While Clinton Sets Her Sight on Trump, Sanders Pulls Her Back

Clinton’s Liberal Health Care Plan Could Clinch Sanders’ Endorsement · The Fiscal Times

During the last month, Hillary Clinton has tried to pivot from the Democratic primary contest in anticipation of a bruising fall confrontation with Republican Donald Trump -- and each time, Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont has spoiled her plans.

After soundly defeating Sanders in late April in New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Maryland, and Delaware and surging ahead in the delegate count, Clinton felt comfortable enough to turn her sights on Trump and the general election campaign.

Related: Mark Cuban to Hillary Clinton: You Need Someone Like Me as Your VP

Almost any way you cut it, Clinton is assured of picking up a majority of the pledged and “super” delegates necessary to claim the Democratic presidential nomination this summer in Philadelphia. Clinton leads Sanders, 2,240 to 1,473 delegates, with a minimum of 2,383 needed to clinch the nomination.

With little more than 1,000 delegates still up for grabs, it is mathematically impossible for Sanders to overtake Clinton at this point, absent a miracle showing in the remainder of primary races that would convince scores of super delegates – party officials who are entitled to vote for a nominee automatically -- to shift their allegiance from Clinton to Sanders.

But Sanders has stubbornly remained in the race, and has scored impressive victories over the last two weeks in Indiana and West Virginia.

He has won 54 percent of the pledged delegates since “Super Tuesday” in early March, according to one analysis, and has gradually moved up in the national polls into a virtual tie with Clinton. Recent polling shows that Sanders would do better than Clinton in a head-to-head contest with Trump. And he is headed into friendly terrain for the final rounds of primaries and caucuses, culminating with the June 7th primary in delegate rich California.

Related: 18 Possible Picks for Hillary’s Vice President

“There are a large number of super delegates who announced for secretary Clinton even before there even was a race and before they even knew about Bernie Sanders,” Jeff Weaver, Sanders’s campaign manager, told MSNBC late last week.

“So there is a tremendous amount of opportunity I think for super delegates to take another look at this race and to make the decision that Bernie Sanders is ultimately better for the Democratic Party in terms of beating Donald Trump and electing down ballot Democrats.”

Clinton advisers and political analysts say that the former secretary of state will simply continue to rack up nearly as many delegates as Sanders under the party’s rules for allocating delegates proportionate to the popular vote, and that there is no way Sanders could close the gap.