tv Americas Choice 2016 NY Primary CNN April 19, 2016 7:00pm-8:01pm PDT
7:00 pm
remembers like this hold up, wolf, not only add to the delegate lead, they believe when you project forward again, into pennsylvania, into maryland, into delaware, you have the african american base that she will have a good night tonight, a very good night next week and the math becomes pret -- >> stand by, i want to the go over to jeb, state college pennsylvania, that's where bernie sanders spoke tonight. it guess they're disappointed, what are their expectations now? what are they hoping will be the final result in new york state, jeb? >> no question, wolf, they are disappointed. they are looking at the margins to see what in fact they will be. they will hope this will be the a single digit race. polls going in, but they were hoping it would be much narrower than this. no one today in the last several days was expecting victory, bernie sanders as he was talking about this tonight, was talking about that closed primary. was talking about all the voting issues in brooklyn, but the reality is here, they needed more than a moral victory, they needed a mathematical victory.
7:01 pm
so they are assessing the way forward. the path forward. senator sanders right now is flying home to vermont, meeting with advisors tomorrow, he'll be campaigning back here in pennsylvania on thursday. but wolf, mathematically, this gets so difficult for the sanders campaign to go forward. yes, they have money behind them, they have supporters behind them, but the math simply is not behind them. so this is something that the democratic party is going to have, have to wrestle with here. if you're wondering if senator sanders is putting a brain in his attacks. that was not the case tonight. he spoke just about a full hour, going after hillary clinton harder than we've heard him in a long time, wolf. so this is going to be interesting mode for the democratic party. it is a party divided. >> jeb is covering the sanders campaign. john, still over here right know 56%. 56% of the vote is in. he's up by almost 20 points right no u with 56, huge win for her in new york state. play out the delegates in new york and the rest of the country. how does it look for bernie sanders? >> before we get to the delegate
7:02 pm
map, these are very important numbers. that's statewide number, if she keep that percentage up in the congressional district. the democratic rules are so generous to the person who comes in second, that hillary clinton not only needs to be above 50% of the districts, she actually needs to be closer to 60% to get, if there's six delegates in a district, if you're close to 60%, if you're around 55%, you split the delegates. the delegate math could be different than the final vote math, but to jeb's point, let's come over and switch this to the democratic race. this starts to get hard. then the question is she believes she's going to have a very strong night next tuesday and in scenario, we give bernie sanders rhode island. the clinton campaign thinks they can win connecticut, pennsylvania, maryland, and delaware, and if you're out to an area now, remember, 225 to
7:03 pm
start the night, 229, they think they can be out in the 280 area by the end of the night tomorrow. and then, if you project this out. if you have if clinton scenario where bernie sanders wins west virginia, hillary clinton thinks she can win out here, she gets out to california, there is a scenario, 55/45, i just projected the rest of the contest, giving christian ton some and sanders some, even at 55/45, here is the question of the democratic party. the magic number, will she get there with pledged delegates? unlikely. unless she wins states now, by big margin, 65/35, no question have a lead, the math for sanders to catch up because of the rules is almost impossible. but you do think by the end of the race, she'll be somewhere like this and need the superdelegates to put her over the top. that of course will cause us controversy in the democratic party. but in the moment, as long as she keeps winning.
7:04 pm
she needs them at the convention. she'll have him. >> those are the rules, 15% of all the delegates at the convention. those super delegate, let's do a key race alert right now. look at this, on the republican side, donald trump is the winner. almost half of the vote has now been counted, he's at 61.8%. the ohio governor john kasich, he's at 24%, ted cruz, a distant third, only 14.2% on the republican side. on the democratic side, more than half of the vote has now been counted 57%, hillary clinton has a very impressive 59.4% lead over bernie sanders. with 40%, 40.6%. she's ahead right now by more than, almost 200,000 votes for hillary clinton right now. big win for hillary clinton in new york. big win for donald trump in new york. anderson. >> we are of course waiting to hear from secretary clinton. we'll bring you those comments as soon as she starts to make them.
