Bernie Sanders has refused to quit the presidential race, assuring his supporters, "The struggle continues". Jon Queally of Common Dreams reports.
BERNIE SANDERS refused to concede the race for the Democratic Party presidential nomination on Tuesday night, even as he congratulated his rival Hillary Clinton on her primary wins and thanked his supporters for their determined commitment to the "political revolution" he has championed throughout the hotly contested primary season.
He told an enthusiastic and cheering crowd in Santa Monica, California,
"If this campaign has taught us anything, it has proven that millions of Americans who love this country are prepared to stand up and fight to make this country a much better place."
When Sanders took the stage, and as of this writing, major news outlets had awarded three of the day's six contests – New Jersey, New Mexico, and South Dakota – to Clinton, while Sanders was able to claim victories in both Montana and North Dakota.
Results in California, meanwhile, remained too close to call.
Though roundly criticised as an inaccurate assessment of the delegate math, media outlets referred to Clinton as the "presumptive nominee of the Democratic Party" throughout the evening. During a prime time speech from Brooklyn, New York, Clinton celebrated the "historic" night after being the first female candidate of either major party to earn the distinction.
In his speech, though it appeared at first Sanders might submit to the not-so-subtle urgings of the Democratic Party establishment and many political pundits who said it was now time for him to quit the race, the U.S. senator from Vermont defied those sentiments by saying his campaign would forge ahead towards next Tuesday's final primary contest in Washington, D.C..
“You’ve built this enormous grass-roots movement; what do you want to do with that?" @POTUS gently nudges Bernie out https://t.co/ZtU50QoEq7
— Julie Davis (@juliehdavis) June 9, 2016
Sanders said:
"What this is about is millions of people from coast to coast knowing that we can do much, much better as a nation. Our fight is to transform this country and to understand that we are in this together, understand that all of what we believe is what the majority of American people believe and to understand that the struggle continues."
When he subsequently said the "fight would continue," the crowd erupted with a roar of approval.
He continued:
"We are going to fight hard to win the primary in Washington, D.C.. And then we will take our fight for social, economic, racial, and environmental justice to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania."
While Sanders acknowledged the difficult "arithmetic" for his campaign on Tuesday night – calling the fight ahead "a very, very steep fight" – he stuck to his repeated promise that he was ready to take "the movement" and energy of his campaign all the way to July's national convention.
He told the roaring crowd, before concluding:
"Thank you all. The struggle continues."
Watch the full speech:
This story was originally published by Common Dreams under the heading,'"The Struggle Continues": Sanders Refuses to Bend the Knee to Establishment', on 8 June 2016 and has been republished under a Creative Commons licence.
Bernie Sanders is forging ahead of Hillary Clinton in the Democratic primaries but you rarely read about it, says... https://t.co/GgKfC59Qfx
— IndependentAustralia (@independentaus) April 11, 2016
Monthly Donation
Single Donation
Sanders fans reluctantly back Clinton with unenthusiastic hashtag https://t.co/v0XzlaZWOc #GirlIGuessImWithHer pic.twitter.com/f2jI98TObO
— The Hill (@thehill) June 9, 2016
Support independent journalism. Subscribe to IA for just $5.