Thousands of Texas Democrats will meet in San Antonio this week for the party’s state convention.

Texas representatives for both the Clinton and Sanders campaigns met in Austin Tuesday to show a united front but people on both sides of the party remain loyal to the candidate of their choice.

“It is by no means a call to take our foot off the gas,” Jacob Limon said to Sanders supporters.

The State Director of Bernie Sanders for President, Limon said, “We have vowed to fight until every vote has been cast.”

That deadline for Sanders and his supporters comes Tuesday with the final Primary vote in Washington D.C.

“But the reality is, after we do that we ought to start talking about what we are going to present to Texans and the American people about the future of this country,” said Garry Mauro, a Texas Authorized Agent for Hillary for America.

Sanders plans to meet with Hillary Clinton, the party’s presumptive nominee, Tuesday night after the results come in. Sanders told reporters the two plan to talk about the party’s national platform—a blue print of the party’s belief system.

More than nine thousand Texas democratic delegates will gather inside the Alamo Dome to build the state’s platform this week.

A former Texas Land Commissioner, Maura said, “We are going to do our damnedest to make sure we don’t have a lot of fights.”

Limon, with the Sanders campaign, said when it comes to issues the two sides are “virtually identical.”

Immigration reform, equal pay, and criminal justice reform are just a few of the issues that will be discussed at the state convention.

Clinton may be the party’s presumptive nominee but Sanders fans plan to go to the convention to push for the same social and economic justices Sanders campaigned for.

“We’ll be fighting for those—the $15 an hour is one example we’ll be pushing for the platform,” Limon said he does not foresee any “deal breakers” onany platform.  

On team-Clinton, Maura said he’s confident the two sides will find “common ground” on the party’s platform but in the end it could be a common enemy that brings this party together.

“With Donald Trump on the ticket we now have a way to get our voters out,” Maura said.

Party leaders in Texas and across the U.S. hope to capitalize on the anti-Trump movement to sway Republicans to vote Democratic in the 2016 Presidential Election.

“That doesn’t mean we are not a battle ground state,” Maura repeated a few times.

A Democrat has not won a statewide office in Texas in more than two decades and the party is the minority in both the state House and Senate.

The last time Texas voted a Democrat into the White House was more than 40 years ago, when Jimmy Carter was elected in 1976.

Few think Texas will turn blue in 2016 but Clinton has said she could take the traditionally red state with the help of women and Latino voters.

“There aren’t enough white males in this state to carry this state,” Maura said of Trump. “Unless he figures out a way to do better among women, Hispanics, African-Americans, and Asians, he’s going to have a difficult time carrying this state.”

Donald Trump will also be in Texas this week. The Republican Party’s presumptive nominee is scheduled to attend a series of private fundraisers that coincide with the Democratic Convention.

Texas Democrats said they don’t know if Trump purposely planned the overlap but they do expect to see protesters outside of Trump’s event in San Antonio Friday.

The convention kicks off Thursday with an opening ceremony and runs through Saturday.