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Hillary Clinton Wins New Jersey, One Day After Effectively Clinching Nomination | Hillary Clinton Wins New Jersey, One Day After Effectively Clinching Nomination |
(35 minutes later) | |
Hillary Clinton rolled up a huge victory margin in the New Jersey primary on Tuesday as she prepared to claim the Democratic presidential nomination and begin the task of swaying supporters of Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont to unite with her against Donald J. Trump. | |
Mr. Sanders made plans to lay off most of his campaign staff, yet he appeared reluctant to let go completely after months of political warfare against a Clinton machine that he holds in thinly veiled contempt. With six states voting on Tuesday, Mr. Sanders was holding out hope for a huge upset in the California primary to justify staying in the race and lobbying Democratic officials to support him in a contested convention next month. | |
Montana, New Mexico and the Dakotas also held Democratic contests on Tuesday. Republicans voted in several states, although Mr. Trump became the presumptive nominee in early May. | Montana, New Mexico and the Dakotas also held Democratic contests on Tuesday. Republicans voted in several states, although Mr. Trump became the presumptive nominee in early May. |
As Mrs. Clinton sought to turn her attention to the general election, Mr. Trump, who had a weekslong head start, was busy reckoning with problems of his own making. His criticism of a federal judge, Gonzalo P. Curiel, for the judge’s Mexican heritage continued to inflict damage on his campaign, as the House speaker, Paul D. Ryan, called Mr. Trump’s remarks racist and other Republicans piled on criticism. One Republican senator rescinded his support. | |
Mr. Trump, speaking to supporters in Briarcliff Manor, N.Y., pledged to make Republicans “proud of our party and our movement,” though he did not try to defuse the controversy. Instead, reading carefully from a teleprompter, he mounted a lengthy attack on Mrs. Clinton’s record, saying she had “turned the State Department into her private hedge fund.” And he explicitly reached out to Sanders supporters who he said had been “left out in the cold by a rigged system.” | |
“We can’t solve our problems by counting on the politicians who created our problems,” Mr. Trump said. “The Clintons have turned the politics of personal enrichment into an art form for themselves.” | |
Although Tuesday had promised to be a watershed moment in the nation’s political history, it proved anticlimactic after The Associated Press reported Monday night that Mrs. Clinton had secured enough delegates to clinch the party’s nomination. But she chose to stick to her plan to use a victory rally Tuesday night in Brooklyn to celebrate her achievement — becoming the first woman to win a major party’s nomination — with some of the same New York Democrats who helped her win a Senate seat in 2000, beginning her career in elected office. | |
The unexpected news set off conversations Tuesday within the two campaigns, with Clinton representatives preparing to make overtures to the Sanders camp as early as Wednesday morning. | The unexpected news set off conversations Tuesday within the two campaigns, with Clinton representatives preparing to make overtures to the Sanders camp as early as Wednesday morning. |
Sanders advisers were on edge over the declaration that Mrs. Clinton had locked up the nomination, worried that it would depress voter turnout in California. And Mr. Sanders told NBC on Tuesday evening that he was “upset” and “disappointed” that The A.P. had made its call based on a survey of superdelegates, party officials who can shift their allegiances as late as the convention. | Sanders advisers were on edge over the declaration that Mrs. Clinton had locked up the nomination, worried that it would depress voter turnout in California. And Mr. Sanders told NBC on Tuesday evening that he was “upset” and “disappointed” that The A.P. had made its call based on a survey of superdelegates, party officials who can shift their allegiances as late as the convention. |
Mr. Sanders said that his aides were “on the phone right now” with superdelegates, including those supporting Mrs. Clinton. | |
“Defying history is what this campaign has been about,” he said of his bid, which was initially seen as a long shot. “I am going to be meeting with our supporters to figure out the best way forward so that we have a government which represents all of us, and not just the 1 percent.” | “Defying history is what this campaign has been about,” he said of his bid, which was initially seen as a long shot. “I am going to be meeting with our supporters to figure out the best way forward so that we have a government which represents all of us, and not just the 1 percent.” |
His campaign also sent an email late Tuesday to supporters asking them to commit to vote for him in the final Democratic primary, in the District of Columbia next Tuesday, suggesting that Mr. Sanders was not calling it quits just yet. | |
