Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Bernie Sanders: "The American people are sick and tired of a president who lies all the time"

Bernie Sanders has cemented his status as the Democratic front-runner to take on Donald Trump in November's US presidential election.

He has a decisive lead over his rivals in the Nevada caucus, with results from over half the precincts counted.

But there is a long way to go until a Democratic nominee is confirmed.

Results from Saturday's vote also show former vice-president Joe Biden coming second, a better performance than in the two states which have voted so far.

He had underwhelming results in Iowa and New Hampshire. Those states kicked off the four-month long primaries process, in which candidates are jostling to convince voters why they are the best candidate to challenge Mr Trump.

What's the latest from Nevada?

So far, with 60% of the ballots counted in Nevada, Mr Sanders, the left-wing senator for Vermont, has 46% of the vote, ahead of Mr Biden on 19.6%. The field is then split between a number of other moderates, with Pete Buttigieg on 15.3% and Elizabeth Warren on 10.1%.

Mr Sanders won in 11 of Nevada's 17 counties.

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Candidates who have won more than 15% of the vote will be awarded delegates, who will then go to the party's convention in July to support their Democratic candidate.

Before Saturday, Mr Sanders had 21 delegates, and while he will remain a long way off the 1,990 needed to become the nominee, victory in Nevada will bring him another small step closer towards that total.

The last caucuses in Iowa were plagued by technical glitches that meant results struggled to be recorded using a new app. While that app is not being used in Nevada, there are reports of volunteers struggling to connect to a telephone number used to record results. Organisers say results should start flowing soon.

In a victory speech in Texas on Saturday evening, Mr Sanders praised his "multi-generational, racial coalition" team of supporters, and attacked Mr Trump. "The American people are sick and tired of a president who lies all the time," he said.

Mr Biden's campaign was in buoyant mood too, declaring that "the comeback starts here". In a tweet, Mr Trump praised Mr Sanders' win, but also called him "Crazy Bernie".

Meanwhile Mr Buttigieg suggested on Twitter that he is the only Democratic candidate with the potential to beat Mr Sanders to the nomination.

How has Bernie Sanders done so well?

It looks like it's all down to a few key factors.

Polling agency Edison Research said more than half of participating Hispanics had decided to vote for him before the caucuses. In a state of more than three million people where Hispanics make up a third of the population, this mattered

Despite some concern from union members about Mr Sanders's plan to shake up their delicately negotiated healthcare plans, 36% of union members backed him. One in four Nevada residents is in a union, or has a relative in a union

Polls suggest he did well across all age groups - apart from over-65s. He was especially popular among young voters in Nevada, and among white college-educated women, who are expected to be a key demographic in November's election

'No doubt Sanders is the front-runner now'

Four years ago, the Nevada caucuses were the moment Hillary Clinton began to turn the tide against Bernie Sanders in his upstart bid for the Democratic presidential nomination. This time around, the results could be further evidence that the Sanders surge is very real and very durable.

Caucus entrance polls show Sanders won a dominating 53% of the Hispanic vote - a demographic he struggled with against Clinton. That bodes well for the senator in the two biggest prizes coming up, Texas and California, with their sizeable Hispanic populations.

Sanders also, not as surprisingly, carried a majority of those aged 18 to 27 and voters who said they wanted someone who agreed with them on the issues.

If Sanders has a winning formula this time around, it could be that he has successfully diversified his coalition, while keeping his loyal support from the young and those who want a president who is with them on issues like major healthcare reform, aggressively combating climate change and addressing income inequality.

The Vermont senator appears so confident in his standing that he was campaigning in California this week and spent the day of the Nevada caucuses in Texas. If there was any doubt whether Sanders was the front-runner before now - and, quite honestly, there shouldn't have been - there is no question now.

What happens next?

All eyes turn to South Carolina's primary next Saturday. It will be the biggest of the four states to have voted before March - and the one with the largest percentage of African-American voters.

This should favour Mr Biden, who is popular among African Americans, but Mr Sanders is also expected to do well, and polls suggest that billionaire hedge-fund manager Tom Steyer could claim his first delegates there.

A few days later, on 3 March, is Super Tuesday, when 14 states vote. They include California and Texas, the two states with the most delegates. By the end of Super Tuesday, it may be much clearer who the Democratic candidate will be.

The Super Tuesday votes will include former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who is not competing in the first four Democratic leadership ballots.