Sanders: 'We Have Enormous Momentum' Going Into South Carolina

Despite a narrow loss in the Nevada presidential caucus on Saturday, Bernie Sanders is not slowing down, and neither are his supporters.

A report filed over the weekend with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) shows the senator from Vermont has received more than four million contributions, raising a total of $94.8 million through January 31st after his campaign launched last April.

“What this entire campaign has been about has been the issue of momentum and bringing more and more people into the political process,” Sanders told a crowd of 600 after the caucus, adding, “we will not allow billionaires and their super PACs to continue to buy elections in the United States of America.”

With less than a week to go until the next Democratic primary in South Carolina, Sanders told CNN on Sunday that the Nevada loss still proved how much progress his campaign has made in just a few short months.

“The truth is that for a campaign that started out as a fringe campaign at 3 percent in the polls we have enormous momentum,” Sanders told CNN‘s Jake Tapper. “You have noticed that one of the recent national polls actually had us ahead of Hillary Clinton, in state after state her margin is narrowing. So I think people are responding to our message of a rigged economy where ordinary Americans work longer hours for lower wages and almost all new income goes to the top one percent.”

And in a press release on Saturday, Sanders noted that he received 47 percent of the vote to Clinton’s 52 percent after trailing by as many as 50 points in Nevada in prior months.

“A month ago, we were 25 points behind,” he told CBS.

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