Hillary Clinton Says 'There's No Way I Won't Be' Democratic Nominee

The candidate compares this election with her 2008 run.

"I will be the nominee for my party," she said, bluntly. "That's already done, in effect. There's no way I won't be."

Clinton currently has 2,293 delegates, according to a delegate count by ABC News, putting her just 90 delegates shy of the number needed to clinch the nomination.

By the same count, Sanders has 1,528 delegates -- 765 less than Clinton.

In recent weeks she has subtly made the case as to why he should consider it, specifically by comparing her 2008 campaign against Barack Obama to her race against Sanders now.

"Depending on how you evaluate, I had more popular votes, but I had fewer delegates. And the name of the game is how many delegates you have, right?" Clinton said on CNN today, referring to her 2008 race.

On June 7, 2008, Clinton dropped out of the primary race when, according to delegate counts at the time by several major news organizations, Obama was ahead by roughly 124 pledged delegates. The two contenders were, as Clinton said today, neck and neck in the popular vote, according to a Real Clear Politics count that showed Obama at 48.1 percent and Clinton at 48 percent.

Earlier this month, when asked whether the likely Republican presidential nominee is qualified, she demurred:

"Well," she said, "The voters have to determine that."

But in her interview today, Clinton said, "I have concluded he's not qualified to be President of the United States."