Democrats Remain United Against President Trump Following Super Tuesday Outcome

By Dan Murphy and Seth Daniel

While some local Democratic leaders were shocked by the outcome of Super Tuesday, especially with Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s third-place finish in her home state, they agree that the top priority now is simply defeating Presidential Donald Trump in November.

     According to the City of Boston’s unofficial citywide election results, former Vice President Joe Biden narrowly edged out Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, with 30.11 percent (43,210 votes) and 30.07 percent of the ballot (43,154 votes), respectively. Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth trailed with 27.31 percent of the ballot (39,188 votes) while former New York City Mayor finished fourth with 8.28 percent, or 11,878 votes.

     In Mission Hill, however, Sanders won in a route – winning seven of the neighborhood’s nine precincts. Warren prevailed in one precinct, 10-9, which is shared with parts of Jamaica Plain. Meanwhile, Biden won a single precinct, 10-1, at the Mission Main Community Center – but only by one vote over Sanders.

     Overall, Sanders won the neighborhood with 1,894 votes, and Warren came in second with 1,438 votes. Biden finished well behind them in Mission Hill with 998 votes. Bloomberg finished with 247 votes on the Hill.

     It was a much closer race between Biden and Sanders citywide, however. Biden used his strength in traditional blue collar neighborhoods like Charlestown and within the black community to gain votes citywide. He also did very well in the South End, Back Bay and Beacon Hill – where Warren was expected to shine.

     Meanwhile, like Mission Hill, the Fenway was firmly Sanders territory.

     Many believed that the switch to Biden came at the last minute following his win in South Carolina last weekend, or maybe even later than that. City Councilor Kenzie Bok, who supported Warren, said she could sense the shift.

     “Talking to Boston voters, what I saw was a huge amount of energy aimed at beating Donald Trump, leading to really high turnout,” City Councilor Kenzie Bok wrote. “Many of those voters shifted to supporting Biden in the last 48 hours, which I heard firsthand as I canvassed for Warren. A sense of momentum for Biden through the national-level media had an enormous impact; in a fluid race, his surge came at exactly the right time for him and the wrong time for Warren, swamping even our much stronger ground operation.”

     While admittedly disappointed by the election results for Sen. Warren, whom she described as the best candidate to defeat Trump, Councilor Bok added,  “But I was encouraged by the collective commitment to defeating Trump, and the enthusiastic support for our grassroots progressive Ward 5 Democratic Committee at the bottom of the ballot.”

     Massachusetts Democratic Party Chair Gus Bickford pointed to the voter turnout on Super Tuesday across all 14 participating states as a clear indication that “Democrats are energized and are eager to turn the page on the dark presidency of Donald Trump.”

     Bickford added, “An incredible number of voters cast ballots in this Democratic primary for President because while income inequality is growing, while climate change is destroying our planet, and while racial inequities are persisting, the policies of Donald Trump have only made these and other crises worse. [Super Tuesday] marks the beginning of the reckoning for Donald Trump.”

     Across the aisle, however, Brad Parscale, Trump 2020 campaign manager, asserted that the election results suggest a sense of indecisiveness on the part of Democratic voters.

     “The results only increase the likelihood that no candidate will have enough delegates for a first ballot victory at their convention, which only means more chaos,” Parscale said in an official statement. “The media is hyperventilating about Joe Biden, but everyone should remember that he is just as terrible a candidate right now as he was a few days ago. At the same time, establishment Democrats have ganged up to try to deny Bernie Sanders the nomination, which is causing even more mayhem. Even if Bernie is not on November’s ballot, his big government socialist ideas will be because they have become mainstream in today’s Democrat Party. President Trump will wipe the floor with whatever Democrat is unlucky enough to be the nominee.”

     On the Republican side, President Donald Trump easily topped the Boston Republican ballot with 6,469 votes (81.8 percent). Former Gov. William Weld garnered 982 votes (12.4 percent).             The Libertarian Party nomination went to Jacob George Hornberger with 34 votes (12.5 percent). The Green Party in Boston chose Dario Hunter with 26 votes (20.63 percent).

The Voting for Mission Hill Ward 10 Precincts 1-9

Overall Mission Hill winner:

 Bernie Sanders – 1,894

•Joe Biden – 998

•Bernie Sanders – 1,894

•Elizabeth Warren – 1,438

•Michael Bloomberg – 247

10-1 (Mission Main

Community Center)

•Joe Biden – 104

•Bernie Sanders – 103

•Elizabeth Warren – 71

•Michael Bloomberg – 32

10-2 (Mission Main

Community Center)

•Joe Biden – 61

•Bernie Sanders – 99

•Elizabeth Warren – 87

•Michael Bloomberg – 20

10-3 (Tobin Municipal Building)

•Joe Biden – 66

•Bernie Sanders – 120

•Elizabeth Warren – 70

•Michael Bloomberg – 6

10-4 (Parks Community Building)

•Joe Biden – 103

•Bernie Sanders – 247

•Elizabeth Warren – 128

•Michael Bloomberg – 30

10-5 (Tobin Municipal Building)

•Joe Biden – 73

•Bernie Sanders – 208

•Elizabeth Warren – 116

•Michael Bloomberg – 16

10-6 (Tobin Municipal Building)

•Joe Biden – 85

•Bernie Sanders – 177

•Elizabeth Warren – 123

•Michael Bloomberg – 17

10-7 (Julia Martin House)

•Joe Biden – 125

•Bernie Sanders – 249

•Elizabeth Warren – 146

•Michael Bloomberg – 41

10-8 (Back of the Hill Apts.)

•Joe Biden – 185

•Bernie Sanders – 311

•Elizabeth Warren – 296

•Michael Bloomberg – 29

10-9 (Curley K-8 in JP)

•Joe Biden – 196

•Bernie Sanders – 380

•Elizabeth Warren – 401

•Michael Bloomberg – 56

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