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Clinton clinches South Carolina as Sanders looks to Super Tuesday – campaign live Clinton clinches South Carolina as Sanders looks to Super Tuesday – campaign live
(35 minutes later)
3.34am GMT
03:34
Dan Roberts
In Rochester, Minnesota, Bernie Sanders came on stage to the sound of Neil Young, and then didn’t mention South Carolina at all…
Bernie Sanders spent most of Saturday acting as if South Carolina didn’t exist. His first public appearance after news of his thumping loss to Hillary Clinton was no different.
Speaking to 2,600 supporters in Rochester, Minnesota, he came across a little more subdued than the fiery orator we had seen in Texas in the afternoon. But it had been a long day in more ways than one.
In a none-too-subtle sign that he plans to fight hard for a dozen more states on Super Tuesday, Sanders came on stage to the sound of Neil Young singing: “Keep on rockin’ in the free world.”
Perhaps, I was imagining it, but the only slight change to the standard stump speech that followed was a fraction more reticence when it came to bashing his Democratic opponent in public.
“Let me take a brief moment to outline some of the differences between ours and Secretary Clinton’s campaign,” he told the Rochester crowd, almost apologetically, before reeling off a truncated version of his standard attacks on her Wall Street links.
There is a palpable sense in the campaign now that even if it carries on through to this summer’s convention, Clinton is likely to be the nominee that all Democrats rely on to beat Donald Trump come November.
While some candidates might be expected to go more negative after a night like tonight, this progressive champion will not want to be remembered as the man who guided Trump toward the chinks in Clinton’s armour.
3.25am GMT
03:25
John Stoehr
Listening to Bernie Sanders’ speech in Minnesota, John Stoehr finds that Hillary Clinton has adopted many of his themes – and stolen the wind from his sails.
Political insurgents are most powerful when the establishment resists the insurgency. If Hillary Clinton had been more resistant to Bernie Sanders’ populist appeal, if she had been less flexible, Sanders might be better positioned today than he is. But she wasn’t.
Months before primary season began, Clinton was slowly adopting many of Sanders’ positions – even his anti-Wall Street stance. At the same time, she has made it clear what the differences between them are. This has been most obvious with her new message of America not being a single-issue country.
All of this means Sanders message of economic justice – as inspiring and uplifting as it may be – is sounding even narrower than it already was. As the primaries come and go, Clinton’s message is likely to sound broader, more varied and richer. Sanders’ message isn’t.
3.12am GMT
03:12
Lucia Graves
Lucia Graves writes from Columbia, South Carolina, on a key victory for the Clinton campaign…
Hillary Clinton led with a promise to help poor minority children in the so-called “corridor of shame”, a stretch of dilapidated schools along South Carolina’s I-95 corridor. That was something President Obama made a benchmark of is 2008 campaign when he beat her in 44 of the state’s 46 counties.
Clinton is not making that mistake again – now it’s she who’s at the forefront of the issue. “This victory tonight is for the parents and teachers in South Carolina, they showed me crumbling classrooms”, Clinton said to cheers. And she promised the federal government would work with state actors to give children the “education they deserve”.
Here’s Lucia’s report on that issue.
And here’s more from tonight’s piece.
She also embraced her identity as a fighter, a role that she can inhabit with tremendous authenticity. “Let’s break down the barriers that sideline people in our country, especially women”, she said to a roaring crowd. “Don’t you think it’s time we had equal pay for equal work?”
You can read the full piece here:
Related: Hillary Clinton may have hit her stride — but don't write Sanders off just yet | Lucia Graves
3.04am GMT
03:04
100% of precincts in South Carolina have reported
…and the final vote tallies are:
Clinton: 271,367Sanders: 95,840
In any language, or any state, that is a decisive win for Clinton.
Related: South Carolina Democratic primary: track the votes live, county-by-county
2.57am GMT2.57am GMT
02:5702:57
Bernie Sanders speaksBernie Sanders speaks
“What this campaign is about is not just electing a president,” he begins. “It is about transforming America, it is about thinking big…”“What this campaign is about is not just electing a president,” he begins. “It is about transforming America, it is about thinking big…”
Is this something more pointed after South Carolina?Is this something more pointed after South Carolina?
Not really. He’s on to inequality. It’s stump, and the crowd like it, and it’s aimed at Republicans with “short-term amnesia” about what America was like when George W Bush left office, eight years ago.Not really. He’s on to inequality. It’s stump, and the crowd like it, and it’s aimed at Republicans with “short-term amnesia” about what America was like when George W Bush left office, eight years ago.
