Not as big as Super Tuesday, but we do have 4 contests today with 161 pledged delegates up for grabs. I'll post a link to the results spreadsheet in a response to my mojo jar so that you guys don't kill it as quickly (though it held up pretty well on Tuesday).
Just take me to the graphs!
Next day Update: Huckabee wins Louisiana. McCain comes from behind in Washington. (Boo!).
Almost Final Washington Results: Obama 67.5%, Clinton 21.2%. From Louisiana: Obama 57.4%, Clinton 35.6%. I still have 26 delegates outstanding for last night, but as of now Obama can stake a claim to a net 51 delegate lead from last night alone.
11:25 PM: Obama has now been awarded with over 50% of the delegates being awarded today, with 85 so far. Currently Clinton has 38, giving Obama a 47 delegate lead right now.
We have a couple of oddities today. The first is Nebraska, which appears to have no set caucusing time, leaving it up to each county to decide. That means some counties vote at 1pm local and others at 6pm local and at various times in between. However, apparently results are required to be reported to the state party by 8:30 PM Eastern. I wouldn't think anything would get reported to the press before some of the caucuses even go to vote, but you never know.
The second oddity is the US Virgin Islands. They are holding a convention where each of the two islands groupings: St. Thomas/St. John and St. Croix each get 3 delegates each based on their own vote, and they are divided up based on that vote. That means that A candidate would win 2-1 or 3-0 on each of the islands. The catch here is that each delegate is worth 1/2 a vote at the convention. That means if Obama, say, won 3-0 on St. Croix but only 2-1 on St. Thomas and St. John, that means he comes away with a 5-1 delegate lead, which translates into a 2.5 to 0.5 vote lead. Yes. People can win half a vote here.
In any case, this may be a little more drawn out night than usual as Washington closes at 4pm eastern while Louisiana closes at 9pm eastern. However, I'll try to be here for all of it.
Also, a note on the combined delegate total - by my calculations there are still 43 outstanding delegates from Super Tuesday - 1 from New Mexico, 1 from states Clinton won (New York) and 41 from states Obama won, most from Colorado. Just thought I'd note that.
In any case, here are the graphs: