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  • Four hundred and fifteen delegates, nearly a third of all those up for grabs tomorrow,

  • are in California.

  • Amna Nawaz has been talking to voters in the Golden State ahead of this key race on the

  • path to the Democratic nomination.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: Well, what do you have growing there?

  • SUSAN MARTIN, California Voter: Well, let's see. That's an orange tree.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: Raised Republican in California's Central Valley, Susan Martin says she couldn't

  • support Donald Trump in 2016, and now wants to see a Democrat defeat him.

  • SUSAN MARTIN: I want to know that they're going to approach it from a conservative,

  • middle-of-the-road, commonsense point of view. If you have Trump here and our most liberal

  • candidate there, I'm about here.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: Susan lives in Modesto, and agriculture is big here, the area John Steinbeck once

  • called America's breadbasket.

  • Like a record 16 million Californians, she's had a mail-in ballot at home for weeks. And

  • for her vote to count, she's got until Super Tuesday to mail that ballot in.

  • The problem? She still doesn't know who to vote for.

  • SUSAN MARTIN: There's so many candidates, and it takes a lot to sort out all their different

  • positions on things and figure out who is your best choice.

  • I just want to wait until I have the best chance to make an effect with my one small

  • vote.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: Ninety miles north, in the sprawling suburbs of Vallejo...

  • DEBORAH DICKSON, California Voter: I have six grandkids.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: ... we visit the home where Deborah Dickson gathers her grandkids before the family

  • votes...

  • DEBORAH DICKSON: We sit down, and we discuss each candidate. My young people, they have

  • their thoughts about it. And I try to straighten them out. OK?

  • (LAUGHTER)

  • DEBORAH DICKSON: Good, bad or indifferent, these are the decisions that we made.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: Like Susan, Deborah's had her ballot in hand for a while. But nothing she's

  • seen, nor heard, she says, inspired her.

  • What was the missing piece of information?

  • DEBORAH DICKSON: It was more of an inspirational feeling. The words that were coming out of

  • their mouths were not -- to me, they were just -- they were just mouthing them. They

  • weren't really feeling them. And they didn't make me feel it.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: Deborah says she just bit the bullet and filled out her ballot for Joe Biden.

  • JOSEPH BIDEN: Thank you, thank you, South Carolina!

  • (CHEERING AND APPLAUSE)

  • AMNA NAWAZ: The day after his decisive South Carolina win.

  • What's the feeling when you finally get to check a box? Is it excitement? Is it relief?

  • DEBORAH DICKSON: I'm going to say it's more of a resignation.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: Another 30 miles away, the narrow city streets of San Francisco, where Stephen

  • Prestwood and his husband have lived for over 20 years.

  • STEPHEN PRESTWOOD, California Voter: With having so many candidates in the primary,

  • it's made it very difficult to determine who will be the best candidate to go up against

  • President Trump. And I don't want to waste my vote.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: Over the last several weeks, he's had his ballot. He's looked at everyone, from

  • Bernie Sanders to Elizabeth Warren to Joe Biden. But he's given himself a deadline,

  • sort of.

  • You said your deadline is Super Tuesday.

  • STEPHEN PRESTWOOD: It is.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: That's a whole day.

  • STEPHEN PRESTWOOD: It'll be in the morning. I have to go to work.

  • (LAUGHTER)

  • STEPHEN PRESTWOOD: So...

  • AMNA NAWAZ: That's the only thing giving you a deadline.

  • STEPHEN PRESTWOOD: Yes. Yes.

  • I may be turning on the dime and making the decision right then.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: So, the political landscape here in California changes with the geographic

  • landscape. But the state is so vast that candidates can't campaign here the same way they did

  • in early states. They have to be strategic about where they spend their time.

  • PAUL MITCHELL, Vice President, Political Data, Inc.: California's really hard to move the

  • needle just on doing coffee klatches.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: Paul Mitchell is the vice president of Political Data, Inc., in Sacramento. He

  • says California's 53 districts offer candidates 53 distinct chances to pick up delegates on

  • Super Tuesday.

  • PAUL MITCHELL: We have districts that are maximizing the coastal vote, maximizing the

  • African-American or Latino vote or Asian vote, even maximizing the LGBT population vote.

  • And in that way, it has created this opportunity for candidates to come in and, even if they

  • can't win statewide, to be able to target certain congressional districts.

  • In the Central Valley, if you're the fourth-ranked presidential candidate and you show up to

  • a barbecue, it's like big news.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: Another factor for candidates to consider in California? Massive early voting

  • and mail-in voting means momentum from earlier states is muted here.

  • Mitchell says 5 percent of California's Democratic electorate had already voted before Bernie

  • Sanders was named the winner in New Hampshire, 25 percent before his decisive victory in

  • Nevada, and a likely 40 percent before voters in South Carolina brought Joe Biden's campaign

  • back to life.

  • So, does that mean that the contest in California is already decided?

  • PAUL MITCHELL: Well, you could say that the contest in California is 40 percent decided.

  • AMNA NAWAZ: Polls show Sanders poised to do well in California, with questions over how

  • his rivals could limit his delegate lead.

  • For moderates who have yet to turn in their ballots, could Pete Buttigieg's and Amy Klobuchar's

  • exits mean more delegates for Elizabeth Warren or Mike Bloomberg? Or will Joe Biden's South

  • Carolina surge win voters over?

  • This year in California, it may be up to the millions of late deciders to determine which

  • way the state's political winds will blow.

  • Voters here in California will have until Super Tuesday to drop those ballots in the

  • mail. As long as they're postmarked by then, they're fine. But with millions of ballots

  • still out, counting them and verifying them could take days, even weeks, some say, unless,

  • Judy, there is a clear and resounding winner on Super Tuesday.

  • JUDY WOODRUFF: Thank you, Amna.

Four hundred and fifteen delegates, nearly a third of all those up for grabs tomorrow,

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