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Easy win for Hillary at Mississippi primary as 4 states vote in U.S primaries

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Detroit, March 9, 2016:As four states voted in presidential nominating contests in both parties, democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton rolled to an easy win in the Mississippi primary over rival Bernie Sanders on Tuesday.

Mississippi an area where more than half of the Democratic electorate was comprised of the African-American voters has overwhelmingly favored her over Sanders. According to the exit polls, Clinton won nine of every 10 black voters.

Early results in Michigan, the night’s biggest prize, showed tight races on both sides, although opinion polls had shown Clinton and Republican front-runner Donald Trump with big leads heading into the voting. With 3 per cent of votes in, Mr. Trump and Ohio Governor John Kasich were running neck-and-neck.

Mr. Trump was hoping to restore some momentum for his campaign after a barrage of attacks from establishment Republicans and a tightening race gave new life to those seeking to block him.

Mr. Trump split four nominating contests on Saturday with conservative rival Ted Cruz, who positioned himself as the prime alternative to the brash New York billionaire in the race to be the party’s candidate in the Nov. 8 election.

Most polls had shown Mr. Trump hanging on to a double-digit lead in Michigan over Cruz, a U.S. senator from Texas, and Mr. Kasich.

Mr. Kasich is in last place in the number of delegates amassed, which are needed to clinch the nomination at the party’s July convention. But a strong showing for him in Michigan could blunt Mr. Trump’s momentum and set up a crucial do-or-die showdown for his campaign in Ohio next week.

“The whole world’s watching what’s going to happen in Michigan tonight,” Mr. Kasich, 63, told a rally in Lansing.

U.S. Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, 44, the favourite of a Republican establishment alarmed by Mr. Trump’s controversial proposals and anxious about Mr. Cruz’s uncompromising conservatism, lagged in Michigan polls and needs a win in his home state next week to keep his campaign alive.

Michigan wins for Mr. Trump and Ms. Clinton would set them up for a potentially decisive day of voting on March 15, when the delegate-rich States of Ohio, Florida, Illinois, Missouri and North Carolina cast ballots. The Republican contests in Florida and Ohio award all the state’s delegates to the winner.

If Mr. Trump, 69, could sweep those two states and pile up delegates elsewhere next week, it could knock home-state favourites Mr. Rubio and Mr. Kasich out of the race and make it tough for Mr. Cruz to catch him.

Republicans were also voting on Tuesday in Idaho and Hawaii.