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Bernie Sanders addresses the crowd during a campaign rally at the Big Four Lawn park May 3, 2016, in Louisville, Kentucky. | Getty Bernie: ‘We’re going to stay in until the last vote is counted'

Bernie Sanders is here to stay.

The Vermont senator said in an interview with NPR that his presidential campaign will continue until June 14, even if the odds in terms of delegates are stacked against him.

“Well, we’re going to stay in until the last vote is counted, and that will be in the primary in Washington, D.C.,” Sanders told “Morning Edition” host Steve Inskeep in an interview from Elizabeth, Indiana, which occurred on Wednesday and aired Thursday morning.

Sanders is badly trailing Hillary Clinton in the delegate race and mathematically, he has been virtually eliminated from clinching the Democratic nomination. However, his come-from-behind victory in Indiana this week provided some additional fuel for him to stay in the primary.

Sanders said every state “should have a right to cast a vote as to who they want to see as president,” pointing specifically to California, which will proportionately award 546 delegates. He also said his campaign has a chance in West Virginia, Oregon and other states.

“We think we have a path towards victory. Admittedly, it is a narrow path, but when I started this campaign we were 60 points behind Secretary Clinton,” Sanders said. “Yesterday, here, in early May, we won in Indiana. … I think we’ve got some more good victories coming. So we are in this race until the very last vote is cast.”

When Inskeep pointed out that coming state contests aren’t winner-take-all, Sanders acknowledged it would be “an uphill battle.”

“The path to victory is to do extremely well in the remaining states and as you indicate, California, of course, is the largest state and we hope to do well there … and win the state,” Sanders said.

He added that there is an “other path” as well: flipping superdelegates.

“I think that in those states where we have won landslide victories, those delegates should reflect the wishes of the people in their state and give us their vote,” Sanders said. “And then, I think, we have got to make the case that the superdelegates, who are in many cases, were on board for Hillary Clinton even before I got in the race, that they should take a hard look at which candidate is stronger against Donald Trump. And I think we can make that case.”