As the primary results are being tallied, it seems Hillary Clinton will become the first woman to win the presidential nomination of a major political party.
But Bernie Sanders supporters are making it clear tonight, they're not throwing in the towel for their candidate.
Clinton is pushing for unity now that tonight's results, when including pledged superdelegate votes, give her the needed 2,383 delegates to Clinch the Democratic nomination. But Sanders supporters say the fight isn't over until those superdelegates vote on July 25th.
Tonight, Clinton is telling women that they can be anything they want.
"If you look at some of the numbers, she's doing really, really well with women," says political consultant Jim Morrison, who adds this election season is unprecedented.
But Morrison says nothing is set in stone with voters yet.
"What is really going to be the key drivers in these things is really up in the air, in my opinion," says Morrison.
Morrison says, as a candidate, Clinton comes with high unfavorables, and is seen by many Sanders supporters as an "establishment" figure.
Meanwhile, many high-profile Republicans find themselves trapped between defending Donald Trump's candidacy, and condemning his comments.
"We may see a really low voter turnout in the general election, because the Cruz supporters won't vote for Trump," says Morrison," and the Bernie supporters won't vote for Clinton," he adds, counting it as one of many theories in the realm of possibility this year.
Many Sanders supporters admit they're torn.
"If you're a Bernie supporter, you feel like the system worked against you," says one Sanders supporter.
"I've heard a lot of people say, if Bernie isn't the Democratic nominee, they'd vote for Trump," says another voter, who adds she isn't fond of any candidate on either side.
Clinton will have help from President Obama in campaigning, which could help boost her approval ratings among voters age 19-34, who also turned out in big numbers to support Obama.
But Morrison says that, too, could backfire.
"It could bring out a lot of Republican voters just to make sure Hillary doesn't carry [Obama's legacy] forward."
Sanders supporters we spoke with say, in the meantime, they're holding onto the thought that enough superdelegates might change their pledge to Clinton, and decide to vote for Sanders, in July.