7:05 pm
>> because my home state of pennsylvania, i think is the big prize of those mid-atlantic states. and it's a very odd state and john king made reference to this, anderson, 54 of the 71 delegates are uncommitted, regardless of the result. you walk into the ballot booth, you don't know really for whom you're voting because there's no indication as to who the delegate will support. i think for a candidate like donald trump, he wants to go into pennsylvania and win convincingly so that he can say to those 54 when it gets closer to the convention, regardless of where they are disposition may lie, i want to state, i want it big, and when you're wondering how does he make up a short fall fa there is one, he turns to pennsylvanians and says, i need you to stick together as a group and put me over the top. >> he clearly mastered a message
7:06 pm
that goes to states. it's so surprising that he's won mississippi, new york, and is on track to win all of these states that typically go for moderates. all of these blue states like new york, pennsylvania, maryland, those are the states that mitt romney would be the nominee and blocked out insurgent candidates who typically did well in the south. so the fact that he's been able to really move together this coalition is really astounding in his message tonight. eight minutes, it was short. >> this is the new -- >> i wonder if what she's thought of candidate donald trump tonight. >> we've been seeing this, i think the new team has had an impact, right? focussed on jobs, you know, even his hair, you know, is more -- he has some of that mousse in in his hair. he's really -- they have had a real impact on him because he's showing he's not just the outsider, but he can be a president. >> at this point in the race, you know, he's done away with
7:07 pm
all the 16 or so opponents he once had, he's got two left, but it's -- i mean if he's ever going to start to project the heir of being a president, this is the time. >> he has to do this. this is going to be on the minds of these delegates. and you know, it is a concern for the republicans and all the candidates have the same problem, there's a lot of hostility here. among republicans for the candidates that are not supporting him. so, he has got to the start elevating a little bit here. >> but he's also stirred the pot in kind of a clever way. he's got a fight going on within the republican national committee. he's got the chairman fighting with the state party in florida for example, and he's also gotten people into thinking that the system is rigged to a degree or unfair to a degree. and you know, i think that that, that that works in donald trump's favor, you know, in the long haul. >> that is his hedge against not
7:08 pm
getting to 1,237, he wants to ill legitimate any effort to take it away from him. >> tonight he became the only republican candidate who has mathematical possibility really of getting to 1,237. >> and involved in the rebranding. tonight he said you vote and you win, that should be the system. that's going to be his message, consistently, going forward into this convention. >> and can i just say one more thing also about the other republicans and maybe amanda can comment on this, but you don't see cruz now saying john kasich needs to get out of this race. that has stopped. >> yeah. >> he needs kasich to stay in this race. >> you want to take every delegate possible. exactly, away from trump. >> they will be desperate to have a debate, look what donald trump didn't did tonight. he tried his hardest to talk about the issues. we have to stop jobs from going overseas. ted cruz should take up the conversation and say okay, here's the best way. do we really want to bring
7:09 pm
manufacturing back to mexico or develop new high-tech companies that are just competitive with a lower tax rate. cruz has a hard challenge ahead. he has to force the conversation back to issues, i keep thinking, the threepeat, principle, personality, and populism. donald trump has the personality, ted cruz has got the principle. they have to figure out how to play -- >> ted cruz doesn't seem to be messaging, it seems to be math. the math is not in his favor. >> but look at -- >> donald trump can reach 1,237, and if even he doesn't, he can make a strong argument that it can't be taken away from him. >> and ted cruz is getting desperate, which is why he said donald trump can't even run a lemonade stand, how ironic, calling, saying this of donald trump whose built a $10 billion brand. he's getting desperate, down into the mud, and he should be worried because look at the polls rieg now. we're at 50% reporting and he's almost in single digits. >> let's shift and talk about hillary clinton's win tonight
7:10 pm
and what this means. >> who within the democratic side? >> talking about trump, he won. >> but as we talk right fwhoub governor andrew cuomo is warming up the crowd. we are expecting hillary clinton, obviously going to bring you her comments live, but van, how does the race now shift? what does bernie sanders start to do, given the states he's looking at the days ahead? >> this is tough, it's if you have for the political revolution had that miracle in michigan, and every time there's a big race coming up, there's that hope that somehow the polls will be wrong and they'll be able to pull a rabbit out of the hat and show that there is a path for bernie sanders. tonight, that path is even tougher. he's got to make a decision now on tone going forward. he's got half of his people saying, hashtag, tone down for what, she's the establishment and go after her, go after her, people are saying hold on a second, if you tarnish her so badly that you create a possibility for her to be defeated, you stet the political revolution back more than anything else. you have a real challenge now
