BROOKLYN, New York — Hillary Clinton will win the California primary, NBC News projected early Wednesday.
The projected victory will be the icing on the cake to a historic 24 hours that saw Clinton become the first female candidate on a major party’s presidential ticket.
It also will deal another blow to Sen. Bernie Sanders, who has refused to bow out of the Democratic contest.
The 2016 race will now begin to move very quickly now for Clinton’s presidential campaign, as the machinery of the Democratic Party’s full arsenal marshals itself to prepare for battle against Donald Trump.
Speaking in measured tones, she declared victory Tuesday night during a celebration here with thousands of supporters as she placed her nomination in the sweep of history for women’s rights. She also praised Sanders — who Tuesday night vowed to continue his fight until July — and rallied her troops for battle against Trump.
“It may be hard to see tonight, but we are all standing under a glass ceiling right now,” she said, echoing the key image of the concession speech from her first presidential bid – delivered exactly eight years ago. “Thanks to you, we’ve reached a milestone. For the first time in our nation’s history, a woman will be a major party’s nominee.”
The former secretary of state also recalled the memory of her mother, who was born nearly 100 years ago, on the day Congress passed the 19th Amendment. “Tonight’s victory is not about one person, it belongs to generation of women and men who struggled and scarified and made this moment possible,” Clinton said.
But Clinton spent much of her time eviscerating Trump, whom she called “temperamentally unfit to be president,” while extending an olive branch to Sanders supporters and even moderate Republicans.
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“This election is not about the same old fights between Republicans and Democrats,” she said. “It’s about who we are as Americans.”
With their nominee in place, Democrats will move rapidly to prepare for the fall. Here’s how.
Endorsements roll in: Party leaders who have been sitting on the sidelines will begin to flood the field for Clinton, starting with Nancy Pelosi who on Tuesday announced she was backing Clinton.
The biggest endorsement to come will be from President Barack Obama, whom aides say is eager to wade into the race. He’ll likely be followed by Vice President Joe Biden, who considered running against Clinton. The two endorsements are likely to be spaced out for maximum impact.
Obama spoke with both Clinton and Sanders Tuesday night, according to the White House, and plans to meet with Sanders on Thursday. He congratulated both candidates on their races, but did not yet make an endorsment.
Another key player to watch will be Elizabeth Warren, who is looking to play a key role in unifying the party thanks to her appeal among both Clinton and Sanders supporters. She may wait for clarity on Sanders’ plans, since so much of her personal base is made-up of his supporters.
Meanwhile, some of the Democratic Party’s most powerful interest groups like the AFL-CIO have waited to engage until the general election.








