If Hillary Clinton Is Indicted, Would Bernie Sanders Be The Nominee?

20160701_0800 If Hillary Clinton Is Indicted, Would Bernie Sanders Be The Nominee (bustle).jpg If Hillary Clinton Is Indicted, Would Bernie Sanders Be The Nominee?
By Cheyna Roth, Bustle.com

(July 1, 2016 08:00 a.m.) — On Friday in a press conference, Attorney General Loretta Lynch vowed to “accept” investigators’ and prosecutors’ recommendations regarding whether to indict presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton’s alleged use of an insecure email server. This announcement set aside whisperings that Lynch would be a safety net for Clinton if an indictment was recommended, particularly in light of a certain tarmac rendezvous with Bill.

While Clinton waits to hear her fate, some wonder if an indictment would help the all-but-defunct campaign of her rival, Bernie Sanders. Looking at the inevitable domino reaction that could come with an indicted presidential candidate, the question becomes, could Sanders become the nominee if Clinton is indicted?

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Bernie Sanders Says He Will Vote for Clinton

20160624_1112 Bernie Sanders Says He Will Vote for Clinton (NPR).jpg Bernie Sanders said he’ll vote for Clinton
By Tamara Keith, NPR

(June 24, 2016 11:12 a.m.) — Bernie Sanders said he’ll vote for Hillary Clinton in November — but more than two weeks after she became the presumptive Democratic nominee, Sanders remains in the race.

Sanders was on MSNBC when Nicolle Wallace, a former Republican aide and now network political analyst, asked Sanders, “Are you going to vote for Hillary Clinton in November?”

His answer: “Yes.”

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Bernie Sanders Will Concede When Hell Freezes Over – The revolution will continue until morale improves

20160617_0918 Bernie Sanders Will Concede When Hell Freezes Over (vanityfair).jpg Bernie Sanders Will Concede When Hell Freezes Over – The revolution will continue until morale improves
By Tina Nguyen, VanityFair.com

(June 17, 2016 9:18 a.m.) — Everyone seems to know the Democratic race is over, except Bernie Sanders. The primary results are in, and the splenetic revolutionary was soundly defeated by Hillary Clinton. Yet Sanders is still fighting on, quickly burning his once substantial political capital, as the Democratic Party turns its attention to Donald Trump, a raving lunatic. Despite the terrifying prospect of a Trump presidency, he vowed again on Thursday night that he would bring his Future You Can Believe In to the convention and beyond.

“Election days come and go. But political and social revolutions that attempt to transform our society never end,” the Vermont senator told his supporters in a live video message. “They continue every day, every week, and every month in the fight to create a nation and world of social and economic justice. . . . That’s what this campaign has been about over the past year. That’s what the political revolution is about and that’s why the political revolution must continue into the future.”

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Bernie Sanders Should Never Endorse Hillary Clinton

20160615_1245 Bernie Sanders Should Never Endorse Hillary Clinton.jpg Bernie Sanders Should Never Endorse Hillary Clinton
By Michael Sainato, Observer

(June 15, 2016 12:45 p.m.) — With the end of the Democratic primaries and several weeks to go until the Democratic National Convention in July, pressure from mainstream media for Bernie Sanders to drop out of the race is increasing.

“Hillary Clinton Made History, but Bernie Sanders Stubbornly Ignored It,” read a headline in The New York Times after Clinton was projected to win California—despite the LA Times reporting more than 2.5 million ballots (nearly half of the state’s six million votes) had yet to be counted. Yamiche Alcindor, the same Times reporter who claimed Sanders ignored history, also inferred Sanders’ decision to stay in the race was sexist, writing on June 12 “Bernie Sanders Refuses to Concede Nomination to Hillary Clinton.”

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Sanders still in the race after meeting with Clinton

20160614_2113 Sanders still in the race after meeting with Clinton (Hill).jpg Sanders still in the race after meeting with Clinton
By Jonathan Easley

(June 14, 2016 09:13 p.m.) — Bernie Sanders is staying in the Democratic presidential race after meeting with rival Hillary Clinton, the party’s presumptive nominee, for nearly two hours at a Washington, D.C., hotel on Tuesday night.

Sanders and Clinton met at the Capital Hilton just blocks from the White House to plot a way forward after the Democratic primary season came to a close on Tuesday.

