Elizabeth Warren suspends 2020 campaign after Super Tuesday failure – reports
Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren has dropped out of the 2020 Democratic presidential primary, according to several reports. The candidate failed to win even her home state on a disappointing Super Tuesday.
Warren’s inability to win a single state in the 14-primary Super Tuesday contest is likely to have triggered her decision to drop out, which NBC News, AP and others have reported is imminent as of Thursday morning. She has collected a total of 65 delegates so far, but her failure to place within the top two in Massachusetts – or win any other state – cast a long shadow over the rest of the primary.
BREAKING: Sen. Warren is suspending her campaign for president, a source familiar with the matter tells @NBCNews; she will be announcing the decision on a call with her campaign staff at 11 a.m. ET. https://t.co/2RpsPlLMiY
— NBC News (@NBCNews) March 5, 2020
The senator’s departure comes within a week of former South Bend, Indiana mayor Pete Buttigieg, Minnesota senator Amy Klobuchar, and former New York mayor Mike Bloomberg leaving the race and endorsing former vice president Joe Biden. Given that Warren has been accused of acting as a ‘spoiler’ to divert votes from progressive Vermont senator Bernie Sanders, all eyes will certainly be watching to see who she endorses after officially leaving the race.
Should Warren throw her support behind Biden, she’d likely be handing him her delegates as well. Delegates for dropped-out candidates become ‘free agents’ at the party convention, but often join with whoever their candidate endorses.
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