Days until New Hampshire primary: 1
Days until SEC Primary: 22
Early voting begins today in Georgia. Tennessee starts Wednesday. Texas and Oklahoma begin a week from Tuesday. Virginia has already started. So many SEC votes cast post-New Hampshire, but pre-South Carolina and Nevada.
Texas:
Marco Rubio's campaign is showing signs of momentum in Texas, though his best hope remains to chip away at Ted Cruz's delegate haul there. (Fort Worth Star-Telegram)
"Scores" of Hillary Clinton supporters organized a rally in San Antonio before going door-knocking and phone calling. (San Antonio Express News)
Marco Rubio's camp and the other "establishment wing" Republicans are eyeing Jeb Bush's Texas donors. (Texas Tribune)
Alabama:
Hillary Clinton opened an office in Birmingham on Saturday. (Alabama Political Reporter)
How U.S. Sen. Jeff Sessions' long-held views on immigration and trade are driving the Republican presidential race. (Yellowhammer News)
Five Alabama supporters of Donald Trump have filed a legal challenge to Ted Cruz's eligibility for the presidency, because he was born in Canada. (AL.com)
Tennessee:
Hillary Clinton will open offices in Nashville and Memphis this week. (The Tennessean)
In a bit of one-upmanship, Bernie Sanders' campaign will open offices in Memphis, Nashville and Knoxville. (Memphis Commercial Appeal)
Tennessee's Republican primary likely will have the highest proportion of white evangelical voters of any state. (The Tennessean)
Virginia:
Bernie Sanders opened a campaign office in the massive D.C. suburb of Fairfax County. (Fairfax County Times)
Arkansas:
In the days since former Gov. Mike Huckabee's exit, the state's newly available GOP establishment started to line up behind Marco Rubio, while social conservatives moved toward Ted Cruz. (The Associated Press)
Remember Paula Jones? The woman who famously accused Bill Clinton of sexual harassment in the 1990s was spotted at last week's Donald Trump rally in Little Rock. (Arkansas Democrat Gazette)
Oklahoma:
Hillary Clinton's campaign bashed a proposed ballot question that would prohibit abortion, in-vitro fertilization and some types of contraception. The initiative needs 124,000 signatures to make it on the ballot, but would violate U.S. Supreme Court precedent in any case. (The Oklahoman)
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