7:11 pm
inside the bernie sanders camp. i guarantee you tomorrow night, tomorrow at the big meeting, that's going to be the question. >> one of the questions is how do you manage your own supporters? if you torqued them up so high and you get -- have such an edge. can you then turn around and say, but now we have to come together? >> let me say one thing, especially tonight because the heartburn about brooklyn, about the fact that 120,000 people were voter disenfranchised, that really is -- you look at online, the young people, the bernie supporters feel like something was stolen from us. now whether or not mathematically that would make a difference, she has to be able to respond to that, that heartburn and he's got to do a better job of keeping it in line. >> any time it's 126 thourk is the last time. and it makes me want to scream. by the way, the bernie people, not pretend those were their voters. hillary won brooklyn and won it solidly. this is an impressive victory. senator sanders outspent her 6.#
7:12 pm
million to less than 4 million on television. enormous rallies, he did as david points out, torque up so much so that one of his supporters called hillary a democratic whore. he apologized. bernie assumes he heard about it said that that was out of bounds, i get that, but the tone, the bitterness in new york was really troubling and i missed bernie's speech, jeff was covering it, bernie tonight was attacking even more aggressive than usual. it is not working for bernie. this is not working for him. and i went back and looked, and when david axelrod was scorching hillary clinton at the end of the 2008 campaign -- >> that's so harsh. >> i like it when paufl says it. >> gracious. >> crazy smile too. april 22nd, 2008, when hillary won the area, she did not attack barack obama, in fact she said, we are in many ways all on this journey together.
7:13 pm
>> the character contest begins. this is a character moment for bernie sanders. sanders, the candidate, can lose. but sanders the cause can still win. the political revolution can still win. reform is still possible, but you've got to be able to begin electing democrats who are going to follow that will revolution and you're going to watch now over the next couple of weeks. key decisions made by bernie sanders and a heart level about whether he's going to tone down or not. >> do you agree that the political contest is over? is that what you're phrasing?
7:14 pm
>> i think its been over for a while. i don't think that the math has really changed. >> on the democratic side. >> this has been a topsy turvey cycle. the math on the democratic side has been relatively consistent. what i find most interesting there has not been a relationship between the crowd size and the donations and the math. regardless of bernie wants to do, that crowd -- >> having been and paul can speak to this, you know, it's easy for us to say they ought to come together, we ought to find common ground, these are human beings. their supporters are human beings, they've been going at it now for quite a while. it's very hard to sort of calm things down, takes a real conscious effort, and that's what you're talking about, van. they need to sit down and say, you know what, we better ratchet this back. on both sides. >> both sides. >> but this was the bernie sanders at the beginning of the race. who used to blame us in the media for trying to get him to criticize hillary clinton. >> let me say one thing about
7:15 pm
secretary clinton, secretary clinton, huge win. huge win. >> absolutely. >> and puts her in a position that was said before, she's got to find even more -- being more magnanimous. she's punched back some. i think at this point, those young people out there, it is hard to uncurdle milk if you sour these young people on the whole process, you hurt not just the party, the country. this is a first time a lot of these young people have gotten involved in anything. you said you want free stuff, as some of her surrogates have done, that's not right. nobody says the pentagon just wants free drones or nasa just wants free space shuttles. everybody pays taxes, people have a right to say where they want the taxes to go. she has to get her surrogates to really reach out to them and bring them in. >> bernie's campaign has really crossed a line. >> and the guy apologized within minutes and bernie apologized as he was. >> he was talking about congressional democrats.
7:16 pm
which he was not, i read the context. >> listen, you and i both know you cannot hold every, the candidate for the surrogate. what i'm going to say you're saying that bernie supporters want free stuff. fair is fair. >> few things, remember the new york times is to ir that broke that one of obama's fundraisers, there was allegedly an allegation that it was time for bernie to gracefully exit right before he won eight of the nine contests. it's up to hillary clinton to be magnanimous, you've got to legitimize the support he has from young people, from middle class voters which donald trump might to peel away in a general election, it's so important. >> aside from bernie here, honestly, i think, you know, bernie sanders has not run for the presidency before. hillary clinton has and lost. and knows what it's like. and it's difficult, but i think bernie sanders at some point also needs to give a signal to his supporters. >> let's get a quick break in before secretary clinton comes out. we'll bring that live.
