Off the wire
Morocco designs approach to implement development plans  • U.S. stocks tumble amid earnings, falling oil  • Rwanda youth urged to venture into agribusiness  • U.S. dollar rises after sharp decline  • British manufacturing PMI falls to lowest level in three years  • Chicago agricultural commodities close lower  • Morocco launches new strategy to counter corruption  • IAEA helps repair Libya's only operational radiotherapy machine: UN spokesman  • U.S. stocks retreat amid earnings, falling oil  • More than 200 people killed on S. African roads during May Day holiday  
You are here:   Home

Majority of Democrats want Sanders to stay in race despite Clinton's lead: poll

Xinhua, May 4, 2016 Adjust font size:

A majority of Democrats now say that Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders should stay in the presidential race despite Hillary Clinton's insurmountable delegate lead over him, said a new national poll on Tuesday.

According to the NBC News/Survey Monkey poll, 57 percent of Democrats said that Sanders should stay in the race through the Democratic convention scheduled for late July.

Only one in four Democrats said Sanders should end his candidacy after the final primary contest in June if he still runs behind Clinton, and only 16 percent think he should withdraw from the race now.

While an overwhelming majority of Sanders' supporters want their candidate to stay in the race through the Democratic convention in July, opinions were divided among Clinton's supporters.

Though Clinton's campaign was expecting Sanders to exit soon, twenty-eight percent of Clinton's supporters agreed that Sanders should stay in the race through the whole nomination process, and 40 percent would like to see him dropping out of the race after the final primary contest in June. Only 30 percent would like to see him bow out now.

The poll came one week after Clinton trounced Sanders with a sweeping victory in four of the five primaries in East Coast. So far, Clinton had won 1,663 pledged delegates, compared with Sanders' 1,367 pledged delegates, according to the latest delegate count by The New York Times.

Despite the uphill battle to surpass Clinton in delegate count, Sanders had made clear that he would not exist the race before California votes on June 7. Endit