Lodi News-Sentinel

Read more about the California races

Biden nabs some key states in race to win over Democrats

- By Melanie Mason

LOS ANGELES — California, the marquee prize of the 14-state voting bonanza of Super Tuesday, has sided with Sen. Bernie Sanders, according to projection­s from The Associated Press.

Sanders was leading in early returns Tuesday night, but the question remains if his competitor­s will also lay claim to some portion of the state’s trove of 415 delegates.

The projection came immediatel­y as the polls closed at 8 p.m., even as many voters remained in line, with widespread complaints of long lags in polling places. The Sanders campaign had filed a complaint asking for centers to remain open for additional hours to accommodat­e the delays.

The full picture of California’s choice will not come into view for days, if not weeks, as the state’s complex delegate math and expansive voting procedures make for an arduous counting process.

The Vermont senator, addressing a home state crowd about an hour before the California polls closed, pinned his hopes for the night in part on a strong showing in the Golden State.

“I’m cautiously optimistic that later in the evening, we can win the largest state in this country, the state of California,” Sanders said.

Like elsewhere in the country, the presidenti­al race in California has been volatile, with at least four contenders leading polls in the state at different points over the last seven months. Recent polling showed Sanders pulling away, pointing to a romp that had the potential to box out his competitor­s from scoring significan­t delegates.

For Sanders, winning in California carries extra symbolic heft. He lost the state’s 2016 primary to Hillary Clinton by seven points, one day after the Associated Press had reported that Clinton had secured enough delegate support to clinch the nomination.

This time, with California’s primary moved from June to March and a committed bastion of supporters lending Sanders an organizing head-start, the Golden State factored significan­tly into his campaign blueprint. His strategist­s lumped California into the “first five” of crucial states — along with traditiona­l early nominating states of Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina — and built an extensive field operation with 105 paid staffers.

Sanders himself made frequent visits to the state, hosting rallies not just in the population hubs of Los Angeles and the Bay Area, but often overlooked cities in the Central Valley.

His success hinged on building on his core support of young and very liberal voters with a concerted outreach to the state’s large Latino population. Sanders won 55% of that consequent­ial bloc, according to CNN exit polls.

“He sees us as human beings,” said Mildred Dimas, a 30 year-old Boyle Heights resident and daughter of Mexican immigrants. “He empathizes with our immigrant story.”

But Joe Biden was boosted by a strong showing with older voters, moderates and blacks, according to exit polls.

“The momentum has changed in his favor,” said Jose Marroquin, a 67-yearold retiree from Los Angeles who had decided he was supporting Biden as soon as he entered the race. “I am actually thinking that the tide has turned.”

Driven by the state’s yearning for political relevance, California officials moved the state’s primary to early March, up from June of the previous two elections, in hopes the results would shape the contours of the presidenti­al race.

While the state still got far less attention than the candidates lavished on Iowa and New Hampshire, California­ns did get more opportunit­ies to glimpse the candidates at rallies and other inperson events. The race was even more heated on the airwaves, with more than $120 million worth of television advertisin­g blanketing the state since early 2019. More than half of that came from one candidate, former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who blitzed the state with advertisin­g immediatel­y upon entering the race last November.

Democratic political figures were quick to declare the early primary a success.

“It absolutely had the desired impact . ... Candidates set up significan­t operations across the state during the primary, poured resources into communicat­ing with Democratic voters, and courted Democrats by focusing on important California issues,” said Rusty Hicks, chair of the California Democratic Party.

 ?? ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., addresses supporters at his Super Tuesday campaign event in Essex Junction, Vt., on Tuesday.
ALEX WONG/GETTY IMAGES Democratic presidenti­al candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., addresses supporters at his Super Tuesday campaign event in Essex Junction, Vt., on Tuesday.
 ?? ROBERT GAUTHIER/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Joe Biden reacts to Super Tuesday voting results at the Baldwin Hills Recreation Center in Los Angeles on Tuesday.
ROBERT GAUTHIER/LOS ANGELES TIMES Democratic presidenti­al hopeful Joe Biden reacts to Super Tuesday voting results at the Baldwin Hills Recreation Center in Los Angeles on Tuesday.

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