7:17 pm
short break, we'll be right back. [engine sounds] the bud light party believes in change. that's why bud light has a new look... and we want to share it with everyone... from our national parks... to our furthest shores... jackpot! to your living room. look under your seats! [squeals of delight] still the same refreshing bud light. with a new look. ♪
7:18 pm
very impressive win for hillary clinton tonight. there you see her on the stage with her family. she's getting ready to address a very enthusiastic crowd. the former president there, chelsea is there, mark, chelsea's husband is there. they're all on the stage, an enthusiastic, big victory speech coming up for hillary clinton. she has done remarkably well in
7:19 pm
her adopted home state of new york. she's going to be speaking right now, jake, this is a big moment for the clintons. >> yes, that's right, wolf, and right now we're waiting for secretary clinton to take the mike. ♪ ♪ in new york, concrete jungle where dreams are made of ♪ >> thank you, new york. thank you all so much. thank you. you know, today, today you proved once again there's no
7:20 pm
place like home. [ cheering and applause ] you know, in this campaign we've won in every region of the country. [ cheering and applause ] from the north to the south to the east to the west, but this one's personal. [ cheering and applause ] new yorkers, you've always, you've always had my back. [ cheering and applause ] and i've always tried to have yours. today, together, we did it again, and i am deeply, deeply grateful. i want -- i want to thank everyone who came out and voted, and to all of you across new york who've known me and worked with me for so long.
7:21 pm
[ cheering and applause ] it's humbling that you trust me with the awesome responsibilities that await our next president. and -- and to all the people who supported senator sanders, i believe there is much more that unites us than divides us. [ cheering and applause ] you know, we started this race not far from here on roosevelt island. [ applause ] pledging to build on the progressive tradition that's done so much for america from franklin roosevelt to barack obama. [ applause ]
7:22 pm
and tonight, little less than a year later, the race for the democratic nomination is in the home stretch and victory is in sight. [ applause ] [ chanting "hillary ] and i i want, i want to say, i want to say to all of my supporters that all of the voters, you have carried us every step of the way with passion and determination that some critics tried to dismiss. [ applause ] because of you, this campaign is the only one, democrat or republican to win more than 10 million votes. [ applause ]
7:23 pm
but i -- i'm going forward because more voices remain to be heard and tomorrow, it's on to connecticut, delaware, maryland, pennsylvania, rhode island, and beyond. we need you to keep volunteering, i hope you will join the 1.1 million people who've already contributed at hillaryclinton.com. [ applause ] and by the way, most with less than $100, because we have more work to do. under the bright lights of new york, we have seen that it's not enough to diet those problems, you'd have to explain how you'd
7:24 pm
actually solve the problems. [ applause ] that's what we have to do together. for our kids, for each other, for our country. so i want you with me to imagine a tomorrow where no barriers hold you back. and all of our people can share in the promise of america. imagine a tomorrow where every parent can find a good job and every grandparent can enjoy a secure retirement. [ applause ] where no child grows up in the shadow of discrimination or under the spector of deportation. [ applause ] where hard work is honored, families are supported, and communities are strong. a tomorrow where we trust and respect each other despite our differences -- [ applause ]
7:25 pm
that is what this is supposed to be about, actually helping people and each other. [ applause ] now we all know -- [ chanting "hillary" ] we all know too many people who are still hurting. i see it everywhere i go. the great recession wiped out jobs, homes, and savings. and a lot of americans haven't yet recovered. but i still believe with all my heart, that as another great democratic president once said, there's nothing wrong with america that can't be cured what's right with america.
7:26 pm
that is afterall what we've always done. it's who we are. america is a problem solving nation. in this campaign we are setting bold by real plans that will improve lives raising wages and reduce i reducing in education no matter what zip code they live in. building ladders of opportunity and empowerment. so all of our people can go as far as their hard work and talent will take them. slets revitalize places that was left and left behind from inner cities to indian country.