Sanders points out the huge crowds he’s had: 10,000 in Austin and 8,000 in Dallas, he says of today. No mention of South Carolina yet, though he is moving on to “unpleasant truths”. Chief among these, however, is America’s corrupt campaign finance system, which is run by an oligarchy, a “handful of billionaires buying elections”. He then runs through his campaign standpoints, including protecting voting rights and securing a raise in the minimum wage to $15 an hour, and student debt, and battling sexism and racism.Sanders points out the huge crowds he’s had: 10,000 in Austin and 8,000 in Dallas, he says of today. No mention of South Carolina yet, though he is moving on to “unpleasant truths”. Chief among these, however, is America’s corrupt campaign finance system, which is run by an oligarchy, a “handful of billionaires buying elections”. He then runs through his campaign standpoints, including protecting voting rights and securing a raise in the minimum wage to $15 an hour, and student debt, and battling sexism and racism.
But it does feel a bit like a fire that has failed to light; a bit like a rock band going through its greatest hits, to dutiful cheers and in the expected order.But it does feel a bit like a fire that has failed to light; a bit like a rock band going through its greatest hits, to dutiful cheers and in the expected order.
He gets to the differences between his campaign and that of Secretary Clinton, which seem very stark this evening. The first is that he does not have a Super Pac. This, of course, we knew. And after a bit of call and response on average donation figures to his campaign – it’s $27 – he says: “With such a brilliant audience here, there is no way we’re going to lose Minnesota.”He gets to the differences between his campaign and that of Secretary Clinton, which seem very stark this evening. The first is that he does not have a Super Pac. This, of course, we knew. And after a bit of call and response on average donation figures to his campaign – it’s $27 – he says: “With such a brilliant audience here, there is no way we’re going to lose Minnesota.”
2.32am GMT2.32am GMT
02:3202:32
Bernie Sanders speaks to supporters in Rochester, MinnesotaBernie Sanders speaks to supporters in Rochester, Minnesota
…and the livestream is here……and the livestream is here…
2.22am GMT2.22am GMT
02:2202:22
John StoehrJohn Stoehr
Hillary Clinton just enjoyed an invigorating victory, so you’d think her speech would have electricity and passion. John Stoehr, however, feels that it fell flat in a few places – even though she said all the right things. Do you agree?Hillary Clinton just enjoyed an invigorating victory, so you’d think her speech would have electricity and passion. John Stoehr, however, feels that it fell flat in a few places – even though she said all the right things. Do you agree?
No one ever said Hillary Clinton was an inspiring speaker. She wasn’t tonight, despite her huge success.No one ever said Hillary Clinton was an inspiring speaker. She wasn’t tonight, despite her huge success.
At one point, she read out the names of black Americans who died at the hands of police or otherwise in a system badly in need of reform. It was a moment that would otherwise be moving and powerful – but it ended up kind of flat. In fairness, Barack Obama is a hard act to follow.At one point, she read out the names of black Americans who died at the hands of police or otherwise in a system badly in need of reform. It was a moment that would otherwise be moving and powerful – but it ended up kind of flat. In fairness, Barack Obama is a hard act to follow.
She’s saying all the right things. To Democrats, anyway. And she’s building, rhetorically, on Obama’s repertoire.She’s saying all the right things. To Democrats, anyway. And she’s building, rhetorically, on Obama’s repertoire.
“Breaking down the barriers”. “America’s best years are ahead”. “America has always been great”.“Breaking down the barriers”. “America’s best years are ahead”. “America has always been great”.
These are things Obama might say. And they still ring true today. And this new motif of the US not being a single-issue country: it’s a very smart answer to Bernie Sanders. She’s very smartly building a big tent.These are things Obama might say. And they still ring true today. And this new motif of the US not being a single-issue country: it’s a very smart answer to Bernie Sanders. She’s very smartly building a big tent.
But more subtly, in saying that we can stand together to break down barriers, she is saying that Democrats can’t do much if they are divided. No political party has ever won the presidency if the party was divided.But more subtly, in saying that we can stand together to break down barriers, she is saying that Democrats can’t do much if they are divided. No political party has ever won the presidency if the party was divided.
In winning South Carolina in a landslide, Clinton is poised to remind Democrats of that.In winning South Carolina in a landslide, Clinton is poised to remind Democrats of that.
