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The rally was Bernie Sanders first public appearance after the polls closed in South Carolina. | Getty Sanders skips over South Carolina results, mocks Donald Trump instead

That South Carolina Democratic primary? Bernie Sanders made no mention of the outcome during a rally in Rochester, Minnesota, Saturday night.

The rally was his first public appearance after the polls closed in South Carolina. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton won decisively in the first Democratic primary in the South, with the race called for her almost immediately after the polls closed at 7 p.m. So Sanders opted not to mention the results at all in Minnesota, instead ticking off the major points of his policy platform on healthcare, economic inequality, and free tuition at public universities.

But the Vermont senator did include some digs at Clinton and real estate mogul Donald Trump. Clinton came first. He dinged her on the fact that she had an active super PAC working for her while Sanders did not. Then he attacked the Democratic front-runner for refusing to release the transcripts of her private speeches to major banks.

"Secretary Clinton gave some speeches to Goldman Sachs for $225,000 a piece. Now, I think if you get $225,000 dollars for a speech, it must be a really excellent speech and therefore you should be really proud to release the transcript of that speech," Sanders said.

Then the Vermont senator pivoted to his vote on the Iraq war and contrasted it to Clinton's position.

"I voted against the war in Iraq. And it gives me, as the senator from a state which suffered very heavy casualties in that war, it gives me no pleasure to tell you much of what I feared would happen in Iraq in fact did happen. Secretary Clinton heard the same evidence, listened to the same speeches. She voted for the war," Sanders said. "That's a real difference."

Near the end of Sanders' almost hour-long speech, he shifted to Trump, the GOP front-runner.

"The American people do not believe or agree with Trump when he thinks we should not raise a $7.27 minimum wage. The American people do not agree with Donald Trump when he says, if you can believe it, that wages in America are too high," Sanders said, sparking boos from the crowd. "I guess if you're a billionaire, maybe you think that wages in America are too high."

Sanders then mocked Trump on the environment.

"He has concluded that climate change is a hoax. And that it is a hoax created by the Chinese. Now I was shocked to hear that because I thought from Trump's perspective that it would have been a hoax created by Mexicans, or the Muslims. But the Chinese took me back a bit," Sanders said. "We will defeat him because the American people do not want a president who insults Mexicans, Muslims, women, African-Americans, veterans, and basically anyone who does not look and sound like Donald Trump."

Sanders finished the speech by asking voters to come out for him in Minnesota's caucuses on Tuesday. His campaign has prioritized Minnesota as a key state to win among the Super Tuesday states.

"In Minnesota, we will win if the voter turnout is high. I have no doubt about that. We will not win if the voter turnout is low," Sanders said.