7:27 pm
and let's put americans to work, rebuilding our crumbling infrastructure including our failing water system like the one in flint, michigan. [ applause ] at risk from the water they drank and the air they breathe. let's combat climate change and make america the clean energy superpower of the time. let's take on the challenge of systemic racism and finally pass kpre hence ifz immigration reform. [ applause ] once and for all, let's guarantee equal pay for women. [ applause ]
7:28 pm
and we are going to keep our families safe and our country strong and we're going to defend our rights. voting rights, women's rights, lgbt rights and rights for people with disabilities. new york slams and they are american slams. and just as we did in this primary campaign we need to stand up for them, throw the general election and every day after that. you know, it's becoming clear
7:29 pm
that the elections are one of the most important of our lifetimes. donald trump and ted cruz -- [ booing ] are pushing a vision for america that's divisive and frankly dangerous, returning to trickle down economics of adding to the minimum wage and making our own health care decisions. promising to surround millions of immigrants, threatening to ban all muslims from entering the country. planning to treat american muslims like criminals. these things go against everything america stands for. and we have a very different
7:30 pm
vision. it's about lifting each other up, not tearing each other down. so instead of building walls, we're going to break down barriers. and in this campaign, i've seen again our remarkable diversity and determination. this is a state and a country of big hearted, open-minded, straight-talking, hard-working people. [ applause ] you know, like john, a firefighter from the south bronx that i met shortly after 9/11 as he searched for survivors at ground zero, and like so many others, john got sick from breathing the toxic air. when we met again last week, he gave me a replica of his fdny badge and thanked me for helping our first responders get the
7:31 pm
health care they need. we have to keep fighting for john and all of our firefighters and our emergency responders and the construction workers who did so much for us. or maxine. a 27-year-old single mom from staten island who's here tonight. [ applause ] she shared with me how she worked her way out of poverty, graduated from college, thanks in part to the help she got for her child from the children's health insurance program that we started in the 1990s. [ applause ] or mikey, from stivenson town, is mikey here?
7:32 pm
well, i'll tell you, mikey spent six months in rikers for low level drug offense. and he found out how hard it is for people who've done their time to find jobs when they get out. mikey managed to start his own ice cream shop, i took a lot of you in reality or through the media there yesterday, i highly recommended as you might have seen, i couldn't stop myself from eating it, as soon as i got it, by the way, he made a concoction for me called "victory." but mikey is one of the many reasons why we have to reform our criminal justice system. [ applause ] and ban the box so others have a
7:33 pm
fair chance to succeed. you know, new yorkers and americans speak every language, follow every faith, hail from every continent. our diversity is one of our greatest strengths in the 21st century, not a weakness. as robert kennedy, as robert kennedy who senate seat i was honored to hold once said, "we are a great country. an unselfish country, and a compassionate country. and no matter what anyone tells you or what you might hear from others running for president, that is still true today. [ applause ] america is great, and we can do great things if we do them together. [ applause ] so, please join us, text join
7:34 pm
47246, go to hillaryclinton.com, be part of this campaign. i know how important it is that we get the campaign's resources from people just like you who go in and chip in, $5, $25, i am grateful to every one of you. and to the volunteers who have worked your hearts out. [ applause ] to the community leaders, members of the state senate and assembly, county executives, mayors of cities large and small, and to the mayor of new york, and our borough president, and our city council members, and to our governor, our senators, our congressional delegation. [ applause ]
7:35 pm
and all my friends across this wonderful state of ours, thank you. you know, we're going to go up against some powerful forces that will do, say, and spend whatever it takes to stop us. but remember, it's not whether you get knocked down, it's whether you get back up. [ cheering and applause ] and finally, finally, let me say this, finally -- [ chanting "hillary" ] finally, let me say this, there is a remarkable young woman here tonight. her name is erika. erika smagelski. she lives the truth of what i've been saying every day. erika's mother, dawn, was the
7:36 pm
principal of sandy hook elementary school. and she died trying to protect her children, her students. erika was devastated as any family member is. and she couldn't imagine life without her mom. but then, she got thinking, she got back up. she'd never been involved in politics before. but she has made it her mission to advocate for common sense, gun safety reform. [ cheering and applause ] you know, like the mothers of
7:37 pm
eric garner and trayvon martin and so many others, erika has turned her sorrow into a strategy and her mourning into a movement. it isn't easy. but as erika said the other day, what if everyone who faced tough odds said, it's hard? so i'm going to walk away. that's not the type of world i want to live in. erika, it's not the type of world we want to live in and we refuse to live in that. [ applause ] to my friends, that's the spirit that makes this country great. it's how new yorkers pulled together and rebuilt our city after the worst terrorist attack in our history. it's how americans worked our way back from the worst economic
