Super Tuesday is the day in early March when a large group of states holds presidential primaries and caucuses simultaneously, awarding a big share of each party's convention delegates at once and often determining the front-runner through momentum and the front-loading of the nomination calendar.
Super Tuesday is the single biggest day on the presidential nomination calendar. In early March of an election year, a dozen or more states hold their primaries and caucuses on the same Tuesday, and the delegate haul from that one day can dwarf everything that came before it. A candidate who sweeps Super Tuesday is usually on a glide path to the party's nomination at the convention, while candidates who underperform tend to drop out within days.
Super Tuesday exists because of front-loading, the trend of states moving their contests earlier and earlier in the calendar so they actually matter before the race is decided. The result is a nomination process where the first month (Iowa, New Hampshire, then Super Tuesday) carries enormous weight. Media coverage, fundraising, and momentum all concentrate on these early contests, which is why campaigns spend years preparing for a few weeks of voting.
Super Tuesday lives in Topic 5.8 (Electing a President) in Unit 5: Political Participation, and it directly supports learning objective AP Gov 5.8.A, which asks you to explain how the different processes in a presidential election work. The CED's essential knowledge lists open and closed primaries, caucuses, and party conventions as factors shaping election outcomes, and Super Tuesday is where primaries and caucuses hit their peak influence. It also explains a bigger idea the exam loves to test, which is that the nomination calendar itself shapes who wins. Early contests winnow the field, momentum snowballs, and by the time most states vote, the race may already be over. Understanding Super Tuesday lets you explain why candidates obsess over Iowa and New Hampshire and why critics say the system gives a few early states outsized power.
Keep studying AP® Gov Unit 5
Iowa Caucuses (Unit 5)
Iowa kicks off the nomination season weeks before Super Tuesday. A strong showing there generates the media attention and donor money a candidate needs to compete across the many Super Tuesday states at once. Think of Iowa as the audition and Super Tuesday as the main performance.
Closed and Open Primaries (Unit 5)
Super Tuesday isn't one election with one set of rules. Each participating state runs its own contest, so some are closed primaries (registered party members only), some are open, and a few are caucuses. That's why candidates can win different kinds of states on the same night.
Conventions (Unit 5)
Super Tuesday is really a race for delegates, and delegates are the people who formally nominate the candidate at the national party convention. Because Super Tuesday awards so many delegates at once, modern conventions usually just ratify a winner everyone already knows.
Invisible Primary (Unit 5)
The invisible primary is the pre-voting phase where candidates compete for money, endorsements, and name recognition. Front-loading raises its stakes, because a candidate who can't fund a multi-state Super Tuesday operation is effectively out before most voters cast a ballot.
Super Tuesday shows up in multiple-choice questions about the nomination process under Topic 5.8, usually paired with the concept of front-loading. One common stem asks what 'front-loading' refers to, and the answer is states scheduling their primaries earlier in the calendar to gain influence. Another classic setup walks you through a sequence (a candidate wins Iowa, stumbles in New Hampshire, then gains momentum heading into Super Tuesday) and asks how early contest results shape the nomination. The skill being tested is explaining cause and effect in the calendar, meaning early wins create momentum, money, and media coverage that pay off when many states vote at once. No released FRQ has used the term verbatim, but a Concept Application FRQ about presidential elections could easily hand you a scenario involving the primary calendar, so be ready to use 'front-loading,' 'winnowing,' and 'delegates' accurately.
Super Tuesday and Election Day are both big voting days, but they belong to different stages. Super Tuesday happens in early March and is part of the nomination process, where voters in each party choose delegates to pick their party's candidate. Election Day happens in November and is the general election, where voters across all states choose among the parties' nominees and effectively select Electoral College electors. On Super Tuesday you're picking your party's champion; in November the champions face off.
Super Tuesday is the early-March day when a large bloc of states holds presidential primaries and caucuses simultaneously, awarding a major share of each party's delegates.
It is the product of front-loading, the practice of states moving their contests earlier in the calendar so their voters influence the nomination before it's decided.
Strong performances in early contests like the Iowa caucuses create momentum and fundraising that candidates need to compete across many Super Tuesday states at once.
Super Tuesday accelerates winnowing, meaning candidates who underperform usually drop out shortly afterward, often leaving a clear front-runner.
It belongs to the nomination stage under LO 5.8.A, separate from the general election and the Electoral College, which decide the actual presidency.
Super Tuesday is the day in early March when many states hold presidential primaries and caucuses at the same time, awarding a large chunk of each party's convention delegates. It falls under Topic 5.8 (Electing a President) and learning objective AP Gov 5.8.A.
No. Super Tuesday is part of the nomination process in March, where each party's voters choose delegates to pick a nominee. Election Day is the general election in November, where voters choose between the parties' nominees and the Electoral College decides the winner.
The Iowa caucuses are a single state's contest that traditionally goes first, while Super Tuesday is a dozen or more states voting on one day weeks later. Iowa matters for momentum and media attention; Super Tuesday matters for the raw delegate count.
Front-loading is when states schedule their primaries and caucuses earlier in the calendar to increase their influence over the nomination. Super Tuesday is the clearest result, since so many states bunched their contests into early March.
Not officially, since the convention delegates formally nominate the candidate. But practically, a candidate who dominates Super Tuesday usually builds a delegate lead and momentum that rivals can't overcome, so the field winnows quickly afterward.
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