As the Democratic frontrunner built on his lead, Trump and Republicans kept stumbling over coronavirus
Good week: Joe Biden
The former vice-president cemented his lead over Bernie Sanders in the Democratic race with another string of primary victories on Tuesday most significantly in Michigan, where the leftwing senator had sensationally beaten Hillary Clinton in 2016. Biden currently holds a lead of 881 delegates to Sanders 725 and the race moves next week to four states the Vermont socialist lost to Clinton last time: Arizona, Florida, Illinois and Ohio. If Biden wins the swing state of Florida, especially, it could be a knockout blow to Sanders in the race for the nomination. Belying his usual gaffe-prone image, Biden made a calm, statesmanlike speech on Super Tuesday election night praising Sanders and his supporters for their tireless passion and calling on them to help him defeat Donald Trump together. And he took the same measured tone on Thursday when he made a statement about the escalating coronavirus emergency attempting to draw a contrast with the chaotic handling of the epidemic so far by the man he hopes to replace.
Bad week: Bernie Sanders

Bidens main challenger for the Democratic nomination was not ready to quit after his disappointing run of primary results on Tuesday. Although he was silent on election night itself, the next day Sanders made a forceful speech looking ahead to his debate with Biden on Sunday in Phoenix and insisting his campaign was strongly winning the contest of ideas. But the
Worse week: Donald Trump
The president lurched this week from transparently playing down the threat of the coronavirus it wasnt long ago he was promising the number of cases within a couple of days is going to be down to close to zero to full-on nativist crisis mode, closing the gates to most Europeans, with the exceptions, bizarrely, of the Brits and Irish. With over 1,600 cases in the US so far, this seemed to be a case of slamming the door to what he called the foreign virus well after the horse had bolted. And by falling back on the kind of ultra-nationalist authoritarian gestures that delight his base, Trump is risking the one thing most analysts agree would decimate his chances of victory in November: an economic crash. Wall Street plunged in the wake of his statement which characteristically was littered with alarming factual errors that he and his administration had to rush to correct. If this was Trump taking charge in an emergency, few seemed reassured.
Worst week: Republicans

Things were pretty bad for continental Europeans, suddenly barred from travelling to the US and abruptly blamed for the coronavirus by Trump. But surely the biggest losers of the week were Republicans whose unswerving loyalty to their president may actually now be risking their health. A Reuters/Ipsos
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from AllAbout https://allabout.pw/why-joe-biden-won-another-week-in-us-politics-and-republicans-lost/
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