You may love Bernie Sanders. You may love his politics. But the battle ahead needs more than love.You may love Bernie Sanders. You may love his politics. But the battle ahead needs more than love.
2.16am GMT2.16am GMT
02:1602:16
Bernie speaks. Briefly.Bernie speaks. Briefly.
Dan RobertsDan Roberts
Dan reports again from Air Sanders, or the steps off it, where Bernie Sanders delivered only a terse statement before disappearing into the Minnesota night:Dan reports again from Air Sanders, or the steps off it, where Bernie Sanders delivered only a terse statement before disappearing into the Minnesota night:
In politics on a given night sometimes you win sometimes you lose, tonight we lost. I congratulate Secretary Clinton on her very strong victory. On Tuesday over 800 delegates are at stake and we intend to win many, many of them.In politics on a given night sometimes you win sometimes you lose, tonight we lost. I congratulate Secretary Clinton on her very strong victory. On Tuesday over 800 delegates are at stake and we intend to win many, many of them.
1.55am GMT1.55am GMT
01:5501:55
Dan RobertsDan Roberts
Meanwhile, Dan Roberts reports from the Sanders campaign plane, which has reached Minnesota…Meanwhile, Dan Roberts reports from the Sanders campaign plane, which has reached Minnesota…
Coming into land now. Really surreal silence from the front of the plane all flight – despite frantic waving from the press seats. When we heard the margin (double New Hampshire) a series of ‘wows’ at the back of the plane. Crickets up front. Going to see if we can ambush him on the tarmac when we land. Think they really don’t know what to say about it.Coming into land now. Really surreal silence from the front of the plane all flight – despite frantic waving from the press seats. When we heard the margin (double New Hampshire) a series of ‘wows’ at the back of the plane. Crickets up front. Going to see if we can ambush him on the tarmac when we land. Think they really don’t know what to say about it.
UpdatedUpdated
at 2.23am GMTat 2.23am GMT
1.53am GMT1.53am GMT
01:5301:53
Ted Cruz releases his tax returnsTed Cruz releases his tax returns
The Texas senator has released nine years’ worth, not quite when he said he would – that was Friday – but still not that long after Marco Rubio released his and way before Donald Trump releases his, presuming he ever will.The Texas senator has released nine years’ worth, not quite when he said he would – that was Friday – but still not that long after Marco Rubio released his and way before Donald Trump releases his, presuming he ever will.
A statement from The Cruzer – as I like to call him – reads thus:A statement from The Cruzer – as I like to call him – reads thus:
It’s time for Trump to come clean and release his tax returns. If he’s not been completely honest or has supported the most radical left-wing groups in America, voters deserve to know.It’s time for Trump to come clean and release his tax returns. If he’s not been completely honest or has supported the most radical left-wing groups in America, voters deserve to know.
Analysis of said returns no doubt on the way by the bucketload.Analysis of said returns no doubt on the way by the bucketload.
I, meanwhile, wonder what “radical left-wing groups” Cruz could be referring to. Maybe it’s the Woodcraft Folk. I hope it’s the Woodcraft Folk. For those who don’t know, the Woodcraft Folk is basically leftwing Boy Scouts, only for boys and girls. It also sprang out of a pacifist group called the Kindred of the Kibbo Kift, or KKK, which is both awkward and by-the-by. I was a member, anyway.I, meanwhile, wonder what “radical left-wing groups” Cruz could be referring to. Maybe it’s the Woodcraft Folk. I hope it’s the Woodcraft Folk. For those who don’t know, the Woodcraft Folk is basically leftwing Boy Scouts, only for boys and girls. It also sprang out of a pacifist group called the Kindred of the Kibbo Kift, or KKK, which is both awkward and by-the-by. I was a member, anyway.
Related: The other KKK: how the Kindred of the Kibbo Kift tried to craft a new worldRelated: The other KKK: how the Kindred of the Kibbo Kift tried to craft a new world
1.39am GMT1.39am GMT
01:3901:39
John StoehrJohn Stoehr
Momentum can be an elusive thing. John Stoehr wonders: does Hillary Clinton finally have it?Momentum can be an elusive thing. John Stoehr wonders: does Hillary Clinton finally have it?
