Quantcast
Channel: Breaking News
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 6329

Clinton, Trump seek to quiet critics in New York primaries

$
0
0

NEW YORK: From a car wash in Queens to a hockey arena in Buffalo, both parties’ presidential candidates spread out across New York on Monday in a final quest for votes, a surreal scene for a state that hasn’t experienced contested White House primaries in decades.

For Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump, victories in New York on Tuesday could help quiet critics who have questioned their strength as front-runners. Each has suffered losses in recent contests that emboldened their rivals, though they still lead in delegate counts and are favored in New York.

Clinton, who represented the state as a senator for eight years, spent the final hours of campaigning trying to drive up turnout among women and minorities, her most ardent supporters. Since Sunday, she’s danced to Latin music at a Brooklyn block party, vowed to defend abortion rights to female supporters in Manhattan, prayed at a black church in Westchester, drank a bubble tea at a dumpling shop in Flushing and cheered newly unionized workers in Queens.

“We’re not taking anything for granted,” she said Monday after greeting workers at the Hi-Tek Car Wash & Lube in Queens. “Tell your friends and your family, everyone, to please vote tomorrow.”

Clinton’s campaign was blunter in outlining the state of the Democratic race. Clinton’s campaign manager Robby Mook declared the primary effectively over, saying Bernie Sanders faced a “close to impossible path to the nomination.”

The Vermont senator has rattled off a string of wins in recent primaries and caucuses. But unless he can topple Clinton in a delegate-rich state like New York, he faces increasingly limited opportunities to change the trajectory of the race.

While polling shows Clinton with a comfortable lead in New York, Sanders held out hope for a closer race.

“This is a campaign on the move,” Sanders shouted to a crowd of thousands gathered along the waterfront in Queens Monday night. “This is a movement getting the establishment very, very nervous.”

For Trump, New York is an opportunity to rebound from a trying stretch for his campaign — and with an exclamation point. The biggest question for him heading into Tuesday is whether he captures more than 50 percent of the vote statewide, which would put him in strong position to win all of the state’s 95 GOP delegates.

Trump was closing his New York campaigning with an evening rally in Buffalo, where thousands packed the city’s hockey arena to catch a glimpse of the billionaire businessman. He’s spent the past week emphasizing his ties to New York, particularly New York City, where he was born and where buildings bear his name.

“We love this city,” he said Monday in brief remarks to reporters at the Trump Tower. “You look at the other folks that are running, they couldn’t care less about New York.”

A big win for Trump is crucial if he hopes to clinch the nomination before the party’s convention in July.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 6329

Trending Articles