Hillary Clinton Wins Last Democratic Primary in Washington, DC

Edited by Pavel Jacomino
2016-06-15 16:41:18

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Washington, June 15 (RHC)-- In the United States, the Democratic presidential race has officially come to an end with Hillary Clinton winning the primary contest in the U.S. capital, gaining nearly 79 percent of the vote.

Hillary Clinton, who already had enough delegates to be her party's presumptive nominee, also met with rival Bernie Sanders Tuesday night and talked about the Democratic Party platform to be drawn up at this summer's convention.

"We're going to have a wide-ranging conversation, because we share a lot of the same goals," Clinton said Tuesday night in an interview with Telemundo, an American Spanish-language broadcast television network.  "We both want to raise the minimum wage, we want to fight inequality of income, we want to make college affordable and we certainly want everybody to get health care."

"I very much am looking forward to having his support in this campaign, because Donald Trump poses a serious threat to our nation," she added.  Sanders has not formally ended his campaign and has not endorsed Clinton either.  He has promised to give every voter a chance to decide between the two candidates.

Nonetheless, the Vermont senator has said he's committed to working with Clinton to defeat Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee.

Sanders said he would continue to "fight as hard as we can" to transform the Democratic Party.  He is a staunch critic of the party's super-delegate system among other things.  He argues that some of the super-delegates had endorsed Clinton eight months before the primaries began in the United States.



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