For the first time ever,
Americans will have the choice of a woman as their president. Hillary Clinton
won’t have to worry about fighting off a challenge from Bernie Sanders based on
technicalities.
Clinton won enough votes in
the last Tuesday of primaries to prevent Sanders from arguing that she was
counting on delegates picked by the party, not voters.
Even Sanders’ dream of
winning in California, the nation’s most populous state, appeared unlikely. It
could take a day or more to determine the winner of the western state but
Clinton was leading. But at the end it was a somewhat boring evening that cable
television had been trying to make it seem like it would decided at the last
minute or perhaps not until the Democrat convention in July in Philadelphia.
The New York Times reported
Sanders had already begun laying off workers.
Clinton, whose husband, Bill,
served two terms as president, has been playing down the fact that she would be
the first female president.
On Tuesday night she let it
all out.
“Tonight’s
victory is not about one person. It belongs to generations of women and men who
struggled and sacrificed and made this moment possible,” she said. “In our
country, it started right here in New York, a place called Seneca Falls, in
1848, when a small but determined group of women and men came together with the
idea that women deserved equal rights,” she said in a speech in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Many
leaders around the world are likely to be happy to see her contesting
Republican Donald Trump, who is considered too inexperienced to run the most
powerful nation in the world.
In her
speech, she repeated an earlier comment, that the New York billionaire
businessman was unfit to be president.
“So we all
owe so much to those who came before, and tonight belongs to all of you,” she
added.
She made special mention of her mother, Dorothy Emma Howell
Rodham, who died in 2011.
“I really wish my mother could be here
tonight. I wish she could see what a wonderful mother Chelsea has become and
could meet our beautiful granddaughter, Charlotte,” she said. “And of course, I
wish she could see her daughter become the Democratic Party’s nominee.”
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