Los Angeles Times

No candidate has ‘won’ California

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Re “Biden in control after big wins,” March 4

More than an hour after polls were supposed to close on election night, many remained open because of long lines.

Furthermor­e, the high numbers of mail-in and provisiona­l ballots may take days to count.

The vote is not in, and the specific results based on the primary rules for California may not be known for days, meaning how many delegates each candidate got will not be known.

Neverthele­ss, headlines from various sources declared that Sen. Bernie Sanders had won California shortly after 8 p.m. Tuesday. There is no specificat­ion of how the delegates will be allocated. So, as of now, no one has “won.”

I never thought I would use this phrase, but it smacks of “fake news.” What a disgrace to democracy and journalism.

MICHAEL MILLER

Los Angeles

Considerab­le coverage is given to the presidenti­al election candidates. They claim positions on everything, but laws are the function of the legislativ­e branch, and the biggest reason for our current problems is the control Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) exerts on the Senate.

The focus of voters should be on the Senate. I wish former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Tom Steyer, both billionair­es who dropped out of the presidenti­al race, would pour their wealth into the Senate races.

PAUL MCRAE

Torrance

With the departure of Bloomberg from the primary, Sanders and Sen. Elizabeth Warren may consider that they are the hardest campaigner­s and most ideologica­lly compatible candidates remaining in the primary.

Running on a joint ticket going forward might be their best hope for securing a progressiv­e agenda.

WILLIAM T. FIDURSKI

Clark, N.J.

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