Still, Mr. Sanders planned to let go as much as 90 percent of his campaign staff on Wednesday, according to current and former aides who spoke on the condition of anonymity. | |
While Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Sanders have not spoken in weeks, representatives of their campaigns have been talking in recent days about the future of the race and about policy priorities for the party’s convention platform in July, according to two Democrats close to the candidates. So far, the discussions have not included the possibility that Mr. Sanders will concede to Mrs. Clinton or endorse her, the Democrats said, but the groundwork has been laid for an eventual conversation or meeting. | |
Several advisers to Mr. Sanders said Tuesday that he had not been inviting opinions or holding meetings about whether to withdraw from the race, nor had he sketched out a speech announcing the suspension of his campaign. They said he had been wholly focused on winning the California primary in hopes that a victory in such a politically important state would give him an opening to lobby superdelegates to shift their support to him. | Several advisers to Mr. Sanders said Tuesday that he had not been inviting opinions or holding meetings about whether to withdraw from the race, nor had he sketched out a speech announcing the suspension of his campaign. They said he had been wholly focused on winning the California primary in hopes that a victory in such a politically important state would give him an opening to lobby superdelegates to shift their support to him. |
“Moving a lot of superdelegates into our column will require a big campaign of persuasion, a nationwide logistical effort, but we believe we have a strong case to make to them — especially if we do very well in Tuesday’s primaries,” said Tad Devine, a senior adviser to Mr. Sanders. | “Moving a lot of superdelegates into our column will require a big campaign of persuasion, a nationwide logistical effort, but we believe we have a strong case to make to them — especially if we do very well in Tuesday’s primaries,” said Tad Devine, a senior adviser to Mr. Sanders. |
Mr. Devine declined to discuss whether Mr. Sanders had heard from any emissaries of the Clinton campaign, like Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, with whom Mr. Sanders has a good relationship and speaks periodically. (Mr. Schumer, reached by phone, declined to say whether he had spoken to Mr. Sanders recently.) | Mr. Devine declined to discuss whether Mr. Sanders had heard from any emissaries of the Clinton campaign, like Senator Chuck Schumer of New York, with whom Mr. Sanders has a good relationship and speaks periodically. (Mr. Schumer, reached by phone, declined to say whether he had spoken to Mr. Sanders recently.) |
Other campaign advisers said they expected Mr. Sanders to consider his options during his flight from California to Vermont on Wednesday. One recalled that Mrs. Clinton did much the same when she found herself in a similar situation eight years ago. | Other campaign advisers said they expected Mr. Sanders to consider his options during his flight from California to Vermont on Wednesday. One recalled that Mrs. Clinton did much the same when she found herself in a similar situation eight years ago. |
The day after Barack Obama clinched the Democratic nomination in June 2008, Mrs. Clinton huddled with her advisers and debated whether to hold on to her delegates and try to force a contested convention. She decided to endorse Mr. Obama instead. The two had a tense but productive private meeting that Thursday night, and two days later she delivered a speech thanking her supporters and urging them to unite around the party’s presumptive nominee, regardless of their disappointment and even bitterness over her defeat. | The day after Barack Obama clinched the Democratic nomination in June 2008, Mrs. Clinton huddled with her advisers and debated whether to hold on to her delegates and try to force a contested convention. She decided to endorse Mr. Obama instead. The two had a tense but productive private meeting that Thursday night, and two days later she delivered a speech thanking her supporters and urging them to unite around the party’s presumptive nominee, regardless of their disappointment and even bitterness over her defeat. |
Mrs. Clinton’s advisers said Tuesday that they were eager to talk to the Sanders campaign about ways to unite the party behind her, but that they were inclined to wait to hear from Mr. Sanders rather than try to force the issue. About 10 million people had voted for Mr. Sanders before Tuesday’s contests, and as many as one in four of his supporters, according to some polls, have said they would not vote for Mrs. Clinton in the general election. | Mrs. Clinton’s advisers said Tuesday that they were eager to talk to the Sanders campaign about ways to unite the party behind her, but that they were inclined to wait to hear from Mr. Sanders rather than try to force the issue. About 10 million people had voted for Mr. Sanders before Tuesday’s contests, and as many as one in four of his supporters, according to some polls, have said they would not vote for Mrs. Clinton in the general election. |
