The data sites can give you electoral odds on just about anything but I havent seen them gauge the probability yet that Bernie will be out of this race 48 hours from now. It cant be much worse than 50/50.
Lets start with Mississippi and Missouri:
Missouri Results:
Biden 62
Sanders 32
Warren 4
Gabbard 2Mississippi Results:
Biden 77
Sanders 22
Gabbard 1
N: 348 MO, 340 MS, fielded 3/4 to 3/7 text to web https://t.co/xRhHbK9P98 Data for Progress (@DataProgress) March 9, 2020
Nuff said. Ed already wrote about how Washington state looks surprisingly close, which shouldt be the case if a national Bernie revival is in the works. The big prize is Michigan, though, since its the first contest in a Rust Belt state which Dems need to flip to beat Trump. Its also a state that Sanders won in 2016 despite poll after poll predicting an easy Clinton victory in the primary there. In hindsight that was a hint that Hillary would underperform in the states that formed the Democrats blue wall. If Biden routs Bernie there tomorrow night, the party will be ecstatic at the evidence that their new nominee will fare much better in November than Clinton did.
New Michigan numbers from the Detroit Free Press:
Sanders beat Clinton by a point and a half there four years ago. Could it be that the DFP poll is fluky, an outlier? Sure! But the other poll out of Michigan today looks a lot like it:
Mitchell Research Michigan Democratic Primary Poll:
Biden 54
Sanders 33Poll conducted March 8th.
If Biden wins in Michigan, it's probably over. If he wins by double digits, there's no coming back for Sanders barring something insane by 2020 standards.
Josh Jordan (@NumbersMuncher) March 9, 2020
But wait. Didnt I just say that the polls in 2016 predicted an easy Clinton win in Michigan? Why should we trust them to accurately gauge Bernies strength there now if they couldnt do it before? The answer is demographics. The key bloc that the polls seem to have missed four years ago was working-class whites, a group with which Hillary struggled in MI in the primary and then, fatefully, again in the general election. Biden isnt struggling with them.
Is it possible there's a polling miss in Michigan? Of course. Of course. But Biden just won white non-college voters by 8 in non-Vermont northern states on Super Tuesday. Sanders won em by 15 in 2016. The dynamic is very different.
(((Harry Enten))) (@ForecasterEnten) March 9, 2020
Whats more, suburban voters may be more of a force in Michigan now. And suburbanites strongly prefer Joe to Bernie:
Angela Vasquez-Giroux, a Democratic operative who worked on Attorney General Dana Nessels winning 2018 campaign, said the constituency that could suffocate Sanderspotentially turning a defeat into a blowoutis suburban women. They were critical to the victories of two freshman Democratic congresswoman, Elissa Slotkin and Haley Stevens, who flipped red districts in 2018. They also powered the campaign of Governor Gretchen Whitmer, who, it happens, defeated a high-profile Sanders supporter, Abdul El-Sayed, by 22 points in the 2018 primary. (Whitmer, Slotkin and Stevens all endorsed Biden last week.)
Want more numbers? Okay. CNN has a national poll out today showing Biden up 52/36. He leads by 20 among whites and by 10 among nonwhites, thanks to Bernies relative strength with Latino voters. But even that strength might be overstated: Heres the latest poll out of Arizona, a state with a large Latino minority thats set to vote on March 17.
Joe Biden holds a large lead over Bernie Sanders in the state as Democratic voters consolidate around the former vice president, crushing the Vermont senator by nearly 30 percentage points
Nearly one-half of likely voters (45 percent) prefer Biden with just 17 percent supporting Sanders.
This would be rough but survivable for Sanders if the map were suddenly about to shift to a series of states that look favorable to him, giving him a chance to chip away at Bidens delegate lead. But the truth is the opposite. You can scroll through FiveThirtyEights chart on the relative likelihood of Biden/Sanders victories on the rest of the calendar, bearing in mind that a series of big wins for Joe tomorrow and next week will only tilt the odds further in his favor in later states as momentum there builds.
And even if Sanders does pull the upset in Michigan tomorrow
You're gonna hear a lot over the next 24 hours that a win in Michigan can reboot Sanders's campaign and put him at even odds to win the nomination. I don't think that's remotely true. Even if you swing the post-MI states to Sanders by 10pts, Biden is still favored to win the nom.
G. Elliott Morris (@gelliottmorris) March 9, 2020
Under normal circumstances I think Bernie might put Biden through his paces and force him to keep winning primaries to clinch the nomination. He wont want to quit on his revolution even after Bidens delegate lead becomes prohibitive. But these arent normal circumstances, for two reasons. One: The party badly wants to defeat Trump and that means ending a pointless and divisive primary as soon as possible in order to let the internecine wounds heal before November. Two: Continuing to hold rallies and elections when the outcome of the race is no longer in doubt would be irresponsible given the risk that doing so will accelerate the spread of coronavirus. Last night I wrote that Washington state might be Bernies best chance to win tomorrow given how tight the polls are and the likelihood that turnout will be down due to COVID-19. But as I think more about it, that seems wrong. With Democrats now presented with a golden opportunity to end the national primary and unite as the economy slides and the disease spreads, fencesitters might decide to tilt towards Joe for that reason alone.
And so, if Biden sweeps, Bernie might call it a day on Wednesday. Which, possibly, will embolden the DNC and state parties to cancel the upcoming primaries and let Biden scale his schedule of campaign events way back to keep people from congregating. No worse than 50/50, as I say.