Showing posts with label Delegate Count. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Delegate Count. Show all posts

Thursday, June 9, 2016

Voters look beyond delegate count, make picks for president


Hillary Clinton Appears To Hit Delegate Count Needed To Clinch | The View

Voters in six states cast ballots in presidential primary contests Tuesday, but many were looking ahead to the general election.

Democratic and Republican voters told The Associated Press they have long been weighing and comparing candidates with an eye toward who could come out on top in November.

Elections in New Jersey, California, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota and South Dakota featured a contest between Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton. Sanders is urging superdelegates to drop their support for Clinton, arguing he is a stronger candidate to take on Donald Trump.

Clinton reached the 2,383 delegates needed to become the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Monday, according to an AP tally.

On the Republican side, Trump has had the nomination locked up for weeks.

Here are some voters" thoughts:

In San Diego, 82-year-old Harry Backer strolled past cyclists, skateboarders and kayakers on the way to vote for Clinton. The retired teacher, who also worked in construction, said America needs a level-headed, grounded woman with world experience.

"I"m left of Bernie Sanders, but I know that she"s the candidate that can possibly get something done," Backer said.

He also wanted to be part of history in making Clinton the first woman to top the ticket of a major U.S. political party.

Izabela Biel voted for Trump in Closter, New Jersey, an upscale suburb across the Hudson River from Manhattan. Biel said Trump"s success as a businessman symbolizes the American dream for her.

Biel came to the U.S. from Poland about 25 years ago, and she offered that even though he isn"t the perfect candidate, she prefers him to the Democratic candidates who "want to make everybody equal."

"I grew up in communism," said Biel, 46. "I"ve lived it, and I absolutely know that it"s proven that it doesn"t work. You can"t make everybody equal. That just doesn"t exist in the real world."

In Albuquerque, New Mexico, 72-year-old retiree Thomas Ocken biked to the University of New Mexico to vote for Sanders. Ocken said didn"t think it mattered after news of Clinton"s delegate count, but he wanted to cast a ballot anyway.

"I think Democratic Socialism is much more fair. I"m not afraid of socialism," Ocken said. "I don"t think he"ll win. At least he"ll put more pressure on Hillary."

Paul Westendorf, a 53-year-old Sioux Falls, South Dakota, resident who works in financial services, voted for Trump, though he wished he had other viable options. He said it was more about "finding what I dislike the least."

"It"s hard to get a read on what he really stands for, and I think that some of that is intentional," Westendorf said.

Westendorf is strongly anti-abortion, and he said he"s uncomfortable because he doesn"t have a good sense of Trump"s true stance on that issue. But he said Trump can surround himself with competent people and build a great team.

In Montana, Sanders supporter Sonya Goes Ahead held out hope that he could still get the delegates needed before the primary.

"The other candidates are not very truthful. They are in it for money," said Goes Ahead, who grew up on Montana"s Crow Reservation and is studying education at Montana State University in Billings.

Sanders was the first presidential candidate to campaign in Montana, in early May, when he also met privately with American Indian leaders from the state"s reservations

"He wants to help communities, help bring jobs to the reservation," the 24-year-old Goes Ahead said. "There"s not many jobs in my home just the schools."

In Helena, Montana, decorative painter Carmela Linguista had no hesitation about whom she was voting for: "Hillary, Hillary, Hillary."

"Hillary has pretty much devoted her life to the needs of women and children," Linguista said. "I think her forte is on the world stage."

She also pulled few punches about Trump.

"The man is insane. He"s a danger," she said. "He"s not presidential material."

Claudia Scott, of Albuquerque, New Mexico, voted for Trump who is "very brash" at times but speaks the truth.

"He"s saying to America what people don"t want to say out loud, but the way the feel," she said after casting her vote at a middle school.

One of the issues she agrees most with Trump on is immigration, she said.

"I hope he doesn"t change his stand on the way that he feels," Scott said.

Steve Mays, 60, a warehouse worker from Bismarck, North Dakota, said he was supporting Clinton.

"I think she will be the same as the old Clinton, Bill and that"s good," he said. "The economy was good when he was president and he knew how to balance a budget."

Mays said it makes no difference to him that she would be the first woman president.

"She"s got experience and I trust her," he said. "It doesn"t bother me at all whether someone is male or female or black or white," he said.

In Kearney, New Jersey, a blue-collar community, Antonio Cunha voted for Sanders, saying the candidate focuses on issues important to regular people.

"I like the idea of helping people afford college, whether it"s totally free or not," said Cunha, 32, who works for a civil engineering firm. "Back in the day everybody got around with a high school education, but now I can see how much more people make in their careers if they have college degrees. And everybody"s saddled with that debt, so that would be a big help."

Contributing to this report were: Associated Press writers Wayne Parry in Atlantic City, New Jersey; David Porter in Closter, New Jersey; Bruce Shipkowski in Toms River, New Jersey; Ellen Knickmeyer in Sonoma, California; Mary Hudetz and Russell Contreras in Albuquerque, New Mexico; Julie Watson in San Diego; Dirk Lammers in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, James MacPherson in Bismarck, North Dakota; Matthew Brown in Billings, Montana; and Matt Volz in Helena, Montana.

Source: http://bismarcktribune.com/news/state-and-regional/voters-look-beyond-delegate-count-make-picks-for-president/article_fd1a714a-dd2c-5791-890c-6e9c1a284f33.html

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Clinton and Trump add to delegate count with wins in New Mexico


Jane Sanders Reacts To Delegate Count, Hillary Clinton, Lewandowski Charge | MSNBC

Presumptive Democratic Presidential nominee Hillary Clinton added to her delegate count Tuesday night with a win in the nations most Hispanic state.