That resistance to Mrs. Clinton is likely to soften somewhat once Mr. Sanders leaves the race, and especially if he endorses her. But Clinton advisers and allies say they will need Mr. Sanders’s help to bring around the many younger voters and liberals who overwhelmingly prefer him. | That resistance to Mrs. Clinton is likely to soften somewhat once Mr. Sanders leaves the race, and especially if he endorses her. But Clinton advisers and allies say they will need Mr. Sanders’s help to bring around the many younger voters and liberals who overwhelmingly prefer him. |
Yet her allies also predicted that many Sanders supporters would be attracted to the historic achievement of a woman earning a major party’s nomination for the first time. | Yet her allies also predicted that many Sanders supporters would be attracted to the historic achievement of a woman earning a major party’s nomination for the first time. |
“I think that will sink in over the next few weeks and months and will go a long way to helping unite the party,” Mr. Schumer said. “I was on the bike this morning and saw on TV that Monday night, Hillary had won the nomination, and I got teary-eyed. From a 10,000-foot perspective, it’s an amazing accomplishment.” | “I think that will sink in over the next few weeks and months and will go a long way to helping unite the party,” Mr. Schumer said. “I was on the bike this morning and saw on TV that Monday night, Hillary had won the nomination, and I got teary-eyed. From a 10,000-foot perspective, it’s an amazing accomplishment.” |
If Mrs. Clinton is beginning the general election with many Sanders supporters incensed at her, Mr. Trump is in the midst of his own self-made crisis. He is forcing Republicans to confront a painful choice: Embrace his brand of racial politics, one that could taint the party’s image well beyond this election, or abandon their presumptive nominee and hand the White House to the Democrats for another four years. | If Mrs. Clinton is beginning the general election with many Sanders supporters incensed at her, Mr. Trump is in the midst of his own self-made crisis. He is forcing Republicans to confront a painful choice: Embrace his brand of racial politics, one that could taint the party’s image well beyond this election, or abandon their presumptive nominee and hand the White House to the Democrats for another four years. |
Already uneasy about Mr. Trump’s hard-edged style of populism, leading Republicans were pushed to the breaking point over his claims that Judge Curiel could not rule fairly in a lawsuit against him because the judge is Mexican-American. | Already uneasy about Mr. Trump’s hard-edged style of populism, leading Republicans were pushed to the breaking point over his claims that Judge Curiel could not rule fairly in a lawsuit against him because the judge is Mexican-American. |
Those comments prompted Senator Mark S. Kirk of Illinois, who is up for re-election, to come out against Mr. Trump on Tuesday, amid a round of condemnation rarely heard in American politics. Mr. Ryan, the House speaker, called Mr. Trump’s remark “the textbook definition of a racist comment,” and the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, bluntly told Mr. Trump to drop his attacks on the judge. | Those comments prompted Senator Mark S. Kirk of Illinois, who is up for re-election, to come out against Mr. Trump on Tuesday, amid a round of condemnation rarely heard in American politics. Mr. Ryan, the House speaker, called Mr. Trump’s remark “the textbook definition of a racist comment,” and the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, bluntly told Mr. Trump to drop his attacks on the judge. |
Mr. Trump bowed to those pleas to a degree Tuesday afternoon, issuing a statement in which he reversed his assertion that Judge Curiel’s ethnicity made him inherently biased and vowed not to discuss the case further. | Mr. Trump bowed to those pleas to a degree Tuesday afternoon, issuing a statement in which he reversed his assertion that Judge Curiel’s ethnicity made him inherently biased and vowed not to discuss the case further. |
It is a testament to Mrs. Clinton’s own unpopularity, and to the country’s sharply polarized politics, that Mr. Trump remains competitive at all. But Mrs. Clinton has a well-financed, data-driven campaign with nearly 200,000 volunteers who have contacted more than 16 million voters so far, her allies and advisers say. | It is a testament to Mrs. Clinton’s own unpopularity, and to the country’s sharply polarized politics, that Mr. Trump remains competitive at all. But Mrs. Clinton has a well-financed, data-driven campaign with nearly 200,000 volunteers who have contacted more than 16 million voters so far, her allies and advisers say. |