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Read Bernie Sanders’ Speech Vowing to Continue His Nomination Fight

20160608_1010 Read Bernie Sanders’ Speech Vowing to Continue His Nomination Fight.jpjg.jpg Read Bernie Sanders’ Speech Vowing to Continue His Nomination Fight
By Katie Reilly, Time

(June 8, 2016 10:10 a.m. ET) –Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders spoke to a crowd of supporters at a rally in California on Tuesday night, vowing to continue to “fight for every vote and every delegate,” shortly after Hillary Clinton declared victory in the Democratic primary during a speech in New York.

“We are going to fight hard to win the primary in Washington, D.C.,” Sanders said. “I am pretty good at arithmetic, and I know that the fight in front of us is a very, very steep fight. But we will continue to fight for every vote and every delegate we can get.”

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4 Reasons Bernie Sanders Could Fight On

20160607_1500 Four Reasons Bernie Sanders Could Fight On (RollingStone).jpg 4 Reasons Bernie Sanders Could Fight On
Why Clinton’s call for Sanders to fall in line misreads the 2016 race
By , RollingStone

(June 7, 2016 03:00 p.m.) — On Monday — even before the Associated Press declared her the presumptive Democratic nominee — Hillary Clinton leaned on Bernie Sanders to fall in line. Citing her own precedent from 2008, Clinton told reporters, “Tomorrow is eight years to the day after I withdrew and endorsed then-Sen. Obama. I believed it was the right thing to do.”

The message from Clinton is clear: Let’s get that “Kumbaya moment” going, Bernie. And make it snappy.

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Die-Hard Bernie Sanders Backers See F.B.I. as Answer to Their Prayers

20160527_0845 Die-Hard Bernie Sanders Backers See F.B.I. as Answer to Their Prayers (nyt).jpg Die-Hard Bernie Sanders Backers See F.B.I. as Answer to Their Prayers
By Yamiche Alcindor, NYT

(May 27, 2016 8:45 a.m.) — ANAHEIM, Calif. — Senator Bernie Sanders may be trailing Hillary Clinton by hundreds of delegates, and Mrs. Clinton may be treating the Democratic nomination as hers, but Julie Crowell, a stay-at-home mother and a die-hard Sanders supporter, is holding out for an 11th-hour miracle: divine deliverance at the hands of the F.B.I.

Like many of Mr. Sanders’s supporters, Ms. Crowell, 37, said she hoped that Mrs. Clinton’s use of a private email server during her time as secretary of state would eventually yield an indictment, and she described it as the kind of transgression that would disqualify another politician seeking high office.

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Sanders Supported Auto Bail-Out Despite Hillary Claims

20160307_1603 In Michigan, Hillary Clinton says Bernie Sanders was against the auto bailout (Politifact).jpg In Michigan, Hillary Clinton says Bernie Sanders ‘was against the auto bailout’
by Lauren Carroll, PolitiFact

Bernie Sanders didn’t support the bailout that saved the auto industry, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton said of her opponent ahead of the primary in Michigan, a state built on the auto business.

Turns out he did.

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Florida Courthouse Hosting Early Voting Allows Campaigning on Property

20160305_1625PA_003 Bernie Sanders Volusia Poll Station Campaign Signs_2048xAUTO.JPG Florida Courthouse Hosting Early Voting Allows Campaigning on Property
by Daryl Parsons

VOLUSIA Fla. (Mar. 5, 2016) — Early voting started today in Florida permitting its residence to get a head start in this year’s presidential primary elections.

Being only the first day, the Volusia Courthouse was met with both voters and campaigning activity.

Campaign signs for both Trump and Clinton were affixed inside and around the Volusia Courthouse’s parking lot that services the courthouse where the election polling stations are at.

The poll station volunteers were asked about the signs and said there was no problem, “as long as they were 100 feet away from the building.” The emphasis here was from the building, and not the property.

Weather the 100 foot rule applies to the government property or building has yet to be clarified pending a review of the matter by city, state and federal election law officials.

Campaign advocates seeking to promote early voting for both Hillary and Sanders campaigns were also out front of the courthouse. They stood outside the 100 foot distance and were across the street not obstructing any entrance into the polling station building.

When asked why the election process at the Volusia courthouse permitted the Trump and Clinton sighs to e posted in the parking lot to the building, one poll person said, “as long as it’s 100 feet from the building,” that it was okay.

Early voting will continue until Mar. 12. Then two days later on Mar. 15, the general primary election will take place.

More photos.

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