We're in the home stretch now for the 2018 midterm season. Here in California, voters have been asked to answer some pretty big questions for the state--from how to deal with the soaring cost of living to how to best address the state's education achievement gap. And, to meet those big questions, we've also seen some big spending and heated campaigning. With just a few days left now before it all comes to a close, we examine the election on this weekend's In Depth with guest host Keith Menconi, joined by two experts in politics: Reed Galen, a political consultant who has worked on high profile national and state political campaigns and chief strategist of the Serve America Movement and Michael Semler, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus in the Political Science Department of California State University, Sacramento. What are these two experts anxious to see on Tuesday? "I think what will be interesting to see is California is always sort of a blue wave, it's been dominated by Democrats in its politics for years. And so whether or not the supposed enthusiasm that Democrats are showing elsewhere leads to enthusiasm on the left in California, given that you know you have a governor's race where it looks like Gavin Newsom's going to win, two Democrats running in the United States Senate race, and local hotly contested congressional races," opined Galen. "So, that's what I'm looking for, whether or not you know the measures and the candidates that are really on the left are a beneficiary of what seems to be a national movement." "I'd second what Reed is examining," added Semler. "Because what's happening in California is really a reflection of what's happening in the United States. This looks like it could be a national campaign and referendum on Donald Trump and the question is how far does that extend and whether it really exists here in California, whether there is an enthusiasm gap or division between what we see in polls and what actually happens on election day."