FiveThirtyEight
Julia Azari

Everything everyone else has pointed out has certainly pointed to a good night for Biden, but I’m remembering how long the 2016 primary went on and imagining who hasn’t voted yet.

Aaron Bycoffe

A breakdown of voting methods from North Carolina shows just how much the vote swung toward Biden. In the absentee vote, he’s about 4 points ahead of Sanders; in the Election Day vote, he’s up by 30 points.

Election Day voters in North Carolina really like Biden

Vote share by candidate for absentee voters and Election Day voters in North Carolina, with 57 percent of precincts reporting

Candidate Absentee Election Day Change
Biden 28.3% 53.0% +24.6
Gabbard 0.4 0.6 +0.2
Sanders 24.3 23.3 -1.0
Warren 12.1 8.4 -3.7
Bloomberg 17.7 10.1 -7.6

Source: North Carolina State Board of Elections

Nathaniel Rakich

Biden winning Minnesota would be pretty bad for Sanders, Sarah. Since Biden had only a 1 in 5 (19 percent) chance of winning the state, it would probably qualify as his most surprising win of the night (that or Massachusetts, if he wins there). It would also imply that the endorsements of Biden in recent days have really been working on voters. Until yesterday, Minnesota was expected to vote for Klobuchar, but then she dropped out and endorsed Biden. It would be a pretty remarkable demonstration of Klobuchar’s political muscle if a majority of voters in her state listened to her and switched to Biden.


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