He easily won this with 63.6 percent of the votes to Joseph Biden’s 36.3 percent. However, that was enough to give Biden the two remaining delegates up for grabs.

As of now the delegate count are as follows (although it might change once voting in the remaining races are counted):
NEXT:
Sunday is the first of two debates with only two sole remaining candidates after Tulsi Gabbard failed to qualify based on the new level of requirements that you needed to win 20 percent of the delegates Tulsi has won two so far, but even if she did a clean sweep last week’s second Super Tuesday round and today’s race it still wouldn’t be enough. The debate airs on CNN tomorrow.
March 17 - four more states are scheduled to hold primaries: Arizona, Illinois, Florida, and Ohio. Three of the four states are in the 100+ delegate range, and Florida will be the biggest prize of the night with a total of 219 pledged delegates awarded. Both candidates are almost halfway to the 1,991 delegate threshold they need to secure their party’s nomination (Biden’s the closest with 890!), and whoever wins might put themselves over the halfway mark. The Coronavirus outbreak has seen Louisiana canceling its planned April, and so far the states haven’t budged.


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