7:38 pm
crisis in our lifetimes. and it is how we're going to break down all the barriers holding us back. the motto of this state is excelsior, ever awkward, so let's go out and win this election, and all rise together, thank you so much. [ applause ] ♪ >> former u.s. secretary of state and former u.s. senator from the great state of new york, hillary clinton on a very good night for her. she has with the numbers coming in right now, at least 57.9% of the vote so far. it was just a few weeks ago, bernie sanders and his campaign were predicting that they could actually win here in the state in which he was born, but where also clinton lives and represented in the senate for eight years, a very, very strong
7:39 pm
dominant showing this evening. and dana bash, you heard from hillary clinton this evening, much more of a general election message than you have -- we have heard in the past. she talked about bringing in, she didn't mention them specifically, but there was definitely a hand, inclusiveness of bringing in, uniting the democratic party. and she took on donald trump and ted cruz directly. she invoked the daughter of the principal at sandy hook elementary school as somebody fighting, fighting tough odds for a worthwhile cause. it was very much hillary clinton, the hopes to be, and presumptive one i think one has to say democratic nominee, that kind of speech. >> absolutely. only a very passing vailed reference to bernie sanders at the beginning of the speech
7:40 pm
talking about the fact that you can't just have ideas, you have to have plans on how to execute it and pivot immediately not to just about republicans and donald trump or ted cruz, but about what she will do and would do as the democratic nominee. and she hopes as president, but, aside from just kind of the substance of what she's said, it's how she's said it, jake, i mean, she clearly has been -- she's not wanted this fight on the democratic side, but it has made her so much better when it comes to her abilities as a candidate. i remember being with her when she was just getting back out into politics after she left the state department in iowa and it was like a completely different person. she is see in command now and the fact is, she -- forget about the speech, she is in a very, very strong position, she knows that, her supporters know that, and that's why she was clearly
7:41 pm
energized by this crowd and by this decisive win. and she should be taking every bit of credit that she deserves for getting this. >> yeah, this evening i think in some ways will be seen in retrospect as a turning point, potentially for the clinton and trump campaigns. nights where they both came out and delivered general election-type speeches, very, very dominant showings, each of them with about 55, 60% of the vote as of right now, the number's still coming in. the very dominant showings. >> exactly. one major difference that we really see illustrated in the picture that we're looking at right now is that donald trump is still not the man of the republican party. she is very much the outsider. -- he is very much the outsider. anybody who knows any familiar political faces in the democratic party in new york,
7:42 pm
they're all there on the stage with her. >> governor cuomo, mayor jenkins. >> and made a point of talking about the governor, the mayor, the former mayor, the congressional delegation. >> bill de blasio on the left side of the screen. the current leader of new york who was her campaign manager for senate in 2000. >> not so subtle message is, i got this guys. the party is coming together behind me. come along, bernie sanders supporters in, you know, in the foouch and in the states that have already voted because we are going to unite and we're going to go forward towards the general election. >> very, very strong evening if if former secretary of state and former u.s. senator from the great state of new york, hillary clinton. coming up our exit polls are revealing new details about just how hillary clinton won new york so decisively, plus voters use about a donald trump presidency if he's elected. we'll have much more election coverage, we're going to take one quick break. stay with us.
7:43 pm
7:44 pm
wrely on the us postal service? because when they ship with us, their business becomes our business. that's why we make more e-commerce deliveries to homes than anyone else in the country. here, there, everywhere. united states postal service priority: you mary buys a little lamb. one of millions of orders on this company's servers. accessible by thousands of suppliers and employees globally. but with cyber threats on the rise, mary's data could be under attack. with the help of the at&t network, a network that senses and mitigates cyber threats, their critical data is safer than ever. giving them the agility to be open & secure. because no one knows & like at&t. ♪ ♪
7:45 pm
7:46 pm
so you evolve. you simplify. you haven't changed. you still help people live their best lives. and finally your new logo is ready, and you decide the perfect time to show the world is right... now. trust safelite. with safelite's exclusive "on my way text" you'll know exactly when we'll be there. giving you more time for what matters most. (team sing) ♪safelite repair, safelite replace.♪ it's my job and it's i takealso my passion.rises. but with my back pain i couldn't sleep... so i couldn't get up in time. then i found aleve pm. aleve pm is the only one to combine a safe sleep aid plus the 12-hour strength of aleve... for pain relief that can last into the morning. and now... i'm back. aleve pm for a better am. they're lovin' their vegetables. this is huge news!
