Clinton favored in South Carolina Democratic primary

AP logo
Saturday, February 27, 2016
Hillary Clinton vies for last minute votes in South Carolina
Hillary Clinton vies for last-minute votes in South Carolina

ORANGEBURG, SC -- Hillary Clinton hoped to win and win big Saturday in South Carolina's Democratic presidential primary, while rival Bernie Sanders, expecting defeat, abandoned the state and looked ahead to next week's Super Tuesday.

For Clinton, an impressive victory Saturday would help wipe away bitter memories of her 2008 primary loss to Barack Obama in the first-in-the-South contest, and establish her as the firm favorite among black voters, a crucial segment of the Democratic electorate.

Sanders scheduled Saturday events in Texas and Minnesota, two of the states voting next week.


WATCH: Bernie Sanders tells Texas students he can win the Lone Star State

Sanders says he can win Texas

Speaking to thousands at a race track near Austin, he said, "On Super Tuesday the state that is going to be voting for the most delegates is the great state of Texas. If all of you come out to vote and you bring your friends and your neighbors and your co-workers, we are going to win here in Texas."

Democrats will vote in 11 states and American Samoa, with 865 delegates up for grabs on Tuesday.

Clinton was campaigning in Alabama, another Super Tuesday state, before returning to Columbia, South Carolina's capital. Polls were to close at 7 p.m.

In Birmingham, she mingled with supporters, shaking hands and posing for selfies.

She greeted backers at Yo' Mama's, a restaurant that pays employees above the federal minimum wage and is supporting an effort by the city's mayor to raise the rate. Clinton has endorsed efforts to raise the federal minimum.

She downed an espresso at a neighboring coffee shop and eyed a strawberry cupcake, telling a staffer, "If you get one, I can have a little taste."

Among early voters in South Carolina, Alicia Newman, a 31-year-old elementary school teacher from Greenville, said she was torn but ultimately went for Clinton.

"I don't think Bernie has a shot in a national election, and this election is too important," she said. "With all the debates, I think Bernie has helped prepare Hillary for November."

But Birgitta Johnson, an assistant professor at the University of South Carolina, said she believes Clinton will "say anything to get votes," while Sanders "deals with structural issues rather than talking points" on education and other issues important to her.

Sanders knew his prospects with South Carolina's heavily black Democratic electorate were grim.

The senator from Vermont, where just about 1 percent of the population is black, lacked Clinton's deep and longstanding connections to the African-American community. He tried to broaden his economic inequality message and touch on issues such as incarceration rates and criminal justice reform, but he struggled to gain traction in South Carolina.

Rather than devote precious time to a state he was all but sure to lose, Sanders spent much of the past week in areas that vote in March.

"We are fighting the fight for the survival of the working class of this country," Sanders said Friday in Hibbing, Minnesota.

In 2008, black voters made up 55 percent of the electorate in South Carolina's Democratic primary, according to exit polls. Clinton lost the state overwhelmingly to Obama in a heated contest where her husband, former President Bill Clinton, was seen by some as questioning the legitimacy of the black presidential contender.

But South Carolina voters appeared ready to forgive.

The former president has been well-received by voters as he's traveled the state campaigning for his wife. Hillary Clinton also received the endorsement of South Carolina Rep. James Clyburn, the influential black lawmaker who stayed neutral in the 2008 primary but was critical of the former president's comments.

Clinton's campaign saw South Carolina as an important jumpstart heading into a busy March. More than half of the delegates up for grabs in the Democratic race are on the table in the next month.

While Sanders has the money to stay in the race deep into the spring, Clinton's campaign sees a chance to build enough of a delegate lead to put the race out of reach.

Clinton has a one-delegate edge over Sanders after her narrow win in Iowa, her sweeping loss in New Hampshire and a five-point victory in Nevada. However, she also has a massive lead over Sanders among superdelegates, the Democratic Party leaders who can the candidate of their choice, regardless of how their states vote.

___

Pace reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Meg Kinnard in Hibbing, Minnesota, and Catherine Lucey in Columbia, South Carolina, contributed to this report.