OnPolitics: And then there were basically two

Not all progressives are the same?

It would make some kind of sense to believe that Sen. Elizabeth Warren dropping out of the race would help shore up progressive support for Sen. Bernie Sanders, yeah?

Whelp, maybe no.

Some Warren supporters remain angry at Sanders for not getting out of the race in 2016 and endorsing Hillary Clinton sooner than he did, and for allegedly telling Warren in December that a woman could never win the presidency – a claim he characterized as "ludicrous."

Plus political experts tell USA TODAY that voters tend to gravitate towards a personality, leaving many Warren supporters not connecting to Sanders.

Congresswoman talks about her private battle with pain

Rep. Abby Finkenauer told USA TODAY that though her long fight against endometriosis hasn't stopped her work in Iowa and DC, it has forced her to consider life-changing decisions and motivated her to help other women facing the same physical pain.

"I'm 31 and I am just tired of having this pain, and there just aren't many options," she explained on Wednesday, sitting in a chair in her Capitol Hill office.

Here is more news

You Asked, We Answered

We scoured the Internet to get an idea of some of your Super Tuesday questions out there. A member of our Facebook group, "Across the Aisle, Across the Nation," Jacqueline Blaszka Campbell asked: Why didn't the younger voters come to vote in the Super Tuesday primaries?

Washington Bureau Chief Susan Page had the answer.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Elizabeth Warren drops out of presidential race