Sanders Forges Ahead: 'No One Said a Political Revolution Would Be Easy'
Following a series of presidential primary losses to Hillary Clinton on Tuesday, Bernie Sanders reminded supporters: “No one said a political revolution would be easy.”
“What you will not hear from the political and media establishment,” the campaign said in an email Wednesday, “is that, based on the primary and caucus schedule for the rest of the race, this is the high water mark for the Clinton campaign…Starting today, the map now shifts dramatically in our favor.”
“The fact remains that Hillary Clinton’s lead will never be as large as it is right now,” the email said. “From here on out we keep chipping away until we take the lead.”
Campaign manager Jeff Weaver said Wednesday from Sedona, Arizona that the Sanders team expects “over the weeks and months we will steadily, consistently and ultimately successfully erode her current advantage in pledged delegate.”
Clinton won primaries in Florida, Illinois, North Carolina and Ohio on Tuesday, and holds a narrow lead in the as-yet-uncalled Missouri.
But on a press call Wednesday, Weaver and Sanders’ chief strategist Tad Devine said the states coming up—Arizona, Washington, California, and Idaho—were more likely to vote for the senator from Vermont.
“We believe, as we look ahead at the states that are in front of us, that we can beat her in most of these states and beat her in some of these states by decisive margins,” Devine said.
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