This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/live/2016/apr/09/clinton-sanders-wyoming-caucus-trump-cruz-colorado-election-news-convention

The article has changed 13 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Clinton and Sanders battle for Wyoming as Republicans gather in Colorado – campaign live Clinton and Sanders battle for Wyoming as Republicans gather in Colorado – campaign live
(35 minutes later)
7.14pm BST
19:14
Bernie Sanders rallies in the Bronx
At a campaign rally in the New York City borough of the Bronx this afternoon, Vermont senator Bernie Sanders highlighted policies that would positively impact racial minorities.
“We’re gonna invest in our young people in jobs and education, not jails and incarceration!” Sanders said, to loud cheers and chants of “Bernie! Bernie! Bernie!” from the crowd.
“We are going to reform a very, very broke criminal justice system,” he continued. “I am tired and you are tired of seeing videos on television of unarmed people, often minorities, being shot.” Sanders cautioned that the vast majority of police officers are law-abiding citizens who face danger in their day-to-day work keeping American cities safe, “but when a police officer, like any other public official, breaks the law, that officer must be held accountable.”
Sanders also called the abolishment of for-profit prisons, telling the crowd that “corporations should not be making money by getting more people into jail - that’s wrong.”
With a few notable exceptions, Sanders has underperformed among African-American voters and Latino-heavy communities in primaries and caucuses, and still falls behind opponent Hillary Clinton in polling of those groups.
7.06pm BST
19:06
We know virtually everything about the presidential candidates, and as primary season presses on we’re gaining a better sense of their national electability. In addition to covering their campaigns, we want to know which issues matter most to you. Tell us and help shape our coverage.
Open contributions: Which election issue matters most to you?
6.56pm BST
18:56
Meanwhile, in a neighboring rectangular state, Texas senator Ted Cruz’s ground game in Colorado is poised win him a vast majority of delegates in the state’s Republican convention today, a possible window into the senator’s strategy for the the seemingly inevitable contested convention in Cleveland this summer.
Cruz has already won every delegate available in the district elections held over the past week in Colorado, and appears on the verge of shutting out opponent Donald Trump, whose organizational woes have contributed to delegate attrition even in states that he won handily, like Louisiana.
Case in point: The Guardian’s Ben Jacobs reports from the state convention that Trump’s campaign apparatus has bungled its ballots for pro-Trump delegates - at the Colorado state convention, attendees vote for delegates who support certain candidates, rather than candidates themselves - almost beyond belief.
Looking at the Trump sample ballot, they have the delegate numbers wrong for 7 different people there. Votes cast on scantrons here.
Of the 7 wrong numbers on the Trump sample ballot in CO, four lead to votes for other Trump delegates, two go to unpledged and one to Cruz
Also, Trump sample ballot misspells the names of two delegates in CO. One of whom also has the wrong number
Corrected Trump sample ballot still has three wrong numbers pic.twitter.com/6EeS1rUDIY
6.37pm BST6.37pm BST
18:3718:37
Scott BixbyScott Bixby
As Democrats in each of Wyoming’s 23 counties begin the caucus process, here’s a quick rundown of what’s at stake for Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders in the Cowboy State.As Democrats in each of Wyoming’s 23 counties begin the caucus process, here’s a quick rundown of what’s at stake for Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders in the Cowboy State.
Wyoming will send a scant 18 delegates to the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia this summer, of which only 14 will be selected by today’s caucus results. Given Clinton’s current delegate lead over Sanders (1,280 to 1,030, discounting) a victory in today’s caucus is less about math than “momentum.” Sanders has won the last six nominating contests in a row, and a win in Wyoming would give him another notch in his belt ahead of more numerically important contests in New York, Pennsylvania and Connecticut later this month.Wyoming will send a scant 18 delegates to the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia this summer, of which only 14 will be selected by today’s caucus results. Given Clinton’s current delegate lead over Sanders (1,280 to 1,030, discounting) a victory in today’s caucus is less about math than “momentum.” Sanders has won the last six nominating contests in a row, and a win in Wyoming would give him another notch in his belt ahead of more numerically important contests in New York, Pennsylvania and Connecticut later this month.
