Los Angeles Mayor Garcetti backs Biden in Democratic presidential race
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[January 10, 2020]
By James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Former Vice
President Joe Biden on Thursday picked up the endorsement of Los Angeles
Mayor Eric Garcetti as he attempts to consolidate the support of the
Democratic establishment behind his presidential bid.
The nod from Garcetti, who has been mayor of the nation's second-largest
city since 2013 and flirted with his own presidential run, was
considered coveted ahead of the critical California primary in March.
"We need Joe Biden to bring our nation and world together during these
most divided and dangerous times," Garcetti said in a statement released
by the campaign.
California holds its primary in the 2020 Democratic presidential
nominating contest on March 3 and has the most delegates at play - 416 -
of any state on the nominating calendar.
Polls have shown Biden, who leads in national surveys among Democrats,
battling with U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders for the lead in the country's
most-populous state. They are among 14 Democrats seeking the nomination
to take on Republican President Donald Trump in the November election.
Along with Garcetti, who will serve as national co-chair of the Biden
campaign, Biden has been working to woo supporters of U.S. Senator
Kamala Harris, a Californian who dropped out of the presidential race in
December.
To that end, Robert Garcia, the mayor of Long Beach, California, said on
Thursday he had switched to Biden from Harris.
Moreover, on Thursday, the Biden campaign said Jonathan Henes, the
former national finance director for Harris’ presidential run and a
prominent New York bankruptcy lawyer, would begin raising cash for
Biden.
Henes, a partner at Kirkland & Ellis, raised money for Hillary Clinton’s
2016 presidential bid.
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U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden joins Los Angeles
Mayor Eric Garcetti on a campaign stop in Los Angeles, California,
U.S., May 8, 2019. REUTERS/Kyle Grillot
Biden recently garnered the support as well of top Wall Street
fundraisers Marc Lasry and Blair Effron, both former Harris
supporters.
The Biden campaign also announced the endorsement of Martha Fuller
Clark, a veteran New Hampshire lawmaker and deputy of the state
party, who previously said she would remain neutral in the
Democratic race.
The recent wave of support comes amid positive signs for Biden in
the two early nominating states of Iowa and New Hampshire, where
recent polls show him among the front-runners. Iowa holds the first
contest on Feb. 3.
Biden, 77, who served two terms under Barack Obama, easily outpaces
the rest of the Democratic field in party endorsements in his fight
against progressive candidates Sanders and U.S. Senator Elizabeth
Warren.
(Reporting by James Oliphant and Ginger Gibson; Editing by
Marguerita Choy and Peter Cooney)
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