The most recent Field Poll in California shows Dean at 25 percent, followed by Wesley Clark with 20 percent, Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut with 12 percent and Kerry and Edwards in single digits. The poll was taken before Iowa and New HampshireThe Democratic presidential candidates headed south and west after Tuesday's New Hampshire primary for a series of races that will determine whether California's March 2 primary will be a competitive contest or simply a coronation.
Many Democratic voters seem to have one main qualification for the nominee: whoever appears at any given moment to have the best shot at beating President Bush.
``They may have their ideology and they may have their beliefs, but boy, there's one thing they're really concerned about, and that's who can beat George W. Bush,'' said Leon Panetta, the former Monterey congressman and White House chief of staff under President Clinton. ``Very frankly, if you can't do that, you're not worth very much.''
After Tuesday's results, the race appears to have three other viable contenders (aside from Kerry, of course) -- former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean, Sen. John Edwards of North Carolina and retired Army Gen. Wesley Clark -- heading into a series of contests that play to their strengths. Dean, the front-runner in the polls until he stumbled to third in Iowa, recovered to finish second in New Hampshire. Clark, who campaigned heavily in New Hampshire, appeared to edge Edwards for third place.
Edwards and Clark, who is from Arkansas, have strong appeal in the South, which is home to key primaries next month in states such as South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. Dean, who has raised more money than any other candidate, has the broadest network of volunteers throughout the country and could compete strongly in several places at once, including Western states such as Arizona and New Mexico.
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