[Breaking news alert, posted at 9:25 p.m. ET Tuesday]
Bernie Sanders has won the Oklahoma Democratic primary, according to a CNN projection.
[Previous story, posted at 9:13 p.m. ET Tuesday]
Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are tightening their grip on the Democratic and Republican presidential nominations as they land big Super Tuesday wins.
Voters went to the polls in a dozen states Tuesday and CNN so far projects six wins for Clinton and five wins for Trump. Clinton will take Georgia, Virginia, Alabama, Tennessee, Arkansas and Texas while Trump will win Georgia, Alabama, Massachusetts, Tennessee and Virginia.
Texas Sen. Ted Cruz will win the Republican primary in his home state, according to a CNN projection.
Bernie Sanders, Clinton’s insurgent Democratic rival, will capture his home state of Vermont.
The Super Tuesday contests are a delegate bonanza for front-runners and a test of survival for others as voters went to the polls across the nation, including in the Deep South, in Colorado and Texas, in ice-bound Alaska and Minnesota.
Trump is expected to notch a large number of victories that could help him stretch his lead in the GOP White House battle and underscore his growing support across all sectors of the Republican coalition. Those wins could come despite being embroiled in a GOP fight that has rival candidates and party elders, desperate to stop his march to the nomination, branding him unfit for the presidency.
Trump’s win in Virginia is a disappointment to Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, who had hoped a win there would kick-start his effort to challenge the real estate mogul.
Sanders, who is keen to challenge the growing narrative that the former secretary of state is now on track to win the nomination, hopes to halt the Clinton tide in Minnesota, Colorado and Oklahoma, in addition to Vermont.
“This campaign is not just about electing a president,” Sanders said at a rally Tuesday night in Vermont. “It is about transforming America.”
A total of 595 Republican delegates of the 1,237 needed to clinch the GOP nomination are up for grabs in 11 states. Sanders and Clinton are facing off in 11 states for 865 of the 2,383 delegates needed to win the Democratic race.
A pivotal moment
Super Tuesday comes at a pivotal moment in the Republican race. It has finally dawned on rival campaigns and alarmed party establishment figures that Trump — after three thumping wins in New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada — will win the nomination unless there is a dramatic reversal of fortunes.
In an unusual move that reflected his booming confidence, Trump held a rally in Ohio, a state that is not taking part in Super Tuesday but holds a crucial winner-take-all primary in two weeks. In the latest surreal twist to his increasingly bizarre showdown with Rubio, Trump said that he had “beautiful hands” after the Florida senator asked at an earlier rally why the real estate mogul’s hands were so small.
Cruz, speaking to reporters before casting his ballot in Houston, did not wait for the results to roll in before signaling that he will try to nudge Rubio and Kasich out of the race.
“If you want to beat Donald Trump, we’ve got to get to a head-to-head, one-on-one race,” Cruz said. “What Donald is benefiting from is a fractured opposition.”
But Rubio, who held election day rallies in Oklahoma and Minnesota, made it clear that he isn’t going anywhere.
“I will campaign in all 50 states. I will get in my pickup truck and drive around this country if I have to before I allow the party of Lincoln and Reagan to fall into the hands of a con man,” Rubio said, referring to Trump.
Trump, who has turned American politics upside down with his outsider campaign, nationwide media blitz and crusade against political correctness, went into Super Tuesday with his polling hitting new peaks.
Looking ahead
It won’t be possible for Trump to clinch the nomination outright Tuesday night. The contests will award delegates proportionally based on a candidate’s share of the vote as long as they reach a certain threshold.
Rubio and Ohio Gov. John Kasich are clinging to the hope that they could win their own states on March 15, when contests start to become winner-take-all affairs, and eventually overhaul Trump’s delegate total.
Clinton’s aides know that she cannot knock out Sanders on Tuesday, but they hope to end the night with a lead of around 100 earned delegates.
Sanders is making clear that despite the size of his defeat in South Carolina he is nowhere near giving up his campaign, though the candidate himself appears to have rock-bottom expectations in the South.
Clinton, however, appeared to be looking toward the general election — and Donald Trump.
“I was very disappointed that he did not disavow what appears to be support from David Duke and the Klan,” the former secretary of state told reporters. “That is exactly the kind of statement that should be repudiated upon hearing it.”