Clinton faces April tests in Wisconsin, New York
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Hillary Clinton's campaign aims to effectively end the Democratic primaries against Bernie Sanders by early May. But first she needs to navigate tricky contests in Wisconsin and her home state of New York.
Clinton enters April with a big delegate lead and insider support among Democrats crucial to the nomination. But Sanders is pointing to victories in five of the past six states holding contests — among them, three western states — and views Wisconsin as a home for the progressive causes he has long supported.
"We are on a roll. Our campaign has momentum," Sanders told a crowd of about 4,000 Tuesday night inside the Wisconsin State Fair Park Products Pavilion in Milwaukee.
A win by Sanders here next week would put pressure on Clinton to deliver in New York, which she represented in the Senate. Returning to New York ahead of the state's April 19 primary, Clinton campaigned at Harlem's famed Apollo Theater and unveiled a new television ad taking on Republican Donald Trump's hardline immigration policies and violence at some of his rallies.
Wisconsin, with its mix of urban and rural voters, could offer parallels to its Midwestern neighbors. Sanders' triumph in Michigan earlier this month was one of the biggest moments of his campaign but Clinton defeated him a week later in Illinois and Ohio, setting up a new fight.
Sanders, reprising a message he used effectively against Clinton in Michigan, said disastrous trade policies led to the 1996 loss of Milwaukee's Johnson Controls plant to Mexico and the closure of Janesville's General Motors plant in 2008.
In a play for Democrats' hearts, Clinton has slammed Republican Gov. Scott Walker, a former presidential candidate who rose to prominence through his fights with organized labor.
Clinton accuses Walker of "taking a wrecking ball" to the rights of workers and women. She also puts Walker at the center of her critique of Sanders' plan to provide free tuition at public colleges and universities, saying it relies too heavily on governors kicking in funding.
Sanders, who advocates for large voter turnout at every turn, has lashed out against Wisconsin's voter identification, faulting Walker with making it harder for people to vote.
Sanders, despite the wins in Washington state, Alaska and elsewhere, still faces significant hurdles. Clinton has won 1,243 pledged delegates compared to Sanders' 980, according to a count by The Associated Press.
Clinton's lead grows when including superdelegates, or party officials like members of Congress and state leaders who can back any candidate they wish. Including superdelegates, Clinton has 1,712 delegates to Sanders' 1,011. It takes 2,383 to win and Clinton's team has suggested April 26 primaries in Pennsylvania, Maryland, Connecticut, Rhode Island and Delaware as a time when it could essentially seal the nomination.
Then-Illinois Sen. Barack Obama defeated Clinton handily in Wisconsin's primary in 2008. Her team has suggested that either a narrow victory or loss would not have a major influence on the overall delegate count.
Paul Maslin, a Wisconsin-based Democratic pollster who worked on Howard Dean's 2004 campaign, said it was a state Sanders "ought to do pretty well in. It won't be a blowout," he said. "I do think overall it's still a fairly progressive Democratic primary. That is the kind of voter that will respond to what Sanders is saying."
In New York, both candidates are preparing for a drag-out fight in a state where both have roots.
Sanders, who grew up in Brooklyn, aims to build a coalition of liberal voters in New York City and economically-frustrated areas upstate, which has suffered as manufacturing jobs have declined.
He's also planning to highlight his strong opposition to fracking, an oil-and-gas extraction method that's New York State was the first to ban.
Clinton, meanwhile, plans to highlight her record as senator, particular her economic work upstate and aid to 9/11 first responders.
Sanders is "going to campaign like a Brooklynite and she's going to campaign like a senator who represented this state for eight years and has lived here for 16," said her senior strategist Joel Benenson. "It may be competitive but he's not going to get a number in New York that's going to change the delegate count materially."
But Clinton's history in New York raises the stakes — win or lose.
"If it's even close, Secretary Clinton will have a whole other set of problems," said Democratic strategist Hank Sheinkopf, a New York-based consultant to President Bill Clinton's 1996 re-election campaign. "Republicans will think it's a great day and Democrats will freak out."
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Associated Press writers Lisa Lerer and Catherine Lucey in New York contributed to this report.
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