The margin of victory for Hillary Clinton in South Carolina – the spread right now is more than 50 points – makes it look like she has all the momentum in the Democratic primary. But she already had Big Mo, even as she took a loss in New Hampshire.The margin of victory for Hillary Clinton in South Carolina – the spread right now is more than 50 points – makes it look like she has all the momentum in the Democratic primary. But she already had Big Mo, even as she took a loss in New Hampshire.
Even as Bernie Sanders was winning there, he was losing. Gallup released a new national poll on Friday showing that Clinton’s favorability climbed during the New Hampshire primary. She now has a 55% favoribility rating. That’s a 10-point jump over the last Gallup poll, in January.Even as Bernie Sanders was winning there, he was losing. Gallup released a new national poll on Friday showing that Clinton’s favorability climbed during the New Hampshire primary. She now has a 55% favoribility rating. That’s a 10-point jump over the last Gallup poll, in January.
What’s going on? Most likely Clinton’s favoribility was suffering as some Democrats considered Sanders. But as the primary season has heated up, Democrats have looked past the Vermont senator and toward the general election. And with that, Clinton’s favorables have risen.What’s going on? Most likely Clinton’s favoribility was suffering as some Democrats considered Sanders. But as the primary season has heated up, Democrats have looked past the Vermont senator and toward the general election. And with that, Clinton’s favorables have risen.
Expect that to increase, not too much but a little more, as the primary season comes to a head. And as Clinton consolidates her hold on the nomination, the argument that Sanders is the better opponent to Donald Trump will appear less and less prudent.Expect that to increase, not too much but a little more, as the primary season comes to a head. And as Clinton consolidates her hold on the nomination, the argument that Sanders is the better opponent to Donald Trump will appear less and less prudent.
UpdatedUpdated
at 1.43am GMTat 1.43am GMT
1.35am GMT1.35am GMT
01:3501:35
Megan CarpentierMegan Carpentier
Megan Carpentier is in Minnesota, at a Hillary Clinton phone bank in St Paul…Megan Carpentier is in Minnesota, at a Hillary Clinton phone bank in St Paul…
Crowded in a conference room in the AFSME building in South St Paul, Megan writes, a group of Clinton phone bankers found themselves with some time on their hands after the AP called South Carolina for Hillary Clinton shortly after 6pm local time.Crowded in a conference room in the AFSME building in South St Paul, Megan writes, a group of Clinton phone bankers found themselves with some time on their hands after the AP called South Carolina for Hillary Clinton shortly after 6pm local time.
So they spent it grilling fellow phone-banker Jason Collins, a former Minnesota Timberwolves player who became the first NBA player to come out as gay, on everything from his shoe size (17) to how he survives commercial airline travel (politely asking fellow travelers not to recline their seats).So they spent it grilling fellow phone-banker Jason Collins, a former Minnesota Timberwolves player who became the first NBA player to come out as gay, on everything from his shoe size (17) to how he survives commercial airline travel (politely asking fellow travelers not to recline their seats).
Collins, who attended Stanford University with Chelsea Clinton, had been stumping for her in several states and spent the day door-knocking and phone-banking for the candidate in Minnesota before heading for a flight home.Collins, who attended Stanford University with Chelsea Clinton, had been stumping for her in several states and spent the day door-knocking and phone-banking for the candidate in Minnesota before heading for a flight home.
Related: NBA center Jason Collins becomes first openly gay player in major US sportsRelated: NBA center Jason Collins becomes first openly gay player in major US sports
Meanwhile, with no nail-biting to do, the assembled volunteers for Clinton (who were not necessarily affiliated with the union), cracked some Diet Cokes, peeled a few clementines and watched Clinton’s victory speech on an old IBM laptop, cheering her line that “tomorrow this campaign goes national” and nodding along with their favorite policy positions.Meanwhile, with no nail-biting to do, the assembled volunteers for Clinton (who were not necessarily affiliated with the union), cracked some Diet Cokes, peeled a few clementines and watched Clinton’s victory speech on an old IBM laptop, cheering her line that “tomorrow this campaign goes national” and nodding along with their favorite policy positions.
But when she said “We don’t need to make America great again, America has never stopped being great” – a references to Donald Trump’s slogan – they all hollered.But when she said “We don’t need to make America great again, America has never stopped being great” – a references to Donald Trump’s slogan – they all hollered.
And then they walked into the next room, sat down and continued the work of “getting out the caucus” by calling their fellow Minnesotans.And then they walked into the next room, sat down and continued the work of “getting out the caucus” by calling their fellow Minnesotans.
(After, of course, discussing how much they loved her speech.)(After, of course, discussing how much they loved her speech.)
