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News / Nation & World

Biden seeks to upstage Buttigieg in fight for California

Endorsement from Los Angeles mayor a boost for former vice president

By MICHAEL R. BLOOD, Associated Press
Published: January 10, 2020, 9:14pm
2 Photos
Former Vice President Joe Biden, center, talks with  officers of Ports of Long Beach during a tour of the Gerald Desmond Bridge Replacement Project Thursday in Long Beach, Calif. (ringo h.w.
Former Vice President Joe Biden, center, talks with officers of Ports of Long Beach during a tour of the Gerald Desmond Bridge Replacement Project Thursday in Long Beach, Calif. (ringo h.w. chiu/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

LOS ANGELES — Joe Biden and Pete Buttigieg chased California votes on Friday in dueling events, looking to sway Democrats in the state that delivers the largest haul of delegates in the presidential contest.

Appearing at a short-term housing complex for the homeless, Buttigieg promised a new era of help for people living on the streets, while Biden sought to upstage the former South Bend, Ind., mayor with a formal endorsement from Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti attended by firefighters. The endorsement was initially announced Thursday.

Garcetti called Biden a longtime friend, “the right leader at the right moment.” Garcetti was an early supporter of President Barack Obama, in whose administration Biden served as vice president for eight years.

Buttigieg’s stop highlighted the homeless crisis in Los Angeles, where tent cities line downtown streets and freeway underpasses are frequently filled with makeshift communities of people with nowhere else to go. He listened intently to stories from residents of the so-called bridge home who described their journey from the streets to the shelter, where they are linked with health services, receive assistance restoring their lives and, hopefully, locate permanent housing. They can stay up to nine months.

Jessica Kelly, who said she once had a career in pharmaceutical sales, described how her life unraveled after a string of back surgeries led to opioid misuse and, eventually, a heroin addition. After several years without a home, finding a bed at the shelter has been “a blessing for me,” she told Buttigieg.

Buttigieg has said he will invest $430 billion to make affordable housing available for over 7 million families while aiming to end homelessness for families with children. he mayor stressed that homeless was a problem that cuts across communities “of every size, in every climate.” He has faced criticism in his hometown for being too slow to act, but his campaign said homelessness was cut by 25 percent during his tenure.

A small but noisy group of Black Lives Matter protesters shadowed his visit, chanting on a sidewalk outside the shelter that Buttigieg was a “fake” and “anti-black.” A planned outdoor discussion with residents was moved indoors, though the din of the protesters could still be faintly heard in the room.

“The people of South Bend feel abandoned,” said protester Kahmiil Middleton, who lives in South Bend.

Buttigieg told reporters afterward, “It is important to me that I have the support that I do from black residents of South Bend. I know that support is not 100 percent, and I respect those political differences.”

Candidates are competing for over 400 delegates in California’s March 3 primary, though mail-in ballots will be going out a month earlier, at the time the Iowa caucuses kick off the presidential election.

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