Democratic presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT) walks through downtown Concord on election day on Feb. 9, 2016 in Concord, New Hampshire. (Credit: Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

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Crowds in the tens of thousands have been a hallmark of Bernie Sanders' presidential campaign, but the turnout hasn’t translated into the primary votes he needs to surge past Hillary Clinton in the race for the Democratic nomination.

Sanders, who will rally Wednesday night in Los Angeles at the Wiltern Theatre, drew 10,000 supporters in San Diego on Tuesday who came to hear his populist speech peppered with staples of his candidacy: income inequality, free college tuition, the need to overhaul the criminal justice system.

"Together we are going to change the national priorities of this country,” he said. “Together we are going to invest in our communities."

But even with fervent support and victories Tuesday in Utah and Idaho, Sanders trails Clinton by about 300 pledged delegates. She crushed him in the day’s other contest in Arizona.

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Bernie Sanders rally at @TheWiltern tonight. Expect overflow of people & traffic in the area https://t.co/Fnr60ux5r9 — LAPD Wilshire (@LAPDWilshire) March 23, 2016

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