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Biden roars back on Super Tuesday

Updated: 2020-03-05 10:06

Former US vice-president Joe Biden arrives with wife Jill (center) and sister Valerie at a Super Tuesday campaign event in Los Angeles on Tuesday. [MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES/AFP]

Ex-vice president's rout of Democratic field sets up a contest with Sanders

A resurgent Joe Biden scored victories from Texas to Massachusetts on Super Tuesday, revitalizing a presidential bid that was teetering on the edge of disaster just days earlier. But his rival Bernie Sanders seized the biggest prize with a win in California that ensured he-and his embrace of democratic socialism-would drive the Democrats' nomination fight for the foreseeable future.

And suddenly, the Democratic Party's presidential field, which featured more than half a dozen candidates a week ago, transformed into a two-man contest.

Biden and Sanders, lifelong politicians with starkly different visions for the future of the United States, were battling for delegates as 14 states and one US territory held a series of high-stakes elections that marked the most significant day of voting in the party's 2020 presidential nomination fight.

It could take weeks-or months-for the party to pick one of them to take on US President Donald Trump in the November presidential election. But the new contours of the fight between Biden and Sanders crystallized as the former vice-president and the three-term Vermont senator spoke to each other from dueling victory speeches delivered from opposite ends of the country on Tuesday night.

"People are talking about a revolution. We started a movement, "Biden said in Los Angeles, knocking one of Sanders' signature lines.

Without citing his surging rival by name, Sanders swiped at Biden from Burlington, Vermont.

"You cannot beat Trump with the same-old, same-old kind of politics," Sanders declared.

Biden drew support from a broad coalition of moderates and conservatives, African Americans and voters older than 45, polls showed.

Sanders' success was built on a base of energized liberals, young people and Latinos. But he was unable to sufficiently widen his appeal to older voters and college graduates who make up a sizable share of voters.

The other two high-profile candidates still in the shrinking Democratic field, New York billionaire Mike Bloomberg and Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren, were teetering on the edge of viability. Warren finished in an embarrassing third place in her home state, and Bloomberg planned to reassess his candidacy on Wednesday after spending more than half a billion dollars to score a single victory-in American Samoa.

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