Hillary Clinton nominated as first Democratic female presidential candidate
Hillary Clinton on Tuesday became the first woman to be nominated as the presidential candidate of the Democratic Party of the United States, Business Insider reported.
According to the source, the former secretary of state and former US senator was formally nominated for president by the Democratic Party at its national convention in Philadelphia. She will lead the party in a general-election matchup with Republican nominee Donald Trump.
Clinton had been the presumptive nominee for the Democratic Party since she defeated her chief rival, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, in the California primary in June.
Sanders, in a show of unity, moved for the convention to nominate Clinton by a voice vote at the end of the state-by-state roll-call proceedings.
Clinton's formal nomination came amid a hacking scandal that compromised thousands of Democratic National Committee emails.
Correspondence between top Democratic officials was published by WikiLeaks and showed that the party apparatus was used to tip the scales in favor of Clinton and against Sanders.
On Monday, Sanders aimed to unite the party, delivering a strong endorsement of Clinton during a prime-time address before the Philadelphia convention on Monday night.
Clinton is scheduled to formally accept the Democratic nomination when she addresses delegates at the convention on Thursday night.