Hillary Clinton wins the
Democratic presidential primary in
California, the
Associated Press projects.
HILLARY CLINTON CLAIMS HISTORIC VICTORY, BERNIE SANDERS VOWS TO FIGHT ON
Hillary Clinton declared victory Tuesday night in the
Democratic presidential nomination, even as
Sen. Bernie Sanders vowed to continue fighting until the party convention in July.
Claiming her place in history, Hillary Clinton declared victory Tuesday night in her bruising battle for the Democratic presidential nomination, becoming the first woman to lead a major
American political party and casting herself as the beneficiary of generations who fought for equality.
"This campaign is about making sure there are no ceilings, no limits on any of us,"
Clinton said during an emotional rally in
Brooklyn, eight years to the day after she ended her first failed
White House run. As she took the stage to raucous cheers, she paused to relish the moment, flinging her arms wide and beaming broadly.
Clinton had already secured the delegates needed for the nomination, according to an Associated Press tally. She added to her totals with victories in
New Jersey,
New Mexico and
South Dakota, three of the six states voting Tuesday.
Clinton faces a two-front challenge in the coming days. She must appeal to the enthusiastic supporters of her rival
Bernie Sanders - who vowed to stay in the race despite having no realistic path to the nomination - and sharpen her contrasts with presumptive
Republican nominee
Donald Trump.
She sought to make progress on both, using her own loss in 2008 to connect with Sanders' backers.
"It never feels good to put our heart into a cause or a candidate you believe in and come up short," she said. "I know that feeling well. But as we look ahead to the battle that awaits, let's remember all that unites us."
Sanders, speaking at a rally in
Santa Monica, said he'd spoken to Clinton late Tuesday. He notably stripped his speech of all criticism of her, but still pledged to compete in next week's final primary in the
District of Columbia and take his fight for "social, economic, racial and environmental justice" to the
Democratic convention.
"Our fight is to transform this country and to understand that we are in this together, to understand that all of what we believe is what the majority of the
American people believe and to understand that the struggle continues," he declared.
Clinton had an edge over Sanders in California, but votes were still being counted early Wednesday. Sanders has hoped a win in California would give him ammunition to convince superdelegates to abandon Clinton before the Democratic convention in July.
Clinton is eager to avoid a convention fight and to set her sights fully on
Trump. She was biting and sarcastic as she took on the billionaire businessman, accusing him of wanting to win "by stoking fear and rubbing salt in wounds - and reminding us daily just how great he is."
Even as the Democratic race was ending, new turmoil broke out among the
Republicans.
GOP leaders recoiled at Trump's comments about a
Hispanic judge, with one senator even pulling his endorsement.
Trump capped his difficult day with victories in
California, New Jersey, New Mexico, South Dakota and
Montana. But he was muted his victory rally, saying he understands "the responsibility" of leading the
Republican Party. He also made a direct appeal to dejected Sanders supporters and other
Democrats.
- published: 08 Jun 2016
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