Presumptive Nominees Biden, Trump Score Huge Wins In Tuesday Primaries

biden trump

By Dan McCaleb

President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump, the presumptive presidential nominees for their respective parties, won big again in Tuesday’s primaries.

Early Results

President of the United States (REP)

Choice Polling Place Early Ballot Provisional Ballot Total Percent
Trump, Donald J. 3,286 398,982 0 402,268 76.35%
Haley, Nikki 109 106,008 0 106,117 20.14%

President of the United States (DEM)

Choice Polling Place Early Ballot Provisional Ballot Total Percent
Biden Jr., Joseph R. 367 346,268 0 346,635 89.75%
Williamson, Marianne 38 13,238 0 13,276 3.44%
Phillips, Dean 10 10,933 0 10,943 2.83%

Trump is projected to win Florida, Illinois, Ohio and Kansas, while Biden is projected to win Illinois, Ohio and Kansas. Barring something unforeseen, the two are headed to a rematch of 2020 come November.

Both the Democratic president and Republican former president had already secured enough delegates to win their respective presidential nominations heading into Tuesday, and they will significantly increase those delegate counts after all votes are counted Tuesday night.

Voters in Arizona also held Democratic and Republican primaries Tuesday. Democrats canceled their presidential primary in the Sunshine State, handing all of Florida’s 224 delegates to President Joe Biden.

After victories last week in the states of Georgia, Mississippi, Washington and Hawaii, Trump raised his delegate count to 1,247 before Tuesday, surpassing the 1,215 delegates needed to become the presumptive nominee. The nomination does not become official until the Republican National Convention in July in Milwaukee.

A total of 350 GOP delegates will be awarded after Tuesday’s primaries.

Biden reached 2,107 delegates after last week’s Democratic primaries, surpassing the 1,968 needed to secure the nomination. As with the Republican race, the Democratic nomination does not become official until the Democratic National Convention in August in Chicago.

A total of 379 delegates will be awarded after Tuesday’s Democratic primaries.

4 Comments

  1. I’m looking forward to Arizona’s July 30,2024 actual primary election! And then the general election November 5, 2024!

  2. And they will do everything possible to keep President Trump from taking office. Knowing that his policies will reveal the failures of big government, they fear him.

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