With 96 percent of votes in New Mexico tallied, Clinton won 53 percent of the vote in the state compared to the 47 percent that voted for challenger Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont. The former Secretary of State is now poised for a general election battle with the presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump.

Clinton secured the 2,383 delegates she needed for the nomination on the eve of Tuesday"s voting, according to an Associated Press tally, but secured the nomination with a win earlier in the night in New Jersey.

Clinton trumpeted her victory as historic.

"We are all standing under a glass ceiling tonight," Clinton said Tuesday night during her speech in Brooklyn, New York. This is the first time in our nations history that a woman will be a major political parties nominee.

Clinton wanted to wait until most of the voting was complete Tuesday night before fully reveling in becoming the first woman nominated by a major U.S. political party

While Clinton claimed the state on the Democratic side, Trump was the candidate who was making headlines in the state in the lead-up to Tuesdays vote, where in an uncontested race he pulled in 73 percent of the vote with just over 50 percent of votes tallied.

The real estate mogul has in the past few weeks both derided and courted New Mexicos Gov. Susana Martinez, the first female governor in U.S. history.

Martinez, the head of the Republican Governors" Association and the first Latina to be chief executive of any U.S. state, has been critical of the real estate tycoon a number of times in the past, including when he first brought up the issue of immigration and building a border wall last summer. His description of Mexicans as criminals was completely and unequivocally wrong, Martinez, who is of Mexican descent, said at the time.

Trump, for his part, called out Martinez while campaigning in New Mexico in May, telling supporters that she has got to do a better job. Shes not doing the job.

Then he added, "Hey! Maybe I"ll run for governor of New Mexico. I"ll get this place going ... She"s not doing the job. We"ve got to get her going."

Despite Trumps harsh words there have been rumors that the businessman has put Martinez on his shortlist as a possible running mate in the general election. A spokesman for Martinez, who has yet to endorse Trump for president, has said the two are set to meet in the near future.

Trump recently said he would welcome Martinez"s endorsement.

"The governor hopes to visit with Mr. Trump in the near future to discuss this issue and others that affect New Mexicans. As she has said, this has never been about her -- it"s about the issues that impact New Mexico." Martinezs spokesman Mike Lonergan said.

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Source: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/politics/2016/06/07/clinton-and-trump-add-to-delegate-count-with-wins-in-new-mexico/

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Hillary Clinton Takes Decisive Lead Over Bernie Sanders in Delegate Count, Popular Vote


Hillary Clinton Appears To Hit Delegate Count Needed To Clinch | The View
June 8, 2016 8:33 a.m. ET

WASHINGTON Hillary Clinton prevailed in the Democratic presidential primary campaign with commanding leads in both the popular vote and delegate count, capping off the race against Bernie Sanders Tuesday evening with a win in delegate-rich California.

Competing in more than 50 contests since February, Mrs. Clinton has amassed a majority in the race for delegates. Taking into account the six contests on Tuesday, Mrs. Clinton has at least 2,755 delegates to 1,852 delegates for Mr. Sanders, according to an Associated Press countenough to for her to declare victory near the end of the primary season. It takes 2,383 delegates to win the Democratic nomination.

Just the District of Columbia has yet to vote, where only 20 delegates are at stake in the citys June 14 primary. Mr. Sanders has vowed to remain in the race until after the D.C. primary.

Democrats divide up their delegates into pledged delegates, who are elected in caucuses and primaries, and unpledged superdelegates, or Democratic Party insiders who are free to cast a vote for any candidate at the partys July convention.

The exact number of pledged delegates from Tuesdays contests wont be known until after vote counting is finished in California.

Mrs. Clinton dominated Mr. Sanders by three of the metrics needed to win a primary campaign: beating Mr. Sanders handily in the popular vote, amassing nearly 400 more pledged delegate than the Vermont Senator and using her deep ties to the Democratic Party establishment to lock up many superdelegates early in the process.

A vote tally compiled by Real Clear Politics gave her a lead of more than 3 million in the popular vote, though some caucuses don"t give vote tallies.

In pledged delegates, three networks projected she would receive an outright majority.

She also dominated in the superdelegate battle, with nearly 600 publicly supporting her. Mr. Sanders has drawn only 48 superdelegates and has made no inroads in convincing her backers to switch sides.

The former secretary of state became the presumptive Democratic nominee this week ahead of the six Tuesday primaries after the Associated Press declared she had garnered enough support from the unpledged superdelegates to secure the nomination.The states voting Tuesday night were California, New Jersey, Montana, New Mexico, North Dakota and South Dakota.

The Sanders campaign said it would continue to try to sway superdelegates ahead of the Democratic convention.

Secretary Clinton does not have and will not have the requisite number of pledged delegates to secure the nomination. She will be dependent on superdelegates who don"t vote until July 25 and who can change their minds between now and then, Sanders campaign communications director Michael Briggs said.

Our job from now until the convention is to convince those superdelegates that Bernie is by far the strongest candidate against Donald Trump, he added.

Mrs. Clinton has built a much more commanding lead over Mr. Sanders than in the last contested Democratic primary campaign in 2008, when President Barack Obama emerged as the winner.

By the end of the final set of primaries in the 2008 race, Mr. Obama led Mrs. Clinton by about 125 pledged delegates. He had 389 superdelegates supporting him at the close of the primary season.

Write to Byron Tau at byron.tau@wsj.com

Source: http://www.wsj.com/articles/hillary-clinton-takes-decisive-lead-over-bernie-sanders-in-delegate-count-popular-vote-1465389182

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