Despite the coronavirus causing concern around the country and world, the show is going on for former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), who will face off in a primary debate Sunday night, hosted by CNN and Univision.
06.03.2020 - 22:15 / deadline.com
By Dominic Patten
Senior Editor, Legal & TV Critic
SPOILER ALERT: This post contains details of the results of the Super Tuesday primaries & the conclusion of Avengers: Endgame.
Already the Comeback Kid after his stellar Super Tuesday performance, Joe Biden is now Captain America to rival Senator Bernie Sanders’ Thanos – at least in a side-splitting mash-up Avengers: Endgame video making the rounds this morning.
Take a look at the edited clip below as a downcast Captain America with the face
Despite the coronavirus causing concern around the country and world, the show is going on for former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT), who will face off in a primary debate Sunday night, hosted by CNN and Univision.
It’s understatement to say that things have changed since the candidates gathered for the last Democratic debate, on February 25. Following a shocking Super Tuesday and subsequent state primaries, we’re down to just two major presidential candidates: former Vice President Joe Biden, and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.
Tonight, the two major candidates remaining in the 2020 Democratic primary race will finally debate in hopes of securing their nomination for this year's presidential election. Former Vice President Joe Biden and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders will go head-to-head on-stage from the CNN studio in Washington, D.C., after the event was relocated from the Arizona Federal Theatre in Phoenix as a result of the continued spread of the coronavirus.
Joe Biden is continuing to expand his primary victories in the run to become the Democratic candidate for the 2020 Presidential election.
By Dominic Patten
When the Democratic primary debate process first began in the summer of 2019, there were close to two dozen politicians taking the podiums to make a case for their candidacies. Now, the field has been whittled down to just two front-runners: former Vice President Joe Biden and Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.
There was something very California about it. Former Vice President Joe Biden was in Baldwin Hills delivering his victory speech live on TV after having won 10 out of 14 Super Tuesday states when a protester dashed onstage with a “Let Dairy Die” sign. Dr. Jill Biden protected her husband and a security guard quickly wrangled her away.
Senator Elizabeth Warren is ending her presidential campaign after failing to win any primary contests and placing third in her home state of Massachusetts on Super Tuesday, according to a source familiar with the matter. She planned to inform her staff in a conference call before holding a press conference outside her home in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Hillary Clinton is singing the praises of Joe Biden.
By Ted Johnson, Dominic Patten
Putting your own personal politics aside (we know, it’s tough), it’s hard not to STAN!
Super Tuesday didn’t draw a massive audience to the broadcast networks’ coverage, at least according to preliminary numbers.
After spending more than half a billion dollars and winning an estimated 31 delegates on Super Tuesday, former New York Mayor Mike Bloomberg ended his presidential run in the face of a stinging rejection by Democratic primary voters, saying he no longer has a path to the nomination. Bloomberg released a statement saying he would be leaving the race and endorsing Joe Biden.
Dr. Jill Biden will not be tolerating any malarky.
By Ted Johnson, Dominic Patten
By Anita Bennett
A resurgent Joe Biden scored victories from Texas to Massachusetts on Super Tuesday, revitalizing a presidential bid that was teetering on the edge of disaster just days earlier. But his rival, Bernie Sanders, seized the biggest prize with a win in California that ensured he — and his embrace of democratic socialism — would drive the Democrats' nomination fight for the foreseeable future.