LAS VEGAS, Nevada – Overshadowed as it is, Saturday’s caucuses in Nevada could wind up being the most decisive contest in the 2016 Democratic nominating process.
Nevada has drawn less attention than Iowa and New Hampshire’s earlier contests. And the Republican primary in South Carolina, also on Saturday, will likely dominate headlines.
But the outcome in Nevada will play a key role in setting the trajectory for the rest of the Democratic race and help determine whether Bernie Sanders can continue to pose a mortal threat to Hillary Clinton.
Full coverage of the race for the White House: Decision 2016
“It could well be that in 10, 20, 30 years from now, people may well look back at what happened in Nevada and say this was the beginning of the political revolution,” Sanders said at a caucus-eve concert rally here to thousands of young people
The race is now seen as a tossup, though Clinton led by more than 20 points just a few months ago.
Sanders needs to prove he can win more diverse states than New Hampshire or Iowa, and Nevada is his best chance to do so before the race moves into the bigger map in March, when the majority of the party’s nominating delegates are at stake.
A win here could “create a real domino effect,” as Sanders’ campaign manager said in a fundraising email Friday. But a loss would be seen as a signal that Sanders can’t go the distance in diverse states — and his campaign knows it.
Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, can withstand a loss here and remain the prohibitive front-runner for the Democratic nomination — at least when it comes to the delegate math. But the pressure from jittery donors, under-pressure campaign staff, a nervous Democratic Party establishment and an aggressive news media would create an ugly week for Clinton heading into South Carolina and the Super Tuesday contests.
Here are five key factors to watch ahead of the caucus, which takes place at 11 a.m. in Nevada.
Flying blind
There has been almost no polling of Nevada, and many experts doubt what little survey data that does exist. Caucuses are hard to poll, and turnout is expected to be very low.
The best indication of the state of play may come from the campaigns’ body language. In a fundraising email sent to supporters late Friday night, Clinton campaign manager Robby Mook – who ran Nevada for Clinton’s 2008 presidential campaign — said he had “no regrets” about the state and urged supporters to look ahead to South Carolina and Super Tuesday.
Sanders, meanwhile, has not tried to hide his confidence. “I have a feeling, folks, we’re going to make history tomorrow,” Sanders said Friday night.
Latino vote
Nevada is the first state in the nominating calendar with a substantial minority population, the largest group being Latinos. Clinton won with Latinos in 2008, even though she lost the overall contest to Barack Obama. Sanders has faced an uphill battle in winning over minorities but has had more success in winning over young Latinos. Allies say those young people are swaying their parents and grandparents, but how big that impact is remains to be seen.
RELATED: Four things to watch in South Carolina’s GOP primary









