Ten days before the first primary for the Democratic Party's presidential candidate this year, polls in the state of Iowa give Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders the lead, followed by former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, former US Vice President Joe Biden and Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren. .
The Iowa caucuses take place on February 3 and are the first in a long process of choosing the party's nomination for the US presidential election at the end of the year.
According to a New York Times poll, Bernie Sanders has an advantage, with 25 percent of Democratic voters supporting him. It is followed by Buttigieg from Indiana (18 percent), former Vice President Joe Biden (17 percent), and then Warren (15 percent).
Unlike Biden, whose popularity has not changed, Buttigieg has been on the rise lately, reports RTS.
After more than a year of campaigning, uncertainty is showing in the race for the nomination for the Democratic leader, the New York Times assesses.
Sanders' victory in Iowa, where he was defeated by Hillary Clinton in the previous election four years ago, could mean a major comeback for the 78-year-old politician who suffered a heart attack last October.
If he wins the next election in New Hampshire, where he will be elected after Iowa, Sanders would be closer to the nomination, the New York Times estimates., which reminds that billionaire Michael Bloomberg, who spent more than 260 million dollars on the campaign, is waiting for the so-called primaries on "Super Tuesday" in early March to enter the Democratic race for voters.
According to a New York Times poll, Pete Buttigieg has the best chance of winning against Trump, followed by Biden.
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