Sanders strongest among students as Biden's appeal broadens

Sen. Bernie Sanders had overwhelming support among college students heading into Super Tuesday.

But Joe Biden won the most states on Tuesday, bringing his struggling campaign back from the brink.

In the hours after the South Carolina Democratic primary, three Democratic presidential contenders- Tom Steyer, Pete Buttigieg, and Amy Klobuchar- declared the ends of their candidacies, leaving Sen. Bernie Sanders, former Vice President Joe Biden, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg as the top Democratic contenders to take on President Donald Trump in November.

But as voters in more than a dozen states went to the polls on Super Tuesday, the question dogging Democrats since the start of this contest was as unsure as ever: Is the Democratic electorate more moderate, or has it shifted to one that could put the party on track to nominate a self-described Democratic socialist for the first time in its history? 

At the end of the night on Tuesday, that question remained largely unanswered still, as Biden won the most states but Sanders’ victory in delegate-rich California puts him in a virtual delegate tie with Biden, if not slightly ahead of the former vice president in terms of delegates.

The answer to whether Democratic voters prefer a system of capitalism as Biden advocates, or a system of Democratic socialism as proposed by Sanders, depends largely on geographical location or demographics, particularly when it comes to age. For example, as Campus Reform has reported, younger Americans are much more likely to vote for a socialist than are older Americans. A recent YouGov poll found that 70 percent of millennials said they are likely to vote for a socialist while 36 percent said they approve of communism. 

[RELATED: Disturbing number of young Americans favor communism, poll finds]

Those numbers bode well for Sanders as he seeks to overtake the so-called moderate establishment wing of the Democratic Party.

In addition to calling himself a Democratic Socialist, insisting that’s different from the type of socialism seen in countries like Venezuela or Cuba, Sanders has praised communist dictators multiple times, seemingly dismissing how their regimes have killed millions of people and instead focusing on how their government-run programs helped more people learn to read. 

Among Democratic and Democratic-leaning college students nationwide, Sanders has the highest support of any other candidate. According to the Chegg-College Pulse Election Tracker, Sanders held 58 percent support among students as of February 25. Sen. Elizabeth Warren had the support of 15 percent while Biden had captured just six percent. Bloomberg, a late-comer to the primary race, had three percent support among Democratic and Democratic-leaning college students. 

[RELATED: ‘Bernie Sanders is your enemy’: Venezuela socialism victims sound the alarm]

It’s important to note that with Steyer, Buttigieg, and Klobuchar now out, theoretically, that leaves about 10 percent of the college vote up for grabs, assuming those who preferred one of those three candidates switch their Super Tuesday vote to one of the remaining candidates. But that additional 10 percent support, even when applied entirely to Warren who is a distant second to Sanders among college students, would not fill the considerable 43 percent gap that currently exists between Sanders and Warren. 

All of this is, of course, based on national polling when Super Tuesday victories are determined at the state level. Polls conducted among the broader Democratic primary electorate in California and Texas, the states that hold the largest delegate prizes on Super Tuesday, offer Sanders promising news heading into the all-important contests, as 45 percent of voters in California under the age of 45 said they would vote for Sanders, according to a CBS News/YouGov poll conducted Feb. 27-29.  Meanwhile, in Texas, the same poll found that 54 percent of voters under the age of 45 said they would vote for Sanders. 

Voters in Texas and California, along with Alabama, American Samoa, Arkansas, Colorado, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, and Virginia all head to the polls Tuesday to cast their ballots for who they want to take on Trump. 

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