Bernie Sanders wins Alaska and Washington, CNN projects
(CNN)Bernie
Sanders has won the Democratic caucuses in Alaska and Washington,
according to CNN projections, on what is a big day for the Vermont
senator's efforts to catch up to Hillary Clinton.
Washington
is the most important target this weekend with a trove of 101 delegates
up for grabs, which is why both candidates spent a significant amount
of time there this past week. Hawaii and Alaska are smaller prizes --
with just 25 and 16 delegates at stake respectively -- and neither
Clinton or Sanders made the trip.
Sanders
entered the contests with the edge, and privately, the Clinton campaign
has acknowledged he should win each state. Clinton's efforts in
Washington were aimed mostly at keeping the race relatively close, as
the Democratic delegates are distributed proportionally. She maintains a
commanding delegate lead overall.
All
three states reported high turnout, possibly approaching the record
numbers hit in 2008 when Clinton and Barack Obama were competing on the
ballot.
In Washington, some
precincts had to move their caucuses outside because they had hit
capacity inside caucus locations, according to Washington State
Democrats spokesman Jamal Raad. The turnout was so big in Steilacoom
that the caucus organizers ran out of voters registration forms at one
point.
In
Alaska, Democratic Party officials in Alaska were also predicting
record turnout. Hundreds of people had lined up an hour before the
caucuses even started in Anchorage.
Sanders
has done well in caucus states, a testament to his organizational
prowess and ability to excite the Democratic base. Sanders' campaign
sees these smaller states as critical to build up momentum for upcoming
contests in Wisconsin and New York next month, and the mightiest of
prizes: the June 7 primary in California.
"He's
obviously doing well in these Western caucus states, because you get a
very committed base of younger voters who are willing to show up and
stand in line in states like Idaho and Utah for hours," said veteran
Democratic strategist Bill Carrick, who is unaligned in the presidential
race this cycle. "There is a streak in the West that is populist -- and
the message that Sanders has is a classic western populist message:
Wall Street is sticking it to us, these big money interests are sticking
it to us, and we're out here scrambling, paying pretty heavy negative
dividends for their behavior."
But Sanders still faces daunting
mathematical odds as he tries to catch up with Clinton's delegate count,
particularly because delegates are allocated proportionally. The former
secretary of state has already amassed 1,711 of the 2,383 delegates she
would need to clinch the nomination, according to CNN estimates, while
Sanders has notched 952 delegates to date. That means he would need to
win 75% of the remaining pledged delegates to defeat her.
Washington turnout at Obama levels
In
an effort to boost participation in Washington, Clinton's campaign had
mailed Washington's version of absentee ballots -- known as "surrogate
affidavits" -- and postage-paid return envelopes to allow voters who
cannot show up to caucus to participate if they have a work schedule
conflict, are serving in the military or are hampered from caucusing
because of illness or a disability.
In
a sign of the energy and interest in the contest, some 35,000 of those
absentee ballots were returned, compared with just a couple of hundred
in past years, Raad said. In yet another sign of larger-than expected
turnout, at least 119,000 people had pre-registered to caucus as of
Friday.
"We may approach the
numbers that we had in 2008," Raad said, alluding to the 250,000 voters
who turned out during the 2008 contest. "We think that there is going to
be incredible turnout."
That
excitement, marked by a large rally at Seattle's Safeco Field Friday
evening, is something Sanders is counting on Saturday and beyond.
Dan
Schnur, director of the Jesse M. Unruh Institute of Politics at the
University of Southern California, said Sanders wins in small and
medium-sized states "almost certainly will not be enough to derail
Clinton from the nomination," but adds there's more to it for the
Vermont senator.
"For all practical
purposes, winning states like these are talking points for Sanders,"
Schnur said. "But for what he's after at this point, talking points
might be good enough. In other words, winning Alaska and Hawaii isn't
going to keep Clinton from getting the nomination, but it keeps his
supporters enthused; it keeps the money coming in; and allows him to
continue having a platform."
During
a rally in Spokane this week, Sanders urged his supporters to turn out
in droves on Saturday, noting that his campaign had taken steps toward
closing the delegate gap with Clinton in Utah and Idaho.
"There
will be a lot of delegates at stake here in Washington," Sanders said
in Spokane. "If you and all Washingtonians come out on Saturday, we will
win a major victory here and Washington will be a major step to the
White House."
Because of the
strength of her position, Clinton has increasingly pivoted away from the
primary contest toward the general election contest, spending much of
the week, for example, highlighting her approach to dealing with ISIS in
the wake of the terrorist attacks in Belgium.
"Understand
that this is not just a contest between different candidates, this is a
contest about fundamentally different views of our country our values
and our future," she said during a rally in Seattle earlier this week.
CNN'
Tulsi Gabbard cuts ad for Sanders in Hawaii
Polling
has been scarce in Hawaii and Alaska, making it difficult to predict
the outcome of those contests, but Sanders is outspending Clinton on the
airwaves. Sanders's wife Jane campaigned in Hawaii last Sunday and
Monday with popular Rep. Tulsi Gabbard, who broke with Democratic Party
leadership to show her support for Sanders.
But
Clinton's ties to Hawaii date back to 1992 when she campaigned in
Honolulu for her husband. Her campaign is well organized in Hawaii and
she has racked up endorsements from key state leaders including Sens.
Mazie Hirono and Brian Schatz, as well as former Gov. George Ariyoshi.
This
week Sanders released an emotional ad featuring Gabbard, who served a
12-month tour in Iraq, talking about the importance of Sanders's vote
against the Iraq War and his pledge to "take the trillions of dollars
that are sent on these interventionist, regime change, unnecessary wars,
and invest it here at home."
"The American people are not looking to settle for inches," Gabbard says in the ad. "They're looking for real change."
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