
Originally published Tuesday, June 7, 2016 at 11:44 p.m. Updated Wednesday, June 8, 2016, at 7:55 a.m.
Former secretary of state Hillary Clinton declared herself the winner Tuesday night of a protracted contest for the Democratic presidential nomination.
“Thanks to you, we’ve reached a milestone: the first time in our nation’s history that a woman will be a major party’s nominee for president of the United States,” she told supporters at the Brooklyn Navy Yard.
But hours later at a rally in Santa Monica, her persistent rival, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), pledged to “continue the fight” through the final primary election next week in the nation’s capital — and beyond.
“We are going to fight hard to win the primary in Washington, D.C. And then we take our fight for social, economic, racial and environmental justice to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania!” he shouted, referring to the site of July’s Democratic National Convention.
The competing declarations came on the penultimate day of voting in the primary election — after six states went to the polls. By early Wednesday morning, Clinton had been declared the winner in New Jersey, New Mexico and South Dakota. Sanders had been named the victor in North Dakota and Montana. Later in the morning, the Associated Press called California, whose 546 delegates made it the biggest prize of the day, for Clinton. She was leading Sanders there 56 percent to 43 percent with most precincts reporting.
Including superdelegates, who can change their mind before the July convention, Clinton had accumulated 2,755 delegates by Wednesday morning, while Sanders had collected 1,852. A candidate needs 2,383 delegates to win the nomination.
Referring to herself as “the Democratic Party’s nominee,” Clinton left little room for doubt that she viewed the primary as over. She congratulated Sanders on the “extraordinary campaign he has run” and argued that their debate had been “very good for the Democratic Party and for America.”
Then she urged Sanders’ supporters to help defeat presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump, calling him “temperamentally unfit to be president and commander in chief.”
“This is our moment to come together,” Clinton said.
Whether Sanders would heed her call was unclear for hours after she spoke. His campaign appeared to send mixed signals about its plans: The New York Times reported that the senator planned to lay off “at least half of his campaign staff” — but then it announced a rally Thursday in D.C.
Even after he took the stage at a Santa Monica airport late that night, Sanders’ plans remained a mystery. Calling his California campaign “one of the most moving moments of my life,” he sounded as if he was preparing to concede the race.
“We will not allow right-wing Republicans to control our government — and that is especially true with Donald Trump as the Republican candidate,” he said. “The American people, in my view, will never support a candidate whose major theme is bigotry — who insults Mexicans, who insults Muslims and women and African Americans.”
Sanders spoke for nearly 10 minutes before revealing that he would remain in the race — an announcement that prompted the biggest cheers of the night.
“I am pretty good at arithmetic, and I know that the fight in front of us is a very steep fight, but we will continue to fight for every vote and every delegate,” he said.
In his sole reference to his rival, Sanders said he had taken part in “a very gracious call from Secretary Clinton and congratulated her on her victories tonight.” He also noted that he had received “a very kind call from President Obama,” though he characterized it somewhat differently than did White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest, who disclosed the president’s conversations earlier that night in a statement.
“The president congratulated Secretary Clinton for securing the delegates necessary to clinch the Democratic nomination for president,” Earnest wrote, adding that Obama had “thanked” Sanders for “energizing millions of Americans.”
Sanders may face more direct pressure from the president on Thursday when the two meet at the White House at the senator’s request. Both Clinton and Obama aides have said in recent days that they expect the president to endorse Clinton and campaign on her behalf soon.
Sanders, who plans to fly home to Vermont on Wednesday, concluded his remarks Tuesday night with a call to action.
“The struggle continues,” he said.



Is the plan really to convince the vast majority of super-delegates to vote at the convention for the candidate who received fewer pledged delegates and fewer popular votes? Really? Is that not undemocratic? Is that not betraying a majority of voters who cast their ballots for Hillary Clinton? Is that not an embodiment of the kind of process that Senator Sanders and his surrogates have been railing against for months?
I’m not sure how you are measuring popular vote, stella, since caucuses do not give accurate numbers.
“Fewer pledged delegates and fewer popular votes”. Let’s not forget that 39% of voters (PEW Research Center 2014) affiliate themselves as Independents – a segment of Americans that were not allowed to participate in some of the state primaries (e.g. New York). With Millenials (18-33 YOA), the percentage increases to 48%. When saying that Hillary has more popular votes, one is disregarding those whose vote was not eligible to be cast. Sanders is identifying with those individuals. Sanders is pushing it to represent those Americans. Not to mention the role the media has played in labeling Hillary as the Democratic candidate by including super delegates in their numbers without differentiating them from the popular vote. What effect did this have on bringing voters to the polls?
why?
Yes, I am not counting votes that were not cast. If this were a general election, would we be talking about the people who supported a particular candidate but did not register to vote in time? Would we be talking about the number of 17-year-olds who supported a candidate but were not old enough to vote? Let’s not pretend like it was a mystery or a surprise that in some states, you have to be registered as a Democrat to vote in the Democratic primary. I don’t deny that Senator Sanders has rallied a segment of the electorate, I just deny that he has more votes than Secretary Clinton.
And yes, the media has long forecast Secretary Clinton as the likely Democratic nominee by including super-delegates, because super-delegates are eligible to cast votes at the convention to select the nominee. Should we ignore the fact that super-delegates exist because it would be better for the Sanders campaign if the system were different? Again, it’s not like the process was a secret – Senator Sanders chose to run as a Democrat knowing that a whole lot of prominent Democrats supported Secretary Clinton, and would likely voice that support publicly. The media are not obligated to withhold relevant facts from the public just because it would benefit one candidate and hurt another.
Word is that Old Yeller is insisting on meeting with Obama Thursday to demand that in exchange for him supporting Hillary, that the Justice Department drop it’s investigation of his wife Jane for the Burlington College financial fraud charges currently pending against her.