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Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump aim to sweep five states

Five US states began voting on Tuesday at a critical juncture in the presidential race, with Hillary Clinton seeking a knockout against Bernie Sanders and Republican Donald Trump confident of extendin

Five US states began voting on Tuesday at a critical juncture in the presidential race, with Hillary Clinton seeking a knockout against Bernie Sanders and Republican Donald Trump confident of extending his lead despite rivals joining forces against him.

A very strong showing in primaries in Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Penn-sylvania and Rhode Island would put former secretary of state Hillary Clinton on the cusp of Democratic victory, a monumental step in her quest to become the nat-ion’s first female commander-in-chief. “I don’t have the nomination yet,” she said in an MSNBC town hall event in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania’s largest city, on the eve of the vote. “We’re going to work really hard until the polls close tomorrow.”

Mr Trump too was traveling the primary landscape in an intensifying effort to surpass the threshold of 1,237 delegates needed to lock down the role of 2016 Republican flag bearer.

But his rivals Ted Cruz and John Kasich controversially have joined forces to thwart the frontrunner, unveiling a late ploy that allows them to essentially go one on one against Mr Trump in key upcoming states.

According to the surprise deal, Mr Kasich will forego campaigning in Indiana, which votes May 3, and Mr Cruz will return the favour later in New Mexico and Oregon to try to deprive Mr Trump of victories there.

Tuesday’s voting began at 6 am (1000 GMT) in Connecticut and one hour later in the other states. In Rhode Island, it was beginning at various times, as early as 7 am.

Polls across all five states close at 8 pm (0000 GMT Wednesday).

Mr Trump is favoured to win all five states on Tuesday, while Mr Sanders, whose grassroots campaign has done well against the Clinton juggernaut, is seen as mounting a last-gasp effort. “We are running as hard as we can to win this thing,” Mr Sanders said on Monday.

News of the Cruz-Kasich deal sent Mr Trump over the top, as he assailed the pair for engaging in what he said was a desperate strategy, which he described as collusion.

“You know if you collude in business, or you collude in the stock market, they put you in jail,” Mr Trump boomed in Warwick, Rhode Island. “But in politics, because it’s a rigged system, because it’s a corrupt enterprise, in politics you’re allowed to collude.”

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