7:47 pm
it's all thanks to our birds eye chef's favorites side dishes perfectly sauced or seasoned. what are you..? shh! i'm live tweeting. oh, boy. birds eye. so veggie good. welcome back. let's get another key race alert right now. the new york republican primary reprojected donald trump is the winner. huge winner in new york. look at this margin right now with 77% of the vote counted. he has 60%, 60.2%. kasich is in second place with only 25.1%. ted cruz, very distant third with 14.7%. look, he's winning by almost a quarter of a million votes in new york state. 228,942 votes ahead of john kasich. on the democratic side, hillary clinton is way ahead as well. she's almost at 60%. 57.6%, bernie sanders only 42.4%.
7:48 pm
she's winning right now with 222,000 votes. hillary clinton is ahead of bernie sanders by almost as much as donald trump is ahead of john kasich in new york. 84% of the vote in new york state. the democratic side has been counted already very, very impressive wins for both donald trump and hillary clinton. let's go over to john king right now because a lot of people thought that hillary clinton would win. a lot of people didn't think she was going to win by this kind of margin. a lot of people thought that donald trump would do exceedingly well, a lot didn't think he was going to win by this kind of impressive margin. >> the margins will impact the delegate math which is what's most important at this stage of the contested convention nomination. this is why hillary clinton was saying in her view that the democratic race in per view mathematically is over. if you look at the map. you see a lot of bernie sanders, but hillary clinton winning in the cities, the smaller cities of rochester and syracuse, then winning huge down here in the new york city area, the bulk of
7:49 pm
the congressional districts were down here and the bulk of the democratic base is down here in the state. westchester county, she now calls home, 67%. come down, nearly 70% of the bronx. 60%, 61% in queens, and in manhattan, 66%, you get the picture. running up the numbers -- >> long island as well. >> yes, long island as well. staten island, more conservative, hillary clinton winning there. long island as well and she's winning less than a margin, in suffolk county. 91% of the vote in. every where you look, the base area hillary clinton winning big. even though that looks impressive when it comes to delegates tonight, proportional rules. she's going to have a net gain of 25, higher than that depending when you go through the districts down in here. she began the night around 229, she wants to add 25, maybe more to that and hoping to have an exclamation point. >> let's look at the republican race.
7:50 pm
extremely impressive. look how red that is, that's donald trump. >> pick your word, shellacking, donald trump running up the score and again, he's above 60% here with nearly 80% of the vote. donald trump will end above 50%. ball park of # 0%. then you say, 95 delegates, what is he going to get? i'd say he's going to get about 90. albany to the west. we see trump as 48, the counties around it, some of the congressional district is in the eastern part of the county. he's at 54. he's at 47, so there's a possibility in this congressional district, he's under 50. if you're under 50, the man in second place gets money and you get two. kasich picked up a delegate here, we're not done continuing, up here another dral district anchored by syracuse where you see trump below there. the district stretches out to the other counties. it's possible, although we're getting close. 99% in the syracuse area. so it's possible kasich gets a
7:51 pm
delegate here and the other place, this, again, overwhelming for trump when you look at this. a lot of people will say, it's his backyard. if there is one minor bruise on donald trump, it is here. kibt, about 500 votes, but john kasich right now winning in the borough of manhattan which donald trump calls home. there's one congressional district right in here. kasich could win win there. one for donald trump and these parts stretch into the congressional districts. for the other district. john kasich could come out with three to five. donald trump gets the rest at the moment, and i don't think see reason it's going to change. big goose egg. >> ted cruz. ted cruz winds up with potentially zero, 59 delegates in new york state. he winds up with zero. >> which hurts his argument that he says i'm the candidate who commit to the convention, i should be your choice on the second ballot. if you're getting a goose egg in
7:52 pm
