The headline is familiar: Hillary Clinton leads Bernie Sanders by double digits in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination. But look closer at the newest NBC News online poll and one group emerges as the main source of her strength: African-Americans.
According to the poll, which was released Friday morning, the Democratic campaign is essentially tied among white voters, with Clinton edging out Sanders by just three points. It’s also close among Hispanics, with whom Clinton leads 42-35%. But among African-Americans, Clinton is crushing Sanders by 54 points. That overwhelming black support is the reason Clinton retains a comfortable overall lead of 45% to 31%.
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It’s also the reason Clinton’s campaign isn’t panicked by her struggles in Iowa and New Hampshire. The latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll has Clinton ahead by just five in Iowa and Sanders leading by 14 in New Hampshire. Those numbers have raised the possibility that Clinton, who entered this campaign as the most imposing non-incumbent front-runner in modern history, might lose one — or maybe even both — of the lead-off states in next year’s primary and caucus season.
But Iowa and New Hampshire are also overwhelmingly white and not representative of the increasingly diverse coalition that comprises today’s Democratic Party. Once those states take their turns, the action will shift to states with more substantial nonwhite populations — most notably South Carolina, which will hold its primary on Feb. 27. In the last competitive Democratic race, the 2008 contest between Clinton and Barack Obama, African-Americans comprised 55% of the primary electorate in South Carolina and cast 80% of their ballots for Obama, powering him to a landslide victory statewide.
Clinton is counting on similarly overwhelming black support this time around — and right now she has it. A CNN poll earlier this week gave her a 50-point lead over Sanders in South Carolina, 70% to 20%. But that massive lead comes entirely from African-Americans, who favor Clinton by a 77-point margin in the state. Among white South Carolinians, she leads by a single point, 48% to 47%.








