The result of Super Tuesday is Trump vs. Biden again

Mondo International Updated on 2024-03-07

The results of Super Tuesday are out: the United States is Trump vs. Biden again this year, (two guys in their seventies and eighties, nothing new). Biden and Trump have won or led in almost every Super Tuesday nomination race. Republican challenger Nikki Haley scored only a symbolic victory in Vermont.

What is Super Tuesday? "Super Tuesday" was the first term to appear in 1984 when the two parties in the United States held a primary election for the nomination of candidates. Because the U.S. election can be divided into two stages, according to tradition, at the beginning of the year, there will be a number of states concentrated on Tuesday for the election, the results will have an important impact on the final party nomination, so this day is called "Super Tuesday", the English term: Super Tuesday. As for why the super-primaries were held on Tuesday instead of any other day of the week? The election experts here could not say why. A logical explanation is that candidates can use the big weekend before Tuesday to canvass for votes in the states. )

The Super Tuesday election did not bring major surprises, which is another way of saying that American politics seems to have entered a strange world. (American-style elections do not require identity verification, nor do they have any rigorous voter registration system, and the United States does not have any inspection and verification mechanism for duplicate voting and false voting, so far the votes are counted by hand, and the voting process allows for black-box operation .......)Blah blah blah blah, it looks like choosing a village chief. )

Joe Biden has repeatedly exposed weaknesses in the polls, but has performed quite well among actual voters, comfortably ranking out of 15 states on Super Tuesday. Biden typically won about 90 percent of the vote yesterday — although in Minnesota, nearly 20 percent of voters chose not to commit and more than 10 percent had no preference in North Carolina.

Donald Trump, who has done well in the polls — ahead of Biden in several recent high-profile surveys — also has some weaknesses among actual voters, especially among highly educated voters who dislike him (and find him vulgar). With the exception of poor Vermont, a Democratic congressman, who looks set to win every game, he is sure to sweep the vast majority of the 865 Republican delegates, including those from Texas and California.

The polls were conducted only in California, North Carolina, and Virginia. According to an exit poll in Virginia, Trump defeated Republican rival Nikki Haley 79 percent to 20 percent, respectively, to white reborn or evangelical, and to 20 percent, 78-19 among non-college-educated Republicans. But Haley outperformed Trump among college-educated voters in Virginia and better than 45 percent among those who identified as non-born-again or evangelicals.

In North Carolina, Trump overwhelmed Haley among voters of 80-15 with non-college backgrounds and won voters at all levels of education except advanced degrees. More than six in 10 Republican primary voters in North Carolina said he would be fit to serve as ** if Trump is found guilty, and seven in 10 Trump voters said they share his values.

The election results, which pushed Biden and Trump to party conventions this summer, once again showed the depraved state of American democracy. It's unclear whether Haley will continue her campaign in the coming days. But her campaign with Trump offers new evidence of the Republican Party's entry into white identity politics and cultural reactions. In many ways, their rivalry looks like a primary between George H.W.** in 1992. The right-wing campaigns of Bush and Pat Buchanan were the forerunners of Trump's white nationalist fervor. Buchanan is a more honest and thoughtful candidate than Trump. But about 70-30 of the 1992 between conservative Bush and reactionary Buchanan will be in Trump's favor in 2024.

As CNN reported: Not a single Republican voter in any of the Republican primaries that conducted immigration polls this year — including Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina — was willing to acknowledge the results of the 2020 election. In a poll of voters conducted by Bloomberg News Morning Consult in February, more than a quarter of voters who said they intended to vote for Trump agreed that Trump was "dangerous."

Meanwhile, in a New York Times Siena poll conducted in late February, 26 percent of registered voters said, "Joe Biden's age makes him inefficient, but he's still able to handle the job well." ”

Americans have been arrogant for a long time, and they have been confident in their game rules for a long time, so they have not been aggressive for many years. Electoral rules that are so backward that they are riddled with holes, and no one in the United States has tried to change them. Trump has called Biden's votes fraudulent for four years, but he has never called for a change in the rules. In the eyes of a victim like Trump, no rule progress is needed.

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