Hillary Clinton took the South Carolina Democratic primary in typical front-runner style. Winning with a whopping 73.5% of the vote to Sen. Bernie Sanders’ 26%, the campaign of the
former Secretary of State heads to Super Tuesday with wind in its sails.
On "Meet the Press" yesterday, Chuck Todd grilled the Vermont Senator on the dismal South Carolina results:
“You lost African American voters 84 to 16, worse than any poll had shown. Senator, what happened?”
Sanders responded appropriately in his straightforward manner:
“Well, we got decimated, that’s what happened.” He did single out one silver lining to the poor results, having won the under 29 years of age vote and doing “well with African
American young people, as well as white young people.”
The younger generation is clearly more in tune with the message of dramatic change espoused by Sanders, in addition to
the South Carolina vote, he won 83% of young people in New Hampshire and 84% in Iowa.
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While that demographic surely helped pave Obama’s path to the White House, it probably won’t be enough to unsettle the political mettle of the Clinton campaign.
In the first three Democratic primary/caucus states, young voters (18-29) made up less than 20% of the electorate. Young people have generally lower turnout rates. Even in 2008, less than
50% of that demographic made it to the voting booth in November. Should she be the nominee, Clinton would be lucky to drive a similar turnout.
Polls have Clinton cleaning up on Super
Tuesday. Following her performance in South Carolina, that looks increasingly likely. In all but one Super Tuesday
state, his home Vermont, Sanders trails Clinton and in many of those by a significant margin.
Sanders’ path to the nomination is looking progressively hazier and
Tuesday’s contests could erase those completely.
There is a slight caveat: The State Department will release a final batch of 4,000 pages of Clinton emails on Monday, one day
before March 1. But whether anything in the release will change anyone’s vote is yet to be seen.