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Democratic Presidential Primary Tracker

The Quest for 1991


South Carolina

Primary Details Delegate Count Chart via the Associated Press


Last updated: 2/27
Date: Saturday, February 29, 2020
Format: Primary Candidate Delegates
Total Delegates: 54 Bernie Sanders 45

South Carolina Polling


RCP Average 2/17 – 2/25
Pete Buttigieg 25
31.4%

20.6%
Joe Biden 15

15.4%
Elizabeth Warren 8
8.8% 8.0%
3.6% 2.8%
Amy Klobuchar 7

Biden Sanders Steyer Warren Buttigieg Klobuchar Gabbard

Delegate Breakdown Primary Calendar


Type Delegates Alternatives WA
89
VT ME
MT ND 16 24
19 14 91 MA
OR
MN
Congressional District 1 6 0
61
ID
20 SD
75 WI NY
NH
24
26 RI

16 84 274
WY MI 60 CT
14 125
IA PA 128 NJ
NV NE 49 186
36 29 IL OH
UT IN 21
Congressional District 2
136 DE

4 0 29 155 82
CO WV
CA VA
67 KS MO 28 96 MD
415 KY 99
39 68
54
NC 20 DC
TN 110
AZ OK 64 6
Congressional District 3 SC AS
NM 37 AR
67

3 0
34 31 54
MS GA 7 GU
AL
36 52 105
6 MP
TX LA
228 54
51 PR

Congressional District 4 4 0 AK FL 7 VI
15 219
13 DA

Congressional District 5 5 0 HI
24

Congressional District 6 8 0 February Super Tuesday March 4–31 April May June
Contests 4 16 13 11 7 6
Congressional District 7 5 0 Delegates 155 1,357 1,091 854 300 222
Delegates % 3.9% 34.1% 27.4% 21.5% 7.5% 5.6%
Automatic PLEOs n/a
(unpledged) 9 Cumulative % 3.9% 38.0% 65.4% 86.9% 94.4% 100%

Pledged PLEOs 7 n/a Cash on hand 2/1/2020


At-Large Delegates 12 5 Sanders: $16.8 million Warren: $2.2 million
Buttigieg: $6.6 million Bloomberg: More than enough
Total pledged: 54 Total unpledged: 9
Biden: $7.1 million Steyer: It’s there if he wants to
Klobuchar: $2.9 million spend it
Past Winners
2000: Al Gore (92%) and Bill Bradley (2%) 2008: John McCain (33%), Mike Huckabee (30%), Fred Thompson (16%),
2000: George W. Bush (53%), John McCain (42%), Alan Keyes (5%), Mitt Romney (15%), Ron Paul (4%), Rudy Giuliani (2%), and others (0%)
and others (0%) 2012: Barack Obama (unopposed)
2004: John Edwards (45%), John Kerry (30%), Al Sharpton (10%), Wesley 2012: Newt Gingrich (40%), Mitt Romney (28%), Rick Santorum (17%), and
Clark (7%), Howard Dean (5%), and Joe Lieberman (2%) Ron Paul (13%)
2004: GOP Primary cancelled 2016: Hillary Clinton (73%) and Bernie Sanders (26%)
2008: Barack Obama (55%), Hillary Clinton (27%), 2016: Donald Trump (33%), Marco Rubio (22%), Ted Cruz (22%), Jeb Bush
and John Edwards (18%) (8%), John Kasich (8%), and Ben Carson (7%)

“Since it cost a lot to win. And even more to lose. You and me bound to spend some time, wondering what to choose.”
– Robert Hunter

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