UpdatedUpdated
at 1.35am GMTat 1.35am GMT
1.31am GMT
01:31
Ben Jacobs
Ben Jacobs, ever-intrepid political reporter, has been with Ben Carson in Houston. In the rather sweary maelstrom of the Republican campaign, the mild-mannered and now consistently low-polling former neurosurgeon is still trying to maintain his dignity. It isn’t proving very easy. Ben writes:
In a campaign event at the Texas Medical Center in Houston, Ben Carson used some of his strongest language yet about the frontrunner for the Republican nomination, albeit while still taking pains to avoid mentioning Donald Trump by name.
In a question and answer session, a voter asked Carson about “a systematic failure in the Republican Party … where Donald Trump is buying votes”.
Carson’s response: “‘Right now people are making decisions based on anger and fear and anyone who knows human nature can tell you that when you make decisions based on anger and fear they tend to be bad decisions.”
He continued: “The real question is are American people going to awaken and recognize what’s going on. I believe the answer to that yes. I do not believe that we are quite that dense … if we were to continue in the vein we are going in right now, yes we would make very very bad mistake.”
In a brief interview with the Guardian, Carson was careful not to mention Trump by name. He said he had meant “dense enough to base our decisions on fear and anger as opposed to evidence and fact”.
Carson also told the Guardian he felt confident about his prospects in the Super Tuesday primaries on 1 March. He said his campaign would do “as good as possible. I am looking forward to doing much better than recent polling”.
Carson is polling in fifth among the five remaining candidates for the Republican nomination. He is also struggling in polls of the 12 states holding Republican primaries on Super Tuesday.
1.20am GMT
01:20
What Donald Trump is up to tonight…
Adam Gabbatt
The Republican race is, of course, continuing, and Adam Gabbatt is with the Republican frontrunner in Memphis, Tennessee for a rally in an aircraft hangar.
“Trump’s plane taxied past the open hangar to huge cheers from the crowd,” Adam writes. “Dramatic music played as the door opened and Trump emerged with New Jersey governor Chris Christie.”
Here’s what happened earlier in the day at a similar event, after Christie’s introductory speech. It’s a bit awkward.
Undaunted, Adam continues:
The pair walked straight to a Trump-branded podium. After a brief introduction from Christie – most of it spent laying into Marco Rubio – Trump took the podium and launched into his now-familiar address.
He ticked off: Rubio’s alleged excess sweating, Mexico building a wall, his business being very successful, politicians being liars, China, and companies being forced to build things in America
At one point Trump, who is projected to win in Tennessee on Super Tuesday, talked about how he is portrayed as pugnacious and how his supporters are often seen as disenfranchised and furious.
“I’m not an angry person,” he said. “And you’re not angry people.”
In the crowd, the evidence suggested otherwise. A man holding up a sign which said “Make America hate again” was quickly rounded on.
As the crowd chanted “Trump, Trump”, a red-faced man snatched the sign and ripped it in half. The protester was ejected, with an accomplice.
An angry man just ripped up this protester's sign at Trump's event https://t.co/1WPyslXdnS
Before the event there had been the feeling of a funfair or a music festival. There were stalls selling Trump-themed tat, a line of portable toilets and a burger van offering Trump burgers: “100% American beef, 100% American cheese”.
Also available were “Bernie Sanders pork nachos” and a “Ted Cruz Canadian bacon burger”. Under the “Canadian burger” text was an admission: “We lied about the Canadian bacon.”
1.02am GMT
01:02
Hillary Clinton speaks in Columbia
And here she goes. She starts off, rather hoarse, with thanks and tells the crowd they have sent a message to America.
“When we stand together there is no barrier too big to break,” she says, before congratulating Bernie Sanders. “Tomorrow, this campaign goes national,” she adds, to cheers. “We’re not taking anything and anyone for granted.”
She calls Jim Clyburn, who joined her on the campaign trail, South Carolina’s champion in Congress and promises to work with him to carry on the work of President Obama. There’s also a shout-out for small donors…
“Today, grassroots donors are powering our campaign,” she says. This is the candidate who has taken shot after shot about her ties to Wall Street, remember, from an opponent and supporters of that opponent who have built their challenge on such small donations.
This victory is for parents and teachers, Clinton says, who in rural South Carolina showed her “crumbling classrooms and communities too long neglected”. It’s also for an entrepreneur, for women and people of colour and “particularly young people”. It’s a tick list of Democratic demographics, of course, but also of groups which have hitherto fuelled the Sanders insurgency.
