Windsor Star

SANDERS STAYS IN DEMOCRATIC RACE AGAINST BIDEN.

Moves forward despite sweeping Biden victories

- LUCAS JACKSON and JOHN WHITESIDES

BURLINGTON, VT. •Bernie Sanders said on Wednesday he will stay in the Democratic presidenti­al race despite suffering a series of big losses to front-runner Joe Biden, promising to keep up the public pressure for his sweeping economic and social justice proposals.

Sanders acknowledg­ed falling behind the former vice-president in the count of delegates needed to win the nomination, but said he remained committed to the overarchin­g goal of defeating Republican President Donald Trump in November.

“On Sunday night, in the first one-on-one debate of this campaign, the American people will have the opportunit­y to see which candidate is best positioned to accomplish that goal,” he told reporters.

Biden, 77, and Sanders, 78, will debate in Phoenix on Sunday ahead of primaries next Tuesday in Arizona along with Florida, Illinois and Ohio.

On Tuesday, Biden notched decisive primary victories in Michigan and three other states, taking a big step toward the party’s nomination to take on Trump, 73, and casting doubt on the future of Sanders’ White House bid.

Sanders said his anti-corporate economic agenda was still winning the ideologica­l battle and gaining support from young people who are the future.

Many Democratic voters, however, still believe Biden has the best chance of beating Trump, Sanders said.

“While our campaign has won the ideologica­l debate, we are losing the debate over electabili­ty,” said the democratic socialist U.S. senator from Vermont.

Sanders’ losses on Tuesday put him in a deeper hole in the delegate count. Biden leads Sanders 786-645 in the race for the 1,991 delegates needed to clinch the nomination at July’s Democratic convention.

Biden’s already looking ahead to the November election, calling for party unity and making an appeal to supporters of Sanders.

“We share a common goal, and together we are going to defeat Donald Trump,” Biden said in Philadelph­ia on Tuesday night, thanking Sanders and his supporters for their energy and passion.

Just two weeks ago, Sanders was seen as the front-runner after an impressive win in Nevada in mid-february, while Biden and other moderate candidates continued to split the vote of the party’s centrists.

But Democrats who worried Sanders’ democratic socialist agenda would doom the party to defeat in November rushed to rally around Biden.

Two of the largest Democratic super PACS said they would back Biden, and former rival Andrew Yang joined other former contenders like Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar, Kamala Harris and Cory Booker in endorsing him.

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