By David Shribman

Dispirited by their failure to unite — and in despair over two terms of a Republican president whose initiatives frustrated if not horrified them and whose appeal befuddled them — the Democrats created Super Tuesday in 1988 so they could climb behind a consensus candidate and present a moderate face to the country. More than a quarter century later, the Republicans are experiencing the same despair over a president of the opposite party and, in the wake of Super Tuesday 2016, are suffering the same lack of unity — but they are on the verge of selecting a nominee who is anything but moderate.

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