The demographics are good for Sanders: Wyoming, like many of the states in which he has claimed victory, is a rural, white, Western caucus state with a small but vocal Democratic minority. Additionally, Wyoming is a state that has not traditionally fallen behind Clinton: In 2008, then-senator Barack Obama defeated Clinton 61% to 38% in the state’s caucus.The demographics are good for Sanders: Wyoming, like many of the states in which he has claimed victory, is a rural, white, Western caucus state with a small but vocal Democratic minority. Additionally, Wyoming is a state that has not traditionally fallen behind Clinton: In 2008, then-senator Barack Obama defeated Clinton 61% to 38% in the state’s caucus.
An extension of his current winning streak has been high on Sanders’ to-do list - which might explain why he gave his victory speech after his success in the Wisconsin primary on Tuesday in Laramie, Wyoming, a college town of 30,000 people.An extension of his current winning streak has been high on Sanders’ to-do list - which might explain why he gave his victory speech after his success in the Wisconsin primary on Tuesday in Laramie, Wyoming, a college town of 30,000 people.
6.24pm BST6.24pm BST
18:2418:24
Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton face off in Wyoming caucus
Alan YuhasAlan Yuhas
Hello and welcome to our live coverage of Wyoming’s Democratic caucuses and Colorado Republican convention, contests in which Bernie Sanders and Ted Cruz are trying to clear paths to the presidency with unorthodox campaigns.Hello and welcome to our live coverage of Wyoming’s Democratic caucuses and Colorado Republican convention, contests in which Bernie Sanders and Ted Cruz are trying to clear paths to the presidency with unorthodox campaigns.
Bernie Sanders, who has won six contests in a row and polls well in western states, is hoping to continue his string of victories ahead of the next primary, in New York. Although Wyoming has far fewer delegates than New York’s 291, a resounding defeat for Hillary Clinton there would play to Sanders’ argument that he is as electable as the Democratic frontrunner, who still has a huge lead in delegates.Bernie Sanders, who has won six contests in a row and polls well in western states, is hoping to continue his string of victories ahead of the next primary, in New York. Although Wyoming has far fewer delegates than New York’s 291, a resounding defeat for Hillary Clinton there would play to Sanders’ argument that he is as electable as the Democratic frontrunner, who still has a huge lead in delegates.
Both Sanders and Clinton are holding competing events in New York City, and my colleague Lauren Gambino will report on their attempts to court the city’s diverse electorate. On Friday, Brooklyn welcomed its native son warmly, and Democrats in Buffalo heard Clinton turn her ire toward Donald Trump, the Republican frontrunner.Both Sanders and Clinton are holding competing events in New York City, and my colleague Lauren Gambino will report on their attempts to court the city’s diverse electorate. On Friday, Brooklyn welcomed its native son warmly, and Democrats in Buffalo heard Clinton turn her ire toward Donald Trump, the Republican frontrunner.
Bill Clinton is still on the trail for his wife, though not without controversy. Data editor Mona Chalabi has fact-checked the former president’s defense of crime and welfare laws that he signed, and which protesters said are responsible for the mass incarceration and poverty of black Americans.Bill Clinton is still on the trail for his wife, though not without controversy. Data editor Mona Chalabi has fact-checked the former president’s defense of crime and welfare laws that he signed, and which protesters said are responsible for the mass incarceration and poverty of black Americans.
In Colorado, Ted Cruz continues to chip away at Trump’s lead in the delegates. Cruz’s well-organized campaign has outplayed Trump’s clumsy operation at nearly every turn in Denver, where local party members have far more control of the process than in open primary elections that have given Trump his lead.In Colorado, Ted Cruz continues to chip away at Trump’s lead in the delegates. Cruz’s well-organized campaign has outplayed Trump’s clumsy operation at nearly every turn in Denver, where local party members have far more control of the process than in open primary elections that have given Trump his lead.
My colleague Ben Jacobs is in Denver to report on Cruz’s creep toward the frontrunner, and Trump’s struggle to make his campaign functional on the ground. Scott Bixby will be here shortly to host their reporting and give live results from the caucuses and convention as they come in.My colleague Ben Jacobs is in Denver to report on Cruz’s creep toward the frontrunner, and Trump’s struggle to make his campaign functional on the ground. Scott Bixby will be here shortly to host their reporting and give live results from the caucuses and convention as they come in.
Related: The Clintons of Chappaqua: it's Hillary's home turf, but Bill still shinesRelated: The Clintons of Chappaqua: it's Hillary's home turf, but Bill still shines
Updated
at 7.15pm BST