Photo: credit Lorie Shaull (Creative Commons)
It was a rough Super Tuesday for Elizabeth Warren, as the Massachusetts senator saw her chances to become the Democratic standard bearer for President of the United States take a serious blow as she finished back in the pack in each of the 14 states up for grabs including in her home Bay State which was won by a surging Joe Biden.
But Warren would be able to savor the taste of victory at least once Tuesday; over in the Town of Homes as the Cambridge resident racked up nearly a third of all votes cast by Belmont voters in the state’s Presidential Primary held March 3.
The final tally in the Democratic primary from Belmont’s eight precincts:
- Liz Warren: 2,856 (32.2 percent)
- Joe Biden: 2,681 (30.2 percent)
- Bernie Sanders: 1,805 (20.4 percent)
- Mike Bloomberg: 1,043 (11.8 percent)
- Pete Buttigieg: 239 (2.7 percent)
- Amy Klobuchar: 108 (1.2 percent)
- Tulsi Gabbard: 59 (0.7 percent)
- Andrew Yang: 19 (0.2 percent)
- Tom Steyer: 16 (0.2 percent)
See Belmont Town Clerk Ellen Cushman announce the results of the 2020 presidential primary.
And there is good evidence that the suspension of Buttigieg and Klobuchar’s campaigns and their endorsements of Biden over the weekend impacted the outcome of the race. In the week of early voting when 1,571 (about 9 percent of all voters) cast ballots, Biden registered just nine percent of the early votes (130 votes), compared to Warren’s 35.4 percent (509 votes) and behind Sanders, Bloomberg and Buttigieg.
Overall voter participation was impressive with 55 percent of registered voters – 9,622 our of 17,633 – going to the polls, participated in early voting or taking out an absentee ballot. In 2016, 9,969 voters (58 percent) came out with two contested races while in 2008, 63 percent of registered voters participated.
Belmont was an outlier among Bay State municipalities as it was one of 14 cities and towns voting for Warren as Biden won the state after trailing badly in polls just a week previously.
With 89 percent of the state’s precinct reporting as of 1 a.m., Wednesday, March 4, Biden has received 33.8 percent of the total vote with Vt. Senator Bernie Sanders at 26.7 percent with Warren down at 20.9 percent.
Over on the Republican side of the ballot, President Trump took home 587 votes with former Massachusetts Gov. William Weld receiving 105.