2016 Presidential Campaign

Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton in a tight race in California as the campaign batters her popularity

California's primary outcome remains difficult to predict, precisely because of the untested nature of Bernie Sanders' following. (Noah Berger (left) / John Locher / Associated Press)
California’s primary outcome remains difficult to predict, precisely because of the untested nature of Bernie Sanders’ following. (Noah Berger (left) / John Locher / Associated Press)

By Cathleen Decker

Hillary Clinton’s popularity has slumped in California under an unrelenting challenge from Bernie Sanders, who has succeeded in breaching the demographic wall Clinton had counted on to protect her in the state’s presidential primary, a new USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll has found.

As he has done across the country this primary season, Sanders commands the support of younger voters by huge margins in advance of Tuesday’s primary — even among Latinos and Asians, voter groups that Clinton easily won when she ran eight years ago. Many of his backers come from a large pool of voters who have registered for the first time in the weeks before the election.

Yet, Tuesday’s outcome remains difficult to predict, precisely because of the untested nature of Sanders’ following. That portends an intense fight in the final days of the campaign.

The Vermont senator has battled Clinton to a draw among all voters eligible for the Democratic primary, with 44% siding with him to 43% for Clinton. That represented a nine-point swing from a USC/Los Angeles Times poll in March, in which Clinton led handily.

Los Angeles Times

One thought on “2016 Presidential Campaign”

  1. As he has elsewhere, Sanders benefits here from party rules that allow registered nonpartisan voters — known in California as “no party preference” voters — to take part in the Democratic primary. Among nonpartisans who were likely to vote, he led by 48%-35%.

    The majority of registered American voters identify as independent. This is important to understand, because unlike so many primary contests, the general election in November will be open to independent voters. Bernie Sanders has won independent voters hands down in open Democratic primary contests.

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