Bernie Sanders votes for Clinton to stop Trump

  • 25/06/2016
US presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders (AAP)
US presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders (AAP)

US Democratic presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders says he will vote for Hillary Clinton to stop Republican Donald Trump from winning the White House, a lukewarm show of support that his campaign says is not a formal endorsement.

Mr Sanders' comments come after weeks of pressure from Democratic party officials to throw his weight behind Ms Clinton, the presumptive nominee.

She locked up the required number of delegates this month with a string of wins in state-by-state primary contests.

Ms Clinton, the former US senator, first lady and secretary of state, needs Mr Sanders' supporters to boost her chances against Mr Trump in the November 8 election.

Only 40 percent of them say they would vote for her, with the rest undecided or divided between Mr Trump, a third-party candidate and staying home, according to Reuters/Ipsos polling.

Asked if he would vote for Ms Clinton in November, Mr Sanders, the US senator from Vermont, told MSNBC television: "Yes. The issue right here is I'm going to do everything I can to defeat Donald Trump. I think Trump in so many ways would be a disaster for this country if he were elected president.

"We do not need a president whose cornerstone of his campaign is bigotry, who is insulting Mexicans and Latinos and Muslims and women, who does not believe in the reality of climate change," he continued.

A spokeswoman for Sanders said his comments on MSNBC did not amount to an endorsement of Ms Clinton, adding that "Senator Sanders is also still an active candidate."

Mr Trump has angered minority groups with his hard line on immigration, including calls to temporarily ban Muslims from entering the country, deport millions of undocumented immigrants, and build a wall along the US-Mexican border if he is elected.

Mr Trump has also called climate change a hoax by the Chinese to hurt business in the United States.

Mr Sanders, a self-described Democratic socialist, managed to turn his long-shot run into a mass movement with proposals to combat wealth inequality, increase access to health care and education, and defend the environment.

His challenge to Ms Clinton, one of the best known figures in US politics, lasted far longer than expected, running for four months and across 50 states and yielding record numbers of small donations to his campaign.

Reuters