Clinton has six days to press her case in the nation's most populous state, where she is desperate to secure a symbolic victory and take Sanders' last remaining argument for staying in the presidential race off the table.
Still-popular former president Bill Clinton heads out West on his wife's behalf, launching a five-day campaign swing beginning today that will take him "up and down California," while Hillary holds her own packed schedule of rallies there beginning today, according to her campaign.
"We have an excellent chance to win California, and it's just possible that we might win it in a significant way," Sanders told a press conference Wednesday in the town of Spreckels.
"And if we win California, and if we win South Dakota, and North Dakota, and Montana, and New Mexico and New Jersey... And the following week do well in Washington, DC, I think we will be marching into the Democratic convention with an enormous amount of momentum."
She has amassed 2,313 delegates, according to CNN's tally, just 70 shy of the number needed to clinch the nomination.
Sanders is considerably behind, at 1,545 delegates. But the US senator from Vermont has long argued that Clinton's lead is largely based on her broad advantage with so-called super-delegates, party grandees who can vote for whomever they wish at the national convention.
Without the huge super-delegate advantage, Clinton's lead is far narrower, something Sanders has repeatedly stressed.
Sanders had a message yesterday for super-delegates: "Please listen to the voters in your own state," he said.
She is expected to inch right to the cusp of victory after caucuses are held at the weekend in the Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico, where Clinton is favored to win.
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