Share

Trump wages ‘woman card’ war with Hillary

“Sanders or you support me, there’s much more that unites us than divides us”, Clinton said.

Advertisement

Mr Trump emerged with more than 50% of the Republican votes in Pennsylvania, Connecticut and Maryland, and scored over 60% in DE and Rhode Island.

“I disagree with them 100 percent on some of the things”, he added. She has nothing else going for her. And, frankly, if Hillary Clinton were a man, I don’t think she would get 5 percent of the vote. “The only thing she’s got going is the woman’s card”.

Scott has, for weeks, been urging the GOP to unite around Trump, who has consistently been the party’s presidential front-runner.

Bolstering his grip on the Republican primaries, Donald Trump prepared Wednesday for a general election showdown with Hillary Clinton, accusing the Democratic front-runner of “playing the woman card” in her presidential campaign. Elected Republican candidates are not officially bound to a single candidate, but barring a change of pledge, all three of the district’s delegates would go for Trump. “It is going to be very hard even if he were not to get the correct delegate count for the party establishment to pull, let’s call it an anti-democratic coup against the clear choice of most Republican primary voters”.

SEN. TED CRUZ (R-TX), Republican Presidential Candidate: Carly Fiorina!

This is not the first time that the campaign has laid off staff, having done so before after the Vermont Senator’s losses on March 15th’s Super Tuesday.

As Business Insider’s Max Tani noted, Clinton’s wins Tuesday night in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, and Pennsylvania put her closer than ever to the nomination and could mark a turning point in the Democratic race.

Although the OH governor did pick up five delegates from Rhode Island Tuesday, strategist John Weaver has indicated that Oregon’s May 17 primary – where 28 delegates are awarded proportionally – is Kasich’s next chance to shift the narrative. The state’s other 17 delegates will automatically go to Trump, who handily won there.

Advertisement

In the AP interview, Sanders bristled when asked if he would continue to contrast his record with Clinton’s. “And we will unify our party to win this election and build an America where we can all rise together”.

Trump: 'If we win Indiana, it's over'