Socialist Democrat Bernie Sanders Wipes The Floor With Corrupt Hillary Clinton In West Virginia Primary

I LOVE IT!! The self-admitted socialist, Bernie Sanders, is running neck and neck with the ultra-corrupt criminal Hillary Clinton, and has now won the last two races after winning the Democrat West Virginia primary.

Hillary Clinton continues to lose support for her campaign at every turn, including many Independents and staunch Democrats, who will now be crossing the isle and use their votes to Make America Great Again by voting for Donald Trump.

The hoards of people running from Hillary Clinton don’t want to vote for a shady criminal who has no respect for the American People or national security, and is responsible for the deaths of more people than I can count, and most of all that Hillary Clinton feels with all of her heart that she is better than you and I, and is above the law and untouchable by authorities or the courts. We’ll see what happens after the FBI is finished with her.

It’s also quite funny that Ted Cruz came out before the West Virginia primary, and said that he may decide to re-start, or “unsuspend” his campaign if he did well in the WV primary race, but then only received 9% of the vote, compared to Donald Trump’s 77%. The Republican race is over, and any attempts to steal the nomination from Trump will cause a nationwide revolt, and drive the final nail into the GOP’s coffin.

Bernie Sanders defeated front-runner Hillary Clinton in West Virginia on Tuesday, regaining momentum and leaving some of Mrs. Clinton’s backers uneasy that her path to the Democratic presidential nomination figures to be rocky to the end.

“I’m always uncomfortable when she loses,” said New Hampshire state Sen. Lou D’Allesandro, a Clinton supporter. “Every time [Mr. Sanders] presents himself and presents his story, more people start talking about him. And that goes on and on.”

Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders greets supporters at a campaign rally in Stockton, Calif., on Tuesday.

On the Republican side, presumptive nominee Donald Trump easily won primaries in West Virginia and Nebraska.

The New York businessman no longer has any opposition, having cleared the once-crowded GOP field. Still, he continues to campaign in primary states, pursuing the magic number of 1,237 delegates needed to clinch the party nomination.

Mr. Trump spent the weekend stumping in West Virginia and Nebraska. He also appeared in the next two states on the GOP calendar, Oregon and Washington.

Mr. Trump has set his gaze on the general election in the fall, setting up a fundraising team and tapping New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie to lead the transition should he be elected president.

A Sanders victory of any size in West Virginia wouldn’t dislodge Mrs. Clinton from her commanding position in a primary fight that has outlasted the Republican contest. West Virginia offers only 29 Democratic delegates and, under party rules that award them on a proportional basis, Mrs. Clinton was unlikely to come away empty-handed.

But polls suggest Mr. Sanders could notch wins next week in Oregon and Kentucky, demonstrating that a sizable wing of the party remains attracted to his populist message and isn’t yet ready to coalesce behind Mrs. Clinton.

Victories also tend to fuel Mr. Sanders’s fundraising, giving him more money to air TV ads and prolong the fight.

Mr. D’Allesandro, the New Hampshire lawmaker, said he has written emails to the Clinton campaign asking that they compete more aggressively in upcoming contests. “You want to enter the convention with the best possible wind at your back.”
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders’ victory in West Virginia’s Democratic presidential primary is his 19th, compared with 23 states won by front-runner Hillary Clinton. Photo: Getty Images

At this stage in the contest, the delegate math remains decisively in Mrs. Clinton’s favor. She led Mr. Sanders by 290 pledged delegates heading into the West Virginia primary. With superdelegates thrown in, her lead stood at 2,228 to 1,454. A total of 2,383 delegates are needed to clinch the nomination. Superdelegates are elected officials and party leaders who can vote for whichever candidate they prefer.

Mr. Sanders reiterated in a statement Tuesday night that he intends to stay in the race: “We are in this campaign to win the Democratic nomination, and we’re going to stay in the race until the last vote is cast.”

He added: “We fully acknowledge we have an uphill climb ahead of us, but we’re used to that. We have been fighting uphill from the day this campaign began.”

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