And here’s a section directed across the divide, against Donald Trump: “We don’t need to make America again. America’s never stopped being great. But we do need to make America whole again. Instead of building walls we need to be breaking barriers.”
Clinton then moves to race.
“We have to face the reality of systemic racism,” she says, name-checking Dr King, Rosa Parks and John Lewis and calling for reform to the criminal justice system. She pays tribute to “five mothers brought together by tragedy”, the five mothers of black men and women who died at the hands of police officers or in cases with racial overtones who have campaigned with her in the state, and lists them all by name, and the circumstances of their children’s deaths.
Related: Women who lost children to violence form powerful Hillary Clinton coalition
And she talks about Flint, Michigan, the city subject to a lead-poisoning crisis in its drinking water after a government decision to cut costs.
“We know there are many other Flints out there,” she says, to a crowd now in a respectful silence.
She also appeals for “more love and kindness in America”. And that leads to a crescendo of rhetoric, and applause, and a wrap.
Updated
at 1.51am GMT
1.00am GMT
01:00
Lucia Graves
Lucia Graves is also in Columbia. She writes:
Forty minutes after the race was called for Clinton, Congressman Jim Clyburn took the stage at the University of South Carolina to chants of “Hillary!” and “Madam President.”
He began saying: “Today the Democratic voters of South Carolina have rendered a significant verdict.” And he thanked the voters for starting Clinton on her way to the White House. But he was interrupted by enthusiastic chanting.
“She’ll be here in a moment!” he said.
Moments later she walked on stage to roars.
Updated
at 1.00am GMT
12.46am GMT
00:46
Hillary Clinton speaks
Here’s the livestream
Updated
at 12.48am GMT
12.43am GMT
00:43
John Stoehr
Guardian US contributor John Stoehr is impressed with Bernie Sanders’ magnanimity in defeat, but wonders when he will start to worry about his chances.
Bernie isn’t often credited with grace under fire, but he’s showing that tonight after South Carolina handed his behind to Hillary Clinton.
CBS News is projecting that Clinton will win by 75% to 25%.
In maintaining his poise, Sanders also rallied the troops, calling South Carolina only the beginning for his “political revolution”.
But the numbers are not in his favor, and he likely knows it. The states at stake in Super Tuesday are more like South Carolina in their percentage of minority voters than they are like Iowa and New Hampshire.
The battle was uphill for Bernie from the beginning and the hill is only getting steeper.
12.38am GMT
00:38
The moment the result was called…
12.32am GMT
00:32
Regarding Clinton’s huge, 84%-16% win among African American voters (according to exit polls), here’s what Jane Sanders, Bernie Sanders’ wife, told the Guardian on the campaign plane earlier:
I think we’re getting a lot better [at reaching African Americans voters], it’s just that they didn’t know us. They didn’t know us in the south generally.
That was filed by Washington bureau chief Dan Roberts. He’s now on that plane again, somewhere between Texas and Minnesota.
Lauren Gambino is at the Clinton victory party in South Carolina. She writes:
Clinton worked hard in the state, dedicating much of the past week to campaigning in churches, community halls and college campuses. She was joined by a major figure in the civil rights movement, Congressman James Clyburn, who famously refused to endorse a candidate in 2008, and other local politicians.
The mothers of Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner and other black men killed by police officers also campaigned for her in the state. At almost every event, she spoke forcefully about the women’s struggle.
Dan and Lauren’s full report is here:
Related: Hillary Clinton defeats Bernie Sanders to win South Carolina primary
Updated
at 12.33am GMT
12.27am GMT
00:27
More from AP on those South Carolina exit polls, about where Clinton won against Sanders:
Black voters powered Clinton to victory, with eight in 10 voting for her. The former secretary of state also won most women and voters aged 30 and older, according to early exit polls.
12.25am GMT
00:25
Meanwhile, in Trumpland… or whatever the online version of Trumpland is…
Trump has an endorsements page on his website now. It features Sarah Palin's name misspelled and one other person pic.twitter.com/SLUm1BYaTL
Marco Rubio may have a view to share on this latest spelling mishap for the Trump campaign. As the Republican candidates hurl insults at each other, the Florida senator has taken to saying Donald Trump’s tweets may be being typed out by illegal immigrants. It’s not Wildean repartee, is it, but it’s a start…