Southern Maryland News

Clinton takes detour from NY to court MD Democrats

- By ALEXANDRA PAMIAS Capital News Service

BALTIMORE — Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is showing Maryland that she will not be ignoring the state despite her heated primary race in New York against Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders.

Clinton hit Baltimore Sunday and also is nailing down key support among Maryland Democratic leaders. Most notably, she claimed the endorsemen­t of Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Baltimore). It was the last endorsemen­t she needed to have the backing of all of Maryland’s Democratic congressio­nal delegation.

Maryland, with 95 delegates at stake, holds its presidenti­al primary April 26. Connecticu­t, Delaware, Pennsylvan­ia and Rhode Island are voting the same day.

New York’s primary, where 291 delegates are up for grabs, is one week before that.

A Washington Post-University of Maryland Poll released last week showed Clinton leading Sanders 55 percent to 40 percent among likely Maryland Democratic voters.

Clinton picked up the Cummings endorsemen­t in person Sunday, gathering with supporters inside City Garage in Baltimore, a building transforme­d from an old city bus garage into the home of Under Armour’s innovation division, a move by the company to encourage businesses to stay in the city.

The Democratic frontrunne­r said she would do anything in her power to break down economic barriers standing in the way of any American, as well as focus on invigorati­ng communitie­s that have been ignored in the past.

“I believe we need to build on the progress that we have made under President [Barack] Obama,” said Clinton. “We need to look for every way possible to create new jobs. We need to be focusing on how we can bring investment to places that need it.”

Clinton stated that she will lay out a comprehens­ive jobs agenda, and that part of that plan would be to direct $20 billion specifical­ly at helping to create jobs for young people. She also said that billions of dollars would be invested in places like West and East Baltimore.

“It is a fact: our economy does better when we have a Democrat in the White House,” Clinton told the crowd. “So what I say we need to be doing is what works.”

Clinton and Cummings were joined onstage by Maryland’s Democratic senators, Barbara Mikulski and Ben Cardin, who had pledged their support to Clinton earlier in her campaign.

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