- Former Vice President Joe Biden won a tightly contested race against Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont in Tuesday’s Democratic presidential primary in Texas, according to Decision Desk HQ and Insider.
- Polls in Texas closed at 7 p.m. CT (8 p.m. ET). The state has the second-most delegates up for grabs on Super Tuesday.
- We have up-to-the-minute live vote counts and results happening in real time updating automatically.
- Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.
Former Vice President Joe Biden defeated Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont in Tuesday’s tightly contested Democratic presidential primary in Texas.
Polls closed at 7 p.m. CT (8 p.m. ET), with 228 pledged delegates up for grabs, making the state the second-largest contest of Super Tuesday.
Texas primary results:
After a tight race with impressive turnout in the Lone Star State, Biden earned a crucial victory in the second-most-delegate-heavy Super Tuesday state.
Biden clinched the state with 65% of precincts reporting and a roughly 40,000-vote lead on Sanders, who led early in the evening but watched his advantage diminish as Tuesday turned into Wednesday.
Minutes after midnight, Biden saw a surge that cut Sanders' lead to just 450 votes. Less than 30 minutes later, the former vice president had overcome the deficit and then some, pulling away by roughly 30,000 votes with 57% of the state's precincts reporting.
Tweeted too soon -- with 56% of Texas precincts in, NBC News reports 450 votes separate Sanders and Biden -- both now with 28.6% https://t.co/gqU87SC7pN
— Emma Kinery (@EmmaKinery) March 4, 2020
While Sanders and Biden duked it out for the top spot in the state, third and fourth place will also be critical to how big of a prize the state is for the two frontrunners. Both former Mayor Mike Bloomberg of New York City and Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts were polling near the 15% threshold necessary to secure delegates statewide.
As things stand, it looks as if Bloomberg could hold on to statewide viability, while Warren is a long shot to reach the mark. Both, however, could still add to their total in congressional districts.
Turnout in Texas is looking to far surpass that of 2016, when just over 1.4 million votes were cast in the primary - turnout for 2020 had nearly reached that total with just about half of precincts reporting.
Long lines to vote were also reported across the state.
Catch up on live coverage from the primary:
- While you wait all of the Texas results to come in, head over to our main Super Tuesday post to follow all the action.
- Record numbers of people came out to vote - Turnout in Texas has already blown past the 1.4 million votes cast in the 2016 primary race between Sanders and Clinton
- Former Vice President Joe Biden is performing well across the South, with wins in Alabama, Arkansas, North Carolina, Oklahoma, and Virginia.
- Biden also took states outside the South, including Sen. Elizabeth Warren's home state of Massachusetts and Sen. Amy Klobuchar's Minnesota.
- The early results of Super Tuesday have been a disaster for former Mayor Mike Bloomberg of New York City, who spent $250 million on advertising in the states being contested.
- Sixteen primaries and caucuses are happening - here's everything you need to know about the biggest day in the Democratic primary race.
- Some polling places in the Los Angeles area were affected by a power failure Tuesday afternoon, which also affected parts of Los Angeles International Airport.
- Bloomberg told reporters the only path he saw to winning was through a contested convention, in which no candidate wins a majority of delegates and the Democratic nomination becomes up for grabs.
Pre-primary:
- Everything you need to know about Super Tuesday on March 3, the biggest day in the Democratic primaries
- The more Democratic voters have gotten to know Mike Bloomberg, the less they like him
- Amy Klobuchar and Pete Buttigieg endorsing Joe Biden is devastating news for Elizabeth Warren
- 9 mind-blowing facts that show just how much richer Mike Bloomberg is than the other presidential candidates
- 'We made history': Pete Buttigieg drops out of the 2020 presidential race
- Joe Biden crushed the South Carolina primary
LIVE UPDATES: See the full results of Super Tuesday, with live vote counts and breaking news
Everything you need to know about Super Tuesday on March 3, the biggest day in the Democratic primaries
What's at stake in the primary?
Texas has been allocated 228 pledged delegates who will go to the Democratic National Convention in Milwaukee this July to select the nominee, or 5.7% of the total number of delegates, making it the second-biggest prize of Super Tuesday. Of those 228, 79 delegates will be allocated proportionally based on the state-wide vote, while the remaining 149 will be won at the congressional-district level.
Candidates must reach a 15% threshold to win delegates at both the statewide and congressional-district levels.
Who did the polling say is ahead?
Texas seemed poised to be hotly contested on Super Tuesday, and with California's results expected later in the week given the state's large proportion of mail-in votes, the Lone Star State could serve as the biggest momentum-booster available to campaigns on Tuesday night.
According to RealClearPolitics' average of the latest polling data, Sen. Bernie Sanders led the race in Texas with 30.3% support, 6 points ahead of the next-closest candidate in the race, former Vice President Joe Biden, who was at 24.3%.
Former Mayor Michael Bloomberg of New York City and Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts were close to the 15% threshold necessary to take delegates in the state, polling at 16.7% and 14.7%.
According to FiveThirtyEight's election forecast, Biden was the favorite to win the state, with a 56% chance of winning the most votes, followed by Sanders, who had a 42% chance to take the state.
Forecasting Texas was especially tricky given the number of changes that the race took in the days leading up to the primary. After Biden's strong showing in the South Carolina primary, three candidates - Sen. Amy Klobuchar, former Mayor Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, and Tom Steyer - dropped out of the race. Klobuchar and Buttigieg went on to endorse Biden at a rally in Texas on Monday night, which could have swing some of the Texas voters they were projected to take in the state in former vice president's favor.