Trump clinches GOP nomination with delegate count

Donald Trump has reached the number of delegates needed to clinch the Republican nomination for president, completing an unlikely rise that has upended the political landscape and sets the stage for a bitter fall campaign.

Trump has been put over the top in the Associated Press delegate count by a small number of the party’s unbound delegates who told the AP they would support him at the convention. Among them is Oklahoma GOP chairwoman Pam Pollard.

“I think he has touched a part of our electorate that doesn’t like where our country is,” Pollard says. “I have no problem supporting Mr. Trump.”

A supporter wearing a "Chinese Americans Love Trump" shirt takes the stage with other female Trump supporters at a campaign rally by the presumptive Republican presidential candidate, May 25, 2016 in Anaheim, California. (AFP/ ROBYN BECK)
A supporter wearing a “Chinese Americans Love Trump” shirt takes the stage with other female Trump supporters at a campaign rally by the presumptive Republican presidential candidate, May 25, 2016 in Anaheim, California. (AFP/ ROBYN BECK)

It takes 1,237 delegates to win the Republican nomination for president. Trump has reached 1,238. With 303 delegates at stake in five state primaries on June 7, Trump will easily pad his total, avoiding a contested convention in Cleveland in July.

Trump, a political neophyte who for years delivered caustic commentary on the state of the nation from the sidelines but had never run for office, fought off 16 other Republican contenders in an often ugly primary race.

Many on the right have been slow to warm to Trump, wary of his conservative bona fides. Others worry about Trump’s crass personality and the lewd comments he’s made about women.

— AP

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