­ty-minded voters and African Americans.

In all, 441 delegates were at stake in a day when Arizona also cast its ballots.

It takes 1,991 to win the nomination at the party’s summer convention and Biden’s powerful showing leaves Sanders with only the barest hopes of a comeback.

Ohio postponed its primary hours before the polls were set to open after the state’s health director, acting at the behest of Gov. Mike DeWine, declared a public health emergency. Even so, some voters turned out only to find their usual polling place locked up tight.

Where voting was underway, election officials worked to balance safety with business as usual.

In Illinois, Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough urged poll workers to use painter’s tape to mark the floor in 6-foot increments, so those in line would stand far enough apart to avoid spreading the virus. “This picture can save lives,” she said in how-to instructio­ns posted on Twitter.

Still, there were reports of missing disinfecti­ng supplies, shuttered voting centers that were supposed to be open and other mishaps throughout the country.

The crisis surroundin­g the coronaviru­s introduced an element of uncertaint­y into a contest that has seemed largely settled since Biden roared back from the brink of eliminatio­n with a crushing victory in last month’s South Carolina primary and a string of Super Tuesday victories on March 3.

It is not so much the mathematic­s of the race, which weigh heavily in Biden’s favor, but rather the mechanics: With tens of millions of Americans locked down at home, several states have delayed their upcoming contests, leaving the candidates and their campaigns in an unpreceden­ted limbo.

After Tuesday, no voting is scheduled until Puerto Rico’s March 29 primary — and officials there are seeking a delay — so it was unclear how the contest would proceed. (Ohio allowed mail balloting to continue, with plans to open its polls and tally the results June 2.)

The chairman of the Democratic National Committee, Tom Perez, urged states that had yet to hold primaries to expand their vote-by-mail programs, absentee balloting and polling station hours to avoid further disruption­s.

“The right to vote is the foundation of our democracy, and we must do everything we can to protect and expand that right instead of bringing our democratic process to a halt,” Perez said in a written statement.

The balloting Tuesday was marked by confusion and lower in-person turnout than expected as the usual election day miscues were compounded by uncertaint­ies caused by the country’s unpreceden­ted health crisis.

Ami Gandhi, senior counsel at the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights, said the group was fielding an unpreceden­ted volume of calls from voters confused about where to vote or unsure whether they should leave their homes to cast ballots.

“If it wasn’t so tragic, it would be comical, the numbers of errors we’re seeing today,” Gandhi said.

Some poll workers failed to show up in Florida, leaving election officials scrambling to accommodat­e voters with no place to register their preference. (Nearly 1.1 million ballots had been cast early or mailed in ahead of election day.)

Makeshift polling places had to be set up in all three states, as nursing homes and other locations that typically serve as polling places were closed off to avoid large gatherings.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/AP PHOTO ?? People wait in line to vote at the Supervisor of Elections office Tuesday in Delray Beach, Fla. This polling station was made available after some precincts in Palm Beach County were unable to open after poll workers did not report to work.
LYNNE SLADKY/AP PHOTO People wait in line to vote at the Supervisor of Elections office Tuesday in Delray Beach, Fla. This polling station was made available after some precincts in Palm Beach County were unable to open after poll workers did not report to work.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States