Gulf Today

S.carolina win boosts Biden’s White House bid

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COLUMBIA: Former vice president Joe Biden decisively won the South Carolina primary on Saturday, reviving his flagging campaign for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination and casting him as the leading rival to frontrunne­r Bernie Sanders.

The victory was the 77-year-old Biden’s first in the race and may give him momentum going into “Super Tuesday” next week, when 14 states go to the polls.

“Just days ago the press and the pundits had declared this candidacy dead,” Biden told hundreds of cheering supporters at a victory rally in Columbia, the South Carolina capital.

“We’ve just won and we’ve won big. We are very much alive,” he said. “You’ve launched our campaign on the path to defeating Donald Trump.” With 85 per cent of the ballots counted in South Carolina, Biden had 48.5 per cent of the vote.

Sanders, the 78-year-old left-wing senator from Vermont, was next with around 20 per cent followed by billionair­e activist Tom Steyer with around 11 per cent.

Former South Bend, Indiana mayor Pete Buttigieg, who has been challengin­g Biden for the centrist vote, had around eight per cent while Massachuse­tts Senator Elizabeth Warren had nearly seven per cent.

A South Carolina victory was seen as crucial to Biden in a state where he was counting on - and received - heavy support among African-american voters, who make up about 60 per cent of the electorate.

Sanders has been the clear leader in the race having won both New Hampshire and Nevada and finishing in a virtual tie in Iowa with the 38-yearold Buttigieg.

Biden finished fourth in Iowa, fifth in New Hampshire and second in Nevada and he desperatel­y needed a win in South Carolina ahead of Super Tuesday.

One-third of the delegates who formally choose the Democratic nominee at the July party convention will be up for grabs on Super Tuesday.

“The biggest question is whether this will slingshot Joe Biden into victory in some Super Tuesday states,” said Larry Sabato, director of the

University of Virginia Center for Politics.

Sabato said Biden’s win will also increase the pressure on the other centrist candidates to drop out of the race.

Steyer, who spent a whopping $23 million on advertisin­g in South Carolina, announced following his disappoint­ing third-place finish that he was ending his long-shot campaign for the nomination.

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Joe Biden celebrates with his supporters after victory at a rally in South Carolina, Columbia, on Saturday.
Agence France-presse
↑ Joe Biden celebrates with his supporters after victory at a rally in South Carolina, Columbia, on Saturday. Agence France-presse

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