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Presidential election in the U.S. Virgin Islands, 2020

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2024
2016
U.S. Virgin Islands
2020 presidential election

Democratic caucus: June 6, 2020
Democratic winner: Joe Biden


Republican caucus: May 30, 2020
Republican winner: Donald Trump


Presidential election by state, 2020

The U.S. Virgin Islands does not cast electoral votes for president of the United States. It does, however, hold primary nominating events. The Democratic Party held a caucus on June 6, 2020. Former Vice President Joe Biden won the Democratic caucus.[1] The Republican Party held a presidential preference vote on May 30, 2020.[2]


Election results

Virgin Islands Democratic presidential caucus on June 6, 2020
 
Candidate
%
Votes
Pledged delegates
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Official_portrait_of_Vice_President_Joe_Biden.jpg
Joe Biden
 
91.3
 
502 7
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Bernie_Sanders.jpg
Bernie Sanders
 
5.1
 
28 0
  Other
 
3.6
 
20 0

Total votes: 550 • Total pledged delegates: 7


Democratic caucus

See also: Democratic presidential nomination, 2020
HIGHLIGHTS
  • The U.S. Virgin Islands held its Democratic caucus on June 6, 2020.
  • The U.S. Virgin Islands had 13 delegates comprised of 7 pledged delegates and 6 superdelegates. Delegate allocation was proportional.
  • The Democratic caucus was closed, meaning only registered Democrats were able to participate in the caucus.

  • Former Vice President Joe Biden (D) was formally nominated as the Democratic presidential nominee at the 2020 Democratic National Convention on August 18, 2020.[3] The convention was originally scheduled to take place July 13-16, 2020.[4] Organizers postponed the event in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

    Prior to the national convention, individual state caucuses and primaries were held to allocate convention delegates. These delegates vote at the convention to select the nominee. In 2020, a Democratic presidential candidate needed support from 1,991 delegates to secure the nomination.

    With the plurality of pledged delegates, Biden became the presumptive Democratic nominee on April 8, 2020, after Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) suspended his presidential campaign.[5] Biden crossed the delegate threshold necessary to win the nomination on June 5, 2020.[6]

    Biden announced U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris (D) as his running mate on August 11, 2020. Harris is the first Black woman to appear on a major party's ticket in the United States.[7]

    Republican territorial convention

    See also: Republican presidential nomination, 2020
    HIGHLIGHTS
  • The Republican Party held a presidential preference vote on May 30, 2020.[2]
  • The U.S. Virgin Islands had 9 delegates comprised of 6 delegates and 3 superdelegates. All delegates are unbound, unless they otherwise specify their candidate.

  • The Republican Party selected President Donald Trump as its presidential nominee at the 2020 Republican National Convention, which was held from August 24-27, 2020.[8]

    Prior to the national convention, individual state caucuses and primaries were held to allocate convention delegates. These delegates vote at the convention to select the nominee. Trump crossed the delegate threshold necessary to win the nomination—1,276 delegates—on March 17, 2020.

    George H.W. Bush (R) was the last incumbent to face a serious primary challenge, defeating political commentator Pat Buchanan in 1992. He was also the last president to lose his re-election campaign. Franklin Pierce (D) was the first and only elected president to lose his party's nomination in 1856.[9]

    Sixteen U.S. presidents—approximately one-third—have won two consecutive elections.

    For an overview of the 2016 presidential election in the U.S. Virgin Islands, click here.



    See also

    Footnotes