Frontrunners Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton rolled to easy wins in
New York state’s presidential primaries, recapturing lost campaign momentum and
taking big steps toward capturing their respective parties’ nominations.
Trump’s huge victory in his home state pushed him closer to capturing
the 1,237 delegates needed to win the Republican presidential nomination and
avoiding a contested national convention in July.
Meanwhile, Mrs Clinton’s dominating double-digit win in New York broke
a winning streak by Democratic rival Bernie Sanders and made it nearly
impossible for him to overtake her commanding lead in the delegates needed to
win the nomination.
The victories for Trump and
Clinton in one of the biggest state nominating contests so far set up both
front-runners for strong performances next Tuesday, when they are expected to
do well in five other North-eastern state primaries.
Mrs Clinton’s win in New York followed some of the most heated personal
exchanges of her campaign against Sanders, a Vermont senator who had won seven
of the last eight state-by-state nominating contests.
The New York victory will expand Clinton’s lead of 244 pledged
delegates over Sanders, and make it nearly impossible for him to overcome the
deficit and capture the 2,383 convention delegates needed for the nomination
under Democratic rules that allocate delegates proportionally based on each
state’s result.
“The race for the Democratic nomination is in the home stretch, and
victory is in sight,” Mrs Clinton said, noting that she had gained more than 10
million votes and won in every region of the country.
While Mrs Clinton reached out to Mr Sanders supporters, she repeated
language she has used recently to criticise her opponent for offering vague
policy ideas without a concrete explanation of how he would achieve them.
“In the bright lights of New York we have seen it’s not enough to
diagnose problems, you have to explain how you actually solve them,” she said.
Mr Trump had more than 60 per cent of the Republican vote with about 40
per cent counted, easily beating rivals Texan senator Ted Cruz and Ohio Governor
John Kasich, putting him in position to possibly win most or all of the state’s
95 delegates.
Mr Trump could win all of the delegates if his vote total is above 50
per cent statewide and in each of the state’s congressional districts.
“We don’t have much of a race anymore based on what I’m seeing on
television,” Mr Trump told cheering supporters at a victory party at his Trump
Tower in Manhattan. “We are really, really rocking.”Mr Trump entered the New York contest with 756 delegates, while Cruz had 559 and Kasich had 144, according to an Associated Press count.
The count includes endorsements from several delegates who are free to
support the candidate of their choice. Mr Trump said his New York win would make it almost mathematically
impossible for Mr Cruz to win the Republican nomination on the first ballot at
the party’s national convention in July.
If Mr Trump does not secure enough delegates needed to win the nomination on the first ballot at the July 18-21 conclave in Cleveland, delegates would be allowed to switch to other candidates.
Mr Trump remains unpopular with the Republican leaders and activists who select and serve as delegates, while Mr Cruz has invested time and money courting them.
Some establishment Republicans have been alienated by Mr Trump’s more incendiary proposals, such as building a wall along the border with Mexico and slapping a temporary ban on Muslims entering the United States. (ABC News)
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