updatedSanders to meet with Clinton Tuesday after final Dem primary

Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders said Sunday he won't endorse Hillary Clinton for president until they meet and he measures her commitment to battling Wall Street, wealth inequality and other priorities that powered his rogue presidential campaign. "I look forward to sitting down with Secretary Clinton and see what kind of platform she is going to support and how aggressive she is going to be," he said on CBS' "Face the Nation."

Bernie Sanders to meet with Hillary Clinton about Democratic platform

Bernie Sanders will meet with Hillary Clinton on Tuesday night in Washington, D.C., as a step toward working with his Democratic presidential rival. "I look forward to sitting down with Secretary Clinton to see what kind of platform she is going to support and in fact how aggressive she is going to be in addressing the major crises that we face," the Vermont senator said in an appearance on CBS' Face the Nation.

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton react to the ‘devastating’ news…

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton react to the 'devastating' news out of Orlando - now called the country's most deadly mass shooting Hillary Clinton wrote a message in English, which was also translated to Spanish, which called the shooting 'horrific' and 'devastating' Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton took to Twitter this morning to give their initial reactions to what's now being called the most deadly shooting in United States history. 'Woke up to hear the devastating news from FL.

Clinton vs Trump: battle of the New Yorkers

Perhaps the only guarantee in Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump's epic fight for the White House is that Americans will get their first New Yorker president since World War II. On a likely freezing January 20, 2017 either the adopted daughter who served twice as state senator or the Queens-born, Manhattan billionaire will be sworn in as the 45th president of the United States.

Game over: Will Sanders come down off the pique?

After Tuesday night, Bernie Sanders' infinitesimal chance of winning the Democratic nomination rests on one possibility: that Democratic superdelegates will overturn the will of the voters. This is no small irony: Sanders spent much of his campaign railing against superdelegates and fighting to eliminate the practice of giving party officials and establishment types a say in the nominating process.

Kids on the menu! Baby goat is heading to a supermarket near you…

Pictured: The gunman who walked up to The Voice star Christina Grimmie as she signed autographs after concert and shot her dead Oklahoma teen, 17, dies after his eight-foot-deep sand tunnel collapses on top of him at the beach while on vacation in Florida 'The end': Fan outrage at poor taste tweet shared on the Voice star Christina Grimmie's Twitter just hours after she was shot dead in Florida 'It is a disgrace that Google would do that' Trump takes aim at search engine over claims it fixed results to help Hillary Clinton Charlotte's first royal wave: Princess is pretty in pink as she makes her Buckingham Palace balcony debut alongside brother George during Queen Elizabeth's official 90th birthday celebrations The Queen of pearls: Of all the dazzling jewellery she owns, a pair of pearl earrings, given to her by her beloved grandmother are the Queen's favourite Right Royal recycling! ... (more)

Brush fire burns on Highway 168 at Shaw Avenue exit in Fresno

Fresno fire fighters extinguish a brush fire burning on the shoulder between Highway 168 and the Shaw Avenue exit in Fresno on Saturday, June 11, 2016. Nathan Magsig, a candidate for Fresno County Board of Supervisors, speaks during his primary party about his chances of an outright victory on Tuesday, June 7, 2016.

The Latest: No mention of Clinton at Sanders rally in DC

Bernie Sanders is making no mention of presumptive Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton at his rally in Washington, capping a day of meetings with President Barack Obama , Vice President Joe Biden and Senate leaders as the primary season nears the end. The rally comes hours after Obama announced his endorsement of Clinton in an online video and Clinton picked up the backing of prominent liberal Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts.

Trump calls for GOP unity but continues intraparty attacks

Campaigning in a pair of crucial battleground states, Donald Trump bashed Democrats and Republicans alike Saturday, from Hillary Clinton to former Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney. First at a convention center in Tampa, Florida, and then in an airport hangar outside Pittsburgh, the presumptive GOP presidential nominee tore into fellow Republicans who have been slow to back him, again dashing hopes among some in the party that Trump would solely train his fire on his likely general election foe.

Jill Stein: Clinton will ‘fan the flames’ of right wing

Voters should not have to choose a "lesser evil" of the two major parties' nominees, likely Green Party nominee Jill Stein said to about 70 people on Saturday. She argued in an afternoon speech that the party has been "ahead of the curve" on racial equality, climate change and LGBT issues.

Sanders’ hometown proud, but resigned he won’t be president

People in this lakeside city that Bernie Sanders helped transform as mayor before embarking on a career in Congress are proud of the mark he's left in the 2016 presidential race even as they recognize that his White House bid is almost certainly going to fall short. The senator returned to Burlington, his hometown, after a week of major developments in the campaign: Hillary Clinton clinched the Democratic nomination, President Barack Obama endorsed her after meeting with Sanders at the White House, and the party kept up efforts to ease Sanders from the race while trying not to offend his many supporters.

Road to 270: Where Trump, Clinton start their race

Graphic shows how states have voted in presidential elections since 1992; 2c x 4 inches; 96.3 mm x 101 mm; No matter the 2016 presidential matchup after the primary campaigns, the Democratic nominee was likely to have an edge over the Republican candidate once the election turned toward the November race. In the past six presidential elections, 32 states and the District of Columbia have voted solidly Democratic or solidly Republican.