Saturday 2 March 2024

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US 2024 Election: What is Super Tuesday and how does today's voting work?

By RuzekiShadow News 

Published on March 2, 2024 

Updated on Mar. 5 

What is Super Tuesday? 

Super Tuesday, on March 5, 2024, is when the largest number of states in the U.S. will be holding presidential primaries or caucuses. 

Over a third of all the available delegates for both the Republican and Democratic nominations are at stake on Super Tuesday. 

In 2024, President Joe Biden is the leading contender for the Democratic nomination, and he has no substantial primary challenge, while former President Donald Trump is leading former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley in the Republican nomination race. 

How does Super Tuesday work? 

Registered voters in the states holding presidential nominating contests will go to the polls and vote on March 5, 2024.  

Fifteen states are holding the GOP contests on Super Tuesday. Alabama, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont and Virginia are holding primaries. Two states, Alaska and Utah, are holding caucuses. 

Eleven of the 15 states are holding GOP primaries that are open to more than just registered Republican. 

The same states, except Alaska, are also holding Democratic primaries, and American Samoa, a U.S. territory, will also be holding Democratic caucuses. 

The Iowa Democratic caucuses took place in January entirely by mail in order to comply with the Democratic National Committee's primary calendar, but the results are to be released Tuesday. 

Why is it called Super Tuesday?

It's called Super Tuesday because more delegates are at stake on March 5 than on any other single date during the primary campaign. 

There are 865 Republican delegates that will be allocated, and the winner of the GOP presidential nomination must collect 1,215 delegates. 

On Tuesday, Democratic primaries will allocate a total of 1,420 delegates, and 1,968 delegates are needed to win the Democratic nomination. 

Going into Super Tuesday, here's where the candidates stand. 

Republican nominees (Need 1,215 to win)
Donald Trump: 276 delegates 
Nikki Haley: 43 delegates
Ron DeSantis(withdrew): 9 delegates 

Democratic nominees (Need 1,968 to win)
Joe Biden: 209 delegates 
Uncommitted: 2 delegates 
Philips: 0 delegates 

What happens after Super Tuesday?

The campaign continues, with the remaining states continuing to hold primaries over the next several months. 

 The final primaries of the campaign will be held on June 4, when Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico and South Dakota all hold Republican and Democratic primaries, and Washington, D.C., holds a Democratic primary. 

Is Super Tuesday a holiday?

No, Super Tuesday is not a holiday. But in order to make it more convenient for voters, several of the Super Tuesday states offered mail or early voting before their primaries. 

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