Bernie Sanders vows to fight Hillary Clinton all the way to Democratic convention as he sets sights on party’s superdelegates
Sanders has argued the current system is unfair and that he’ll work to change the future Democratic nominating process.

Bernie Sanders vowed to soldier on to a “contested” Democratic National Convention, despite projections that Hillary Clinton will reach the 2,383 delegates necessary for the party’s nomination after polls close in New Jersey on Tuesday.
At a press conference in Los Angeles on Saturday, the Vermont senator said media projections expected to dub Clinton the presumptive nominee are “simply not accurate” because they include super-delegates – elected officials and party leaders who will not cast their votes until the convention in Philadelphia in July.
It is extremely unlikely that Secretary Clinton will have the requisite number of pledged delegates to claim victory on Tuesday night
Superdelegates back Clinton by a wide margin, but Sanders hopes he can get them to defect.
“In terms of delegate math I think there is some confusion in the media,” Sanders said. “It is extremely unlikely that Secretary Clinton will have the requisite number of pledged delegates to claim victory on Tuesday night.”
Sanders cited an interview that Luis Mirander, Democratic National Committee communications director, gave to CNN in April, in which he said that superdelegates should not be included in delegate totals on primary and caucus nights. Instead, Sanders said the DNC should prepare for a "contested convention".
In 2008, when Barack Obama secured the Democratic nomination over Clinton, the race was called in early June based on a combination of pledged and superdelegate support. Clinton quickly suspended her campaign. Obama was formally nominated at the party’s convention in August.
Saturday’s press conference mirrored one Sanders had in Washington on May 1, following his losses in Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Delaware and Maryland days earlier. At the time Sanders said it was unfair that only 7 per cent of super-delegates had backed his campaign when he had won approximately 45 per cent of the pledged delegates.