Super Tuesday 2020

By Veronica Rocha, Amanda Wills, Mike Hayes and Meg Wagner, CNN

Updated 4:03 p.m. ET, March 4, 2020
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11:51 p.m. ET, March 3, 2020

Why Warren lost Massachusetts

From CNN's Grace Sparks

Elizabeth Warren’s poor performance in her home state reflected a loss of support among her core groups: women, white college-educated voters and liberals. 

Warren drew only around 1 in 10 women voters in Massachusetts, according to exit polls. That was significantly fewer than projected winner Joe Biden, who led with around a third of women, and Bernie Sanders with 3 in 10. 

Around 1 in 5 white college-educated Massachusetts Democrats chose Warren for the nomination -- less than the 3 in 10 who voted for Biden and 3 in 10 for Sanders. 

Finally, liberal voters, who might have split between Warren and Sanders, went strongly for Sanders, around 2 in 5, followed by Biden, around 3 in 10. Around 1 in 10 liberals voted for Warren. As in other states, Biden carried those over 65 and moderates in Massachusetts.

11:50 p.m. ET, March 3, 2020

Did Bloomberg's stop-and-frisk apology work?

From CNN's Tami Luhby

Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Mike Bloomberg has been heavily criticized for his support of the controversial stop-and-frisk policing policy while he was mayor of New York.

But that doesn’t seem to have dampened his support among blacks in Alabama, Massachusetts and Texas.

In all three states, Bloomberg captured a somewhat larger share of votes cast by blacks than by whites.

However, in several other states, the voting ratio was essentially the same. And the former mayor did relatively worse among black voters in Minnesota and Virginia.

11:53 p.m. ET, March 3, 2020

Warren confidant: "There is no path forward for her"

From CNN's Jeff Zeleny

A top Democrat and Warren confidant said Warren deserved the time to come to a decision on her own and shouldn’t be pushed from the race. But the reality is clear: She has no path.

“There is no path forward for her,” the top Democrat said tonight. “It’s beneath her to remain” in the race.

Going into Super Tuesday, advisers said she wanted to stay in the race to become an alternative to Bernie Sanders and Joe Biden. She wanted to be on the debate stage March 15 in Arizona to offer voters a third choice. 

The fading hopes are pinned entirely to her performance in California tonight, but the prospect of falling below viability in Texas makes an already difficult path even more so.

11:53 p.m. ET, March 3, 2020

Nearly half of the polling stations in this major Texas county remain open

From CNN's Paul Murphy

Voters line up at a polling station to cast their ballots during the presidential primary in Houston, Texas on Tuesday, March 3.
Voters line up at a polling station to cast their ballots during the presidential primary in Houston, Texas on Tuesday, March 3. Mark Felix/AFP/Getty Images

In Harris County, Texas – which includes Houston – nearly half of the polling stations remain open.

According to Harris County Elections spokesperson Rosio Torres, the data shows 371 polls are still open at this time, out of 802 sites.

Watch:

11:34 p.m. ET, March 3, 2020

It's 11:30 p.m. ET. Here's where things stand.

AP
AP

Results are still coming in from the two biggest prizes — California and Texas — in tonight's contests.

If you're just tuning in, here's where things stand as of now:

Joe Biden will win 8 states: The former vice president is projected to win eight states — Arkansas, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Alabama, Virginia, North Carolina and Tennessee.

Bernie Sanders to take 3 states: The Vermont senator is projected to win contests in Colorado, Vermont and Utah. Speaking at a rally tonight, Sanders vowed to win the Democratic nomination.

About California: It has a massive 415 delegates at stake. Meanwhile, in Los Angeles County, voters were given additional time to cast their ballots for candidates. Voters across the area reported long lines at polling centers.

11:24 p.m. ET, March 3, 2020

Warren now has a decision to make

From CNN's Lauren Dezenski

Patrick Semansky/AP
Patrick Semansky/AP

Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren missed out on any sort of home-field advantage in her state's primary contest today.

Joe Biden won the state, despite a minimal campaign presence. And Bernie Sanders finished second. Warren came in third.

After falling short in her home state, and appearing to be nowhere close to first place in any of the other Super Tuesday contests, Warren faces a difficult decision on her campaign's next steps.

Before polls closed in Massachusetts, her campaign made it clear they planned to continue on to the next contests in Michigan, Arizona and Idaho, who vote later this month.

But without any major victories (or momentum) to point to, Warren may find an even more difficult path to the nomination -- and increasing questions about her future in this race.

11:21 p.m. ET, March 3, 2020

Elizabeth Warren loses Massachusetts, her home state

From CNN's Lauren Dezenski and Gregory Krieg

Patrick Semansky/AP
Patrick Semansky/AP

Sen. Elizabeth Warren has lost her home state of Massachusetts to Joe Biden.

There had been signs in late February that Warren could finish behind neighboring Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont. Polling from WBUR and MassINC showed him markedly ahead of her. That same poll showed Biden in fifth place. 

Warren rarely led in polls of Massachusetts during the campaign, save for a spike around fall of 2019, when she briefly emerged as the primary’s frontrunner.

But as the results rolled in on Tuesday night, the depth of Warren’s troubles came into view. Not only was she trailing Sanders, but a resurgent Biden had leap-frogged them both.

Sanders narrowly lost Massachusetts in 2016 to Hillary Clinton. In that cycle, he sought to tap into the state’s progressive grassroots -- at the time energized by Warren.  

 Warren has represented Massachusetts in the Senate since 2012.

It’s not immediately clear what the Massachusetts loss means for the future of Warren's campaign.

11:23 p.m. ET, March 3, 2020

Biden will win Massachusetts, CNN projects. It's an upset for Warren.

Joe Biden will win Massachusetts, CNN projects, an upset in Sen. Elizabeth Warren's home state.

There are 91 delegates at stake in Massachusetts.

Who won in 2016: Hillary Clinton won the Democratic primary and Donald Trump won the Republican primary. 

Watch:

 

7:07 a.m. ET, March 4, 2020

Sanders will win Utah, CNN projects

Bernie Sanders will win Utah tonight, CNN projects. This is his third win for the night.

There are 29 delegates at stake tonight in Utah.

Who won 2016: Sanders won the Democratic caucuses and Ted Cruz won the Republican caucuses. 

Watch: