Bernie Sanders Endorses Hillary Clinton for President

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ABC News(PORTSMOUTH, N.H.) — Sen. Bernie Sanders endorsed Hillary Clinton Tuesday and said that he will do “everything I can to make certain” she wins the 2016 presidential election.

“Secretary Clinton has won the Democratic nominating process and I congratulate her for that,” Sanders said, after being interrupted by applause.

“I have come here to make it as clear as possible as to why I am endorsing Hillary Clinton and why she must become our next president,” Sanders said.

While his endorsement earned major applause throughout the New Hampshire venue, there was also a group of Sanders supporters who walked out in protest, one of whom was holding a sign that read “nope.”

The former secretary of state became the Democratic Party’s presumptive nominee last month, and while Sanders previously said he would vote for her in November, he had withheld his formal endorsement.

Tuesday’s event marks their first joint general election campaign event, and they walked out together to Bruce Springsteen’s song “We Take Care of Our Own,” which Sanders had used regularly during his campaign.

Sanders started his speech by thanking the millions of Americans for voting for him during the Democratic primary and for the small donations he received to fund his campaign.

“Together we have begun a political revolution to transform America and that revolution continues!” he said with Clinton at his side. “Together we will continue to fight for a government that represents all of us and not just the one percent.”

He closed his speech by calling her “one of the most intelligent people that we have ever met” and noted that he is “proud to stand with her today.”

Clinton followed with her own remarks, thanking Sanders and noting “how much more enjoyable this election is going to be now that we are on the same side!”

She made a direct appeal to Sanders’ fans, ticking through the issues on which the two campaigns had come together, such as minimum wage and college affordability, among others.

She asked his supporters to get involved and donate.

“We accept $27 donations too, you know,” she joked, referencing the figure Sanders’ team regularly toted as their average campaign donation.

“To everyone here and everyone across the country who poured your heart and soul into Sen. Sanders campaign, thank you,” she said, adding that Democrats needed them to take back the Senate.

“Let’s open the doors to everyone who shares our progressive values,” she said. “This is one of the most important elections in our lifetimes. So I’m asking you to stand with us and then I’m asking you to keep working in the weeks, months, and, yes, years ahead. You will always have a seat at the table when I am in the White House.”

The candidates’ march toward unity began last month when Sanders and Clinton met in person in Washington, D.C., to discuss their agendas and the future of the presidential race.

According to sources from both campaigns, Sanders’ campaign manager Jeff Weaver and Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook have remained in daily contact, negotiating policy roll-outs and next steps. Last week, the Clinton campaign unveiled two significant updates to her policy platforms on college affordability and health care, incorporating and crediting many of Sanders’ ideas.

Sources from the Clinton campaign say her team has been conducting outreach to Sanders supporters as well, especially in states that Sanders won during the primary, including New Hampshire.

Eight years ago, Clinton held a summer rally in New Hampshire with then-candidate Barack Obama to demonstrate the Democratic Party coming together after he secured the nomination. The decision to hold a similar event again in the Granite State, which Sanders won handily, shows a clear effort to bring activists from both sides together.

Over the course of the primary season, Sanders won 23 contests in total, including many battleground states such as Colorado, Wisconsin and Michigan. He landed major victories in states like Washington, Idaho and Utah. Still, he fell short and lost by equally huge margins in other places including South Carolina, New York and Arizona.

Clinton benefited from overwhelming support from officials in the party and superdelegates who committed to her candidacy early on and did not budge.

Despite stinging losses in the South Carolina primary and on Super Tuesday, Sanders was able to stay in the race so long in part due to his unprecedented small-donor fundraising. His insurgent campaign raised $225 million and will be remembered for some of the largest events of the campaign cycle and appeal to young voters.

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