Sanders: ‘Clinton Team Thinks Race Is Over. They’re Wrong’

WASHINGTON (AP) —
Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Bernie Sanders speaks at a campaign rally at the University of Wyoming in Laramie, Wyoming. (Mark Kauzlarich/Reuters)
Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders. (Mark Kauzlarich/Reuters)

Bernie Sanders said Tuesday that his primary bid against Hillary Clinton was far from over, pointing to his victory in Indiana and strength in upcoming races as a sign of his durability in the presidential campaign.

“I know that the Clinton campaign thinks this campaign is over. They’re wrong,” Sanders said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press from New Albany, Indiana. “Maybe it’s over for the insiders and the party establishment but the voters today in Indiana had a different idea.”

The Vermont senator acknowledged that he faced an “uphill climb” to the Democratic nomination but said he was “in this campaign to win and we are going to fight until the last vote is cast.”

Sanders spoke to the AP after he defeated Clinton in Indiana’s primary, predicting that he would achieve “more victories in the weeks to come” in West Virginia, Kentucky, Oregon and California.

Of the 83 Indiana delegates that were at stake, Sanders will gain at least 43. Clinton picked up at least 37. Three delegates remain to be allocated, pending final vote tallies.

Sanders’ win in Indiana likely won’t make much of a dent in Clinton’s lead of more than 300 pledged delegates. Clinton is still more than 90 percent of the way to clinching the Democratic nomination when the count includes superdelegates, the elected officials, and party leaders who are free to support the candidate of their choice.

Based on primaries and caucuses to date, that means that Clinton now has 1,682 and Sanders has 1,361. Clinton’s lead is bigger when including superdelegates, or party officials who can back any candidate. She has 2,202, or 181 delegates away from the 2,383 needed to win, keeping her on track to clinch the nomination by early June. Sanders has 1,400.

If he still hopes to win the nomination, Sanders would need to win more than 84 percent of the remaining delegates and superdelegates.

Sanders said in the interview that he would be the best-positioned Democrat to take on Republican Donald Trump, who is now the likely Republican nominee after Texas Sen. Ted Cruz dropped out of the race. “There is nothing more I would like than to take on and defeat Donald Trump, someone who must never become president of this country.”

Sanders said he had no intention of dropping out of the race and rejected the notion that his criticism of Clinton’s record on issues like trade, campaign finance and the Iraq war would help Trump.

“There is nothing that I have said about Secretary Clinton that the Republicans are not more than aware of. They must have dozens and dozens of opposition researchers,” Sanders said. “They will go into areas that I have chosen not to go into. They will be talking about emails. They will be talking about the Clinton foundation.”

Sanders said he wants to debate Clinton in California later this month, noting that both campaigns had reached an agreement in principle to hold the forum in the nation’s largest state.

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