With the conclusion of Super Tuesday, the field for the Democratic Presidential Nomination has been cleared. The race for the nomination is now seen as a contest between Biden and Sanders and the two of them along with their respective camps of supporters are on a collision course.

Sanders started the expected mudslinging by stating that the former Vice President has a lot to explain to Americans. Sanders then enumerated the trade deals that Biden has pushed as Vice President. He also mentioned the Iraq War, which was not stopped during the Obama administration and then the health-care system. The Senator’s choice of criticisms against Biden is aimed at drawing distinctions between his policies and records and those of his opponent.

Sanders is making it clear that in the next stage in the race for the Democratic nomination, people would have to make a choice as to which side they would be on. Sanders is starting to paint Biden as a candidate that is backed by billionaires, someone who may side with giant corporations and not fight for the rights of the ordinary families and Americans who need change.

“The American people have got to understand that this is a conflict about ideas, about a record, about a vision for where we go forward,” Bernie told reporters in his campaign headquarters in Vermont. The senator insisted that he does want the campaign to go down to the level of personal attacks.

Biden for his part is dismissive of Sanders’ sweeping plans for reforms, believing that those proposals endanger the chances of the Democratic Party in denying President Trump another four years in the White House. President Trump’s reelection can have disastrous results for the Democratic Party.

The former Vice President is considered to be the ultimate winner of Super Tuesday after he was able to win most of the southern states and important states like Minnesota, Texas, and Massachusetts. Sanders was not completely beaten because he was able to win in California, which was a notable victory in the race.

However, it is Biden who is clearly the leading candidate now for the Democratic nomination. Many of the other candidates have quit. Buttigieg and Klobuchar have endorsed Biden in recognition of the fact that the moderates of the party must stick together against Sanders’ far-left tendencies which may take the Democratic Party into unchartered territory should he win the nomination. Even Rep. Beto O’Rourke, who washed-out early in the nomination race, has placed his support for Biden. Former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg, after spending more than $500 million on his campaign has also quit and is now supporting Biden.

The race between Biden and Sanders is dividing the Democratic party now right in the middle with the moderate globalists on the side of Biden and the liberals with their unrealistic policies like AOC and Ilhan Omar backing Sanders. This squabbling within the party ranks is only benefiting President Trump’s campaign which is getting stronger with each misstep that the Democrats are making.