Hillary Clinton claimed her place in history Tuesday as America's first female presumptive presidential nominee but rival Bernie Sanders is refusing to drop his bid despite overwhelming odds.
The
former secretary of state immediately pivoted from her victory to a
full bore assault on the presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump and
made a sweeping effort to reach out to Sanders supporters in an attempt
to unify Democrats.
Primary results maps
But
hours after Clinton's euphoric victory rally in Brooklyn, Sanders spoke
before a roaring crowd of his own in California to declare "the
struggle continues." The Vermont senator pledged to stay in the race
through next week's primary in Washington, D.C., and to fight on for
social, economic, racial and environmental justice at the Democratic
National Convention in Philadelphia.
But
he did not specifically commit to pursuing his fight for the nomination
at the convention, leaving his ultimate intentions unclear.
Obama's call
President
Barack Obama, who waited until voting ended in the last six primary
states to weigh in on the race, called both candidates to congratulate
them for "running inspiring campaigns that have energized Democrats,"
according to a White House statement.
But
the President, who will meet with Sanders Thursday at the Vermont
senator's request, clearly sided with Clinton by lauding her for
"securing the delegates necessary to clinch the Democratic nomination
for President."
"Her historic
campaign inspired millions and is an extension of her lifelong fight for
middle-class families and children," the statement said.
Reaching
the highest peak yet in a tumultuous and trailblazing political career,
Clinton claimed victory exactly eight years after folding her 2008
Democratic primary campaign against Obama.
"Thanks
to you, we've reached a milestone," she said during a speech in
Brooklyn. "Tonight's victory is not about one person. It belongs to
generations of women and men who struggled and sacrificed and made this
moment possible."
Her
long-awaited moment of celebration came as she notched wins in the
night's primaries in New Jersey, South Dakota and New Mexico Democratic
primaries, according to CNN projections. By 2:30 a.m. ET, she had a lead
of 400,000 votes in the California primary, which has 475 delegates --
the most on offer in the entire nominating season. Sanders won victories
in North Dakota and Montana.
Clinton
took the stage in Brooklyn to an explosion of cheers from her crowd, in
the kind of eruption of enthusiasm that has been fleeting during much
of her campaign. Clearly delighted, she stood with her arms outstretched
on stage, savoring the adulation.
Reaching
out to Sanders supporters, Clinton praised the Vermont senator for his
long public service and mirrored some of his progressive economic
rhetoric. She played down any notion of divisions and said their
vigorous primary campaign was "very good for the Democratic Party and
for America."
But in a sign of the
task she faces in uniting the party, Sanders supporters loudly booed her
name when he said he had received a "gracious" call from his rival and
said he had congratulated her on her victories on Tuesday.
Sanders confounded the notion that the end of the state primary races would mean the end of his campaign.
"Next
Tuesday, we continue the fight in the last primary in Washington DC,"
Sanders said. "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."
"I am pretty good at arithmetic and I know that the fight in front of us in a very, very steep fight."
But Sanders vowed to fight on for every delegate and every vote.
Clinton vs. Trump
While
Sanders signaled that he was not yet ready to fold a campaign that
started with him as a fringe candidate and ignited a startling grass
roots uprising that won more than 10 million votes, Clinton looked ahead
to the general election.
Clinton
intensified her assault on Trump, laying out a case that his values and
rhetoric are incompatible with American principles and that he's
"temperamentally unfit" to be President.
"He
is not just trying to build a wall between America and Mexico. He is
trying to wall of Americans from each other. When he says let's make
America great again, that is code for let's take American backwards."
She
hit Trump hard for his recent attacks on a judge with Mexican ancestry
along with mocking a disabled reporter and calling "women pigs."
Source: CNN
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