Trump declares his race is won as Clinton clears way to nomination
HILLARY Clinton and Donald Trump were a giant step closer to their parties’ presidential nominations yesterday after crushing their respective Democratic and Republican rivals in a string of presidential primaries.
Clinton has now virtually cleared the way to become the Democratic nominee in the November presidential election, the first woman in US history to reach that milestone.
The former secretary of state won four out of five primaries on Tuesday in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland and the night’s big prize, the battleground state of Pennsylvania.
She conceded only the small state of Rhode Island to rival Bernie Sanders in a near sweep that gives her an almost insurmountable delegate lead.
Clinton now has 2,168 delegates, including more than 500 “super-delegates,” against Sanders’s 1,401, with about 1,000 more to be distributed in the 14 remaining nominating races. She needs 2,383 delegates to win the nomination.
“What a great night,” Clinton told supporters in Philadelphia.
The 68-year-old former first lady telegraphed her eagerness to shift toward the general election and a showdown with Republicans.
“Let’s go forward, let’s win the nomination, and in July let’s return as a unified party,” she said.
Clinton’s strong showing heaps pressure on Sanders, a self-styled democratic socialist from Vermont who vowed to battle on until the California primary on June 7.
“The people in every state in this country should have the right to determine who they want as president and what the agenda of the Democratic Party should be. That’s why we are in this race until the last vote is cast,” Sanders said.
Trump swept all five presidential races held on Tuesday, strengthening his grip on the Republican race.
He demolished rivals Ted Cruz and John Kasich in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island — a stunning show of force by a candidate seen as a populist political savior by millions despite being loathed by the party establishment.
“I consider myself the presumptive nominee,” the real estate mogul told a crowd at Trump Tower in New York, despite still needing 1,237 delegates to win the nomination outright.
The 69-year-old billionaire extended his lead in the delegates who will officially choose the Republican nominee at the party’s convention in July.
“For weeks, the stop Trump, dump Trump movement has tried to puncture” his rise, James Morone, a political science professor at Brown University, told reporters.
“Today’s results overwhelmingly tell you it’s not working.”
Trump offered a preview of what a Trump-Clinton matchup would look like, repeating on CNN yesterday his assertion that Clinton is “playing the woman card left and right.”
But at her victory party in Philadelphia, she told supporters that “if fighting for women’s health care and paid family leave and equal pay is playing the woman’s card, then deal me in.”
Trump’s triumph comes after Cruz and Kasich teamed up to try and to block the frontrunners path in several upcoming primaries.
Trump slammed the alliance as “pathetic” and ineffective.
“This joke of a deal is falling apart, not being honored and almost dead,” Trump said on Twitter. A key test will come in Indiana on May 3. Kasich has agreed not to campaign there, giving Cruz an opportunity to compete head to head with Trump for the state’s 57 delegates.
Trump now stands at 988 delegates, according to CNN’s running estimate. Cruz was a distant second with 568, while Kasich increased his numbers only slightly, to 152.
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