new york, if he can't pick some up next week, do cruz's argument will take a hit. >> let's go back to dana, big ab big night for hillary clinton and donald trump. >> that's right, wolf, and let's talk about with the cnn politics executive editor mark protestton about how they did it. let's start with hillary clinton. who were the people turning out? women have been a core group of hillary clinton supporters, let's look at democratic women and see where they broke for. hillary clinton 61% of those went with the former secretary of state, rather, bernie sanders only got 39% of that vote. let's talk about the non-white vote as well. hillary clinton picked up 67% of that vote, bernie sanders only 33%. this is african americans, asian americans and latino americans. now let's talk about the quality of a candidate. hillary clinton, 90%, those
7:53 pm
voters picked up, they believe she has the right experience. it was a below, hillary clinton the former secretary of state was a former first lady and the former senator took bernie sanders to the wood shed on that issue, jake. this has been such a divisive contest, how do republican voters in new york and the state where donald trump is dominating, how do they feel about a potential president trump? >> well, jake, good news and bad news for donald trump here. let's hook at the numbers here -- look at the numbers here, 56% said they would vote for donald trump, another 19% said they would probably vote for him. look at that top number, 23% said they would not vote for him. that's a quarter of the electorates. should donald trump win the republican nomination as we've been talking all night. he's going to try to bring together a fractured republican party. let's go to the next numbers right now. if donald trump was elected president, 35% of new york republicans would be excited,
7:54 pm
28% optimistic. pretty good numbers there, you're looking at about 63% of the electorate. again, he has still has work to do. 22% are scared. that's a little bit more than a third of the new york republican electorate that certainly has some concerns. some serious concerns in some cases about donald trump as a gop nominee, jake. >> and that's in a state, dana bash, a state that he is winning and dominating in more than a third of the republican voters in new york concern or scared about the idea of a donald trump, of a president trump. >> yeah, and whenever we see that word, scared, and it's even close to 22%, which it has been in some other states, even those that he's won. it's remark to believe see that. i mean that is a very aggressive passionate response to somebody who is a potential nominee of the party. especially the place like new york where it was a closed primary, meaning only
7:55 pm
republicans rather could vote in it. having said that, this is, it's not just spend, it is a new phase of the campaign clearly for donald trump. he is going to try clearly very hard to turn those numbers around and if he continues to do the kind of thing that he did today, give a short, crisp, speech, really trying to stay on message to try to not be as controversial and frankly use offensive language and lines as he has before, maybe he'll go a long way in changing those numbers, even in a state where he's clearly dominating. >> although right now the only controversial expression that i'm thinking about is ted cruz referring to new york values, ted cruz who is ending this evening the big loser with zero delegates. the only candidate in both races of the five candidates still standing to have zero delegates out of new york. donald trump and hillary clinton both, of course, the big winners in the empire state tonight, but exactly how many delegates will
7:56 pm
7:57 pm
"super food?" is that a real thing? it's a great school, but is it the right one for her? is this really any better than the one you got last year? if we consolidate suppliers, what's the savings there? so should we go with the 467 horsepower? ...or is a 423 enough? good question. you ask a lot of good questions... i think we should move you into our new fund. sure... ok. but are you asking enough about how your wealth is managed? wealth management at charles schwab. if time is infinite, why is ta john deere 1 family tractor can give you more time for what you love. because with our quick-attach features, it takes less work to do more work. nothing runs like a deere. innovative sonicare technology with up to 27% more brush movements versus oral b. get healthier gums in 2 weeks guaranteed. innovation and you.
7:58 pm
8:00 pm
donald trump and hillary clinton scoring big in a very important victory tonight on their mutual home turf. we're talking about new york state as hillary clinton put it, there's no place like home. both the republican and the democratic front runners now poised to claim a big new haul of delegates that would move them even closer to their party's nominations. we're awaiting the final tallies to see exact lly how many delegates they will win. right now a key race alert, let's look a where the votes stand right now. take a look at this on the republican side first, 83% of the vote is in a huge win for donald trump. almost 60% of the vote, john kasich, the ohio governor, distant second place with 256.2%, ted cruz with only 14.9%. you saw the vote tally just change,
151 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
