Former secretary of state Hillary Clinton speaks with California voters during a rally in east Los Angeles on May 5. Her campaign announced a team Monday for the D.C. pimary on June 14. (Melina Mara/The Washington Post)

The District will award some of the last handfuls of delegates in the Democratic primary contest, and many party leaders in the nation’s capital have already committed to Hillary Clinton for president, but the front-runner isn’t taking any votes for granted, her campaign says.

On Monday, Clinton’s campaign announced a leadership team for District’s June 14 primary that includes two figures in her national campaign and another heavily involved in her string of victories across the South.

Adam Parkhomenko, who founded the “Ready for Hillary” effort to ramp up early national grass-roots engagement, will lead the D.C. campaign, similar to the role he took on for the campaign’s rout in Maryland.

Richard McDaniel, Southern political director for Hillary for America, will become D.C. political director.

LaDavia Drane, who left D.C. Mayor Muriel E. Bowser’s office last year to become Clinton’s head of African American outreach, will serve as a special adviser.

Up for grabs in D.C. are about 45 delegates, with about 20 already pledged to Clinton.

Early polling shows Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders could hit the 15 percent threshold to win at least a few of those delegates.

[The latest Democratic delegate count]