On March 6, the Washington Post published an article entitled "Not as "Super" Tuesday as in the past", saying that the "Super Tuesday" in the United States in the election year believes that it is a key turning point in the election nominations of major political parties. The term describes a day on the primary election schedule in which many states and/or states with large populations exert influence to give candidates the opportunity to stand out in the race for the support of their party's convention delegates and actually determine the outcome of the nomination.
In the past, Super Tuesday served this purpose. The delay in the primary race could result in a number of important Tuesdays: CNN calculates that there will be at least three "Super Tuesdays" in 2016.
In 2024, the number of Super Tuesdays will be zero, the article says, at least at the campaign level.
After all, we already know who the candidates of the main political parties will be. Unless the two are kidnapped by aliens or have other mishaps, we'll see Donald Trump vs. Joe Biden face off again in November. Biden will win the Democratic nomination because he has not faced significant opposition; Trump will win the Republican nomination because he hasn't faced any major opposition for about a year.
The article says that this assertion will understandably haunt supporters of Nikki Haley, the former permanent representative of the United States to the United Nations. But, for understandable reasons, Trump will win the support of the Republican majority in two weeks at most.
Over the next 10 days, there are several races that will be enough to bring Trump a little closer to the nomination.
By March 19, everything will be over. On that day, primaries will be held in Arizona, Florida and Ohio, and the three states will have a large number of votes, and Trump will almost certainly win. These are winner-takes-all states: win this state, and you'll get all the delegate votes.
This Tuesday will be the same inconsequential drama that happens on every election night: the results of the districts are in the hands and the states are backing Mr. Trump. But barring a structural change in U.S. politics, the most "super" content of Tuesday's campaign related to the nomination may be the kind of thing that makes us collectively shrug our shoulders. (Compiled by Cheng Guoyi).