Well that was exciting.
Big huge batch of delegates for both parties.
Lets talk Democrats first.
1406 delegates got allocated on the Democratic side, of which 99.8% went to Biden.
There were also 14 more "Uncommitted" delegates in Minnesota, adding to the 2 in Michigan that were already there. But as I mentioned then, these delegates are just free agents who will eventually still vote for someone (probably Biden), so they just count as TBD for us.
But there is that 0.2%. That would be 3 delegates from American Samoa that ended up going to Jason Palmer. Only 91 people voted in the Democratic territorial caucus in American Samoa. But 51 of them voted for Palmer compared to 40 for Biden. So they split the 6 delegates from American Samoa evenly, 3 delegates each.
This is the first person other than Biden to get delegates on the Democratic side this cycle. So we have a race! (Not really.)
Anyway, here are the key charts and graphs for the Democrats. We'll talk Republicans on the other side.
OK, Republicans.
819 delegates were allocated on the Republican side, of which 92.8% were for Trump.
There were also 4 "unbound" delegates in Minnesota. Like the Uncommitted delegates on the Democratic side, these end up essentially as free agents, so are just TBD here. They will probably vote for Trump.
Unlike the Democratic side, these 4 aren't the result of some campaign to have people vote a particular way, but appear to just be a result of Minnesota's particular rules on how to allocate delegates based on the vote results having some delegates "left over", and this is what they do with those.
Fun.
Haley did pick up 7.2% of the delegates from Super Tuesday though, including racking up her second outright win in Vermont, where she got all 17 delegates.
Of course that is nowhere near enough to change the trajectory of the race.
So here are the key charts and graphs:
And that is that for Super Tuesday.
Both Biden and Trump are very close to mathematically wrapping things up, but not quite. We'll have to wait for the 12th on the Republican side and the 19th on the Democratic side for that.
In the mean time, next up is the Democrats in Hawaii Wednesday, and the Republicans in American Samoa on Friday.
131.5 days until the Republican National Convention
166.5 days until the Democratic National Convention