All five candidates make a last-minute campaign push in New York ahead of Tuesdayâs primary.
- Delegate-hungry Ted Cruz and John Kasich could diminish Donald Trumpâs haul in New York
- Many Californians in the American Independent Party joined by mistake, according to a Times investigation
- Trump campaign officials say the delegate process may hurt the GOP nominee in November
In a room filled with female supporters, a plea from Hillary Clinton to help her make history
Hillary Clinton has worked to strike a balance on the matter of potentially becoming the first female president â accenting it, but trying not to accent it too much. Monday was a day to accent it.
Before a rapturous crowd, mostly women, in a midtown Manhattan hotel, after the equally rapturous introductions by women ranging from former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords of Arizona to a Madison Square Garden union worker, Clinton suggested her prospective win was a component in a line of civil rights achievements dating to the suffragettes of the early 1900s.
Recounting what made Tuesdayâs New York primary special to her, she segued from her tenure as the stateâs U.S. senator to the work of women upstate in Seneca Falls, who crafted a declaration of womenâs rights.
âIt didnât come easily,â she said, recounting hunger strikes and women chaining themselves to the fence surrounding the White House. That sentiment is what her campaign is about, she said.
âWhen I think about the sacrifices of suffragettes, when I think about the sacrifices of the leaders of the civil rights movement, when I think about the sacrifices of those who were trying to form unions against extraordinarily violent protest,â she said. âWhen I think about what all these Americans did, starting in the 19th and going into the 20th century â to make a very simple frame on the idea that we are all created equal, we all have a right to life, liberty.â
The crowd roared over the end of her remarks.
The presence of Giffords, shot in the head in an attempted assassination in 2011, added an emotional component to another of Clintonâs pitches Monday: her insistence that challenger Bernie Sanders is not up to combating the National Rifle Assn. and other gun-rights groups. She criticized the Vermont senator, as she does almost every day, for voting for a measure that protected gun makers and sellers against legal liability in the case of shootings.
âThis is an issue that knows no boundaries,â Clinton said. âI have met too many people â fathers and mothers, siblings, children, close friends and loved ones â who have lost people. On average 90 people a day are killed by guns in America. That is 33,000 people a year.â
âThis has to be a voting issue. We have to organize ourselves,â she said. âThey know Iâm coming for them. Theyâre already coming after me, and I consider that a badge of honor. I will stand with Gabby Giffords.â
She also scored Republican candidates Donald Trump and Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas for remarks critical of Muslims.
âWhat youâre hearing from Trump and Cruz is not only offensive, itâs dangerous,â she said. âThat doesnât only offend us, that sends a message to the rest of the world. âŚWe need a coalition of nations to stand with us.â
Clintonâs day was a blur of activity that drove her from multiple visits with voters in places as disparate as a Queens carwash to the chandeliered hotel ballroom where she was embraced by supporters. She pleaded with all she met for their votes in Tuesdayâs primary, when she hopes â once again â to hasten the end of Sandersâ campaign.
Hillary Clinton campaigns like a local politician in New York
While rival Bernie Sanders has been drawing tens of thousands of people to rallies here ahead of Tuesdayâs New York primary, Hillary Clinton has campaigned more like a city council candidate, visiting neighborhoods to shake hands and rub shoulders with local leaders.
She has played dominoes at a senior center in East Harlem, danced at a Washington Heights block party and spoke at a church in Mount Vernon.
On Monday, the day before the stateâs crucial primary, she was making the rounds again. First, she visited a Yonkers hospital, flanked by city officials including the mayor and state lawmakers, and spoke to about 150 workers in a hot and crowded room.
âNew York values are Americaâs values, and we want to stand up for those, here in New York and across the country,â Clinton said, taking a shot at Republican candidate Ted Cruz, who had derisively referred to âNew York valuesâ during his campaign.
Next she was on to a car wash in Queens, which had the slogan âLube It or Lose It.â The car wash is unionized, and Clinton shook hands with the owner.
âIâm proud of what youâre doing,â she said. âThis is such a model. Iâm so impressed, so grateful.â
Before climbing back into her black SUV, a reporter asked how Clinton was feeling about Tuesdayâs primary.
âIâm excited. I will work as hard as I can,â she said. âIâve got great friends and supporters across the city and the state who are helping me, but weâre not talking anything for granted.â
Sheâs scheduled to appear in Manhattan with Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), the president of the Planned Parenthood Action Fund and former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.) in the afternoon.
Hillary Clinton says Donald Trump is hurting U.S. standing abroad
Hillary Clinton refused to respond to Donald Trump labeling her âcrooked Hillary,â but she nonetheless used his attack as an opportunity to challenge his own image.
âHe is hurting our unity at home,â Clinton said in an interview with ABCâs âThis Week.â âHe is undermining the values that we stand for in New York and across America, and heâs hurting us around the world.â
His insulting nickname for her doesnât deserve an answer, Clinton said.
She also accused Trump of threatening women, Muslims, immigrants and people with disabilities. Before anyone can make a decision on policy toward any groups, she said, they need to understand the people themselves, the issues and consequences.
âUnlike some people, I do try to learn whatâs the core of any question before I offer an opinion because itâs not enough to say whatâs wrong,â she said. âI think youâve got a responsibility to say how youâll fix it.â
Donald Trump: The GOP convention needs a âshowbizâ touch
Donald Trump wants to add his own touch to the Republican National Conventions in July with a little stagecraft and a âshowbizâ feel.
âItâs very important to put some showbiz into a convention; otherwise people are going to fall asleep,â Trump said in an interview with the Washington Post. The comment appeared to be, in part, an warning by Trump that he wants more of a say in the convention than a nominee would normally get, assuming he does secure the partyâs nomination.
He told the Post that he thinks non-politicians and business leaders deserve the opportunity to speak at the convention in Cleveland, not just the party leaders. The Republican National Committee runs the event, but Trump, the GOP front-runner, said he doesnât think the RNC can handle putting on an interesting show.
âWe donât have the people who know how to put showbiz into a convention,â he said.
In past elections, a nominee surfaced long before the convention and helped put together the convention around their campaign. But in this 2016 race, the potential for a contested convention and lack of a clear leader threatens to upend traditional convention proceedings.
Trump is poised to win New York, but by how much matters a lot to delegate-hungry Cruz and Kasich
The 12th Congressional District of New York, centered on Manhattanâs Upper East Side, is home to many symbols of the cityâs gilded glory: Park Avenue, the Guggenheim and Metropolitan museums, the penthouse abode of one Donald J. Trump.
It is also home to about 48,000 registered Republicans, a population dwarfed by more than 210,000 Democrats who twice delivered the district to President Obama with a vote surpassing 75%.
Still, that relatively meager mass of GOP faithful â more moderate, affluent and educated than the national norm â explains why presidential hopeful John Kasich plopped this weekend onto a counter seat at PJ Bernsteinâs delicatessen, where a swarm of reporters documented his intake of kreplach, sour pickles and strudel.
He was cherry-picking.
Are you an independent voter? You arenât if you checked this box
With nearly half a million registered members, the American Independent Party is bigger than all of Californiaâs other minor political parties combined. The ultraconservative partyâs platform opposes abortion rights and same-sex marriage, and calls for building a fence along the entire United States border.
Based in the Solano County home of one of its leaders, the AIP bills itself as âThe Fastest Growing Political Party in California.â
But a Times investigation has found that a majority of its members have registered with the party in error. Nearly three in four people did not realize they had joined the party, a survey of registered AIP voters conducted for The Times found.
That mistake could prevent people from casting votes in the June 7 presidential primary, Californiaâs most competitive in decades.