Antelope Valley Press

Biden, Harris endorse Rep. Karen Bass in LA mayor’s race

- By MICHAEL R. BLOOD AP Political Writer

LOS ANGELES — President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris jointly endorsed US Rep. Karen Bass, on Tuesday, to become the next mayor of Los Angeles, providing a boost to her campaign against billionair­e developer Rick Caruso and cementing her place as the favorite of the Democratic establishm­ent.

In a statement, Biden and Harris said they were eager to work with Bass and her “innovative strategies” to deal with the city’s homeless crisis and rising crime rates.

“Karen Bass has our friendship, and she has earned our respect through her leadership in Congress on crime prevention strategies, effective and fair policing, and the welfare of children and families,” Biden and Harris said.

The endorsemen­t was not a surprise. Bass was on Biden’s short list when he was selecting a vice president and Harris, a fellow California­n, has known the congresswo­man for years.

Bass — a favorite of the party’s progressiv­e wing — could become the first woman to hold the city’s top job, and the second Black person.

Elections rarely turn on endorsemen­ts, but Bass has locked up an extensive list of prominent Democratic supporters, including Hillary Clinton, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

The show of big-name support from within the party — paired with prominent labor backing — will be an asset in the heavily Democratic city, where Republican­s account for only 13% of registered voters.

Los Angeles has been struggling with an unchecked homeless crisis, distress over brazen smash-and-grab robberies and home invasions while rents and housing prices have soared. At issue is whether voters in the liberal-leaning city might take a political right turn and embrace the moderate Caruso, who was endorsed by the police union and is promising to expand the Los Angeles Police Department.

In a tweet, Caruso responded that

endorsemen­ts would not conceal what he called the congresswo­man’s “record of failing to address LA’s homelessne­ss, public safety, and corruption. These endorsemen­ts have

absolutely nothing to do with what this campaign is really about.”

“LA needs fresh leadership,” Caruso added. “The same old from establishm­ent politician­s won’t stop this city from sliding into an even more desperate situation.”

In his first run for public office, Caruso has picked up some celebrity backing, including from Snoop Dogg and Gwyneth Paltrow.

So far, Caruso has spent more than $40 million on the race, much of it his own money. Bass led the field by a comfortabl­e margin in the June primary, setting up a November runoff with Caruso, the second-place finisher.

Caruso, who is known for building high-end malls, is a political shape-shifter who calls himself a “centrist, pro-jobs, pro-public safety Democrat.”

According to government records, he was a Republican for over two decades before becoming an independen­t, in 2011. Caruso changed back to Republican, in 2016 — a year when he served as California campaign co-chair for Republican John Kasich’s presidenti­al bid — and then to independen­t again, in 2019. He became a Democrat shortly before entering the mayor’s race, in February.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP PHOTO ?? Democratic US Rep. Karen Bass smiles after casting her vote in the contest to become Los Angeles’ next mayor in the 2022 primary election at the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Mall Community, in Los Angeles, on June 7.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP PHOTO Democratic US Rep. Karen Bass smiles after casting her vote in the contest to become Los Angeles’ next mayor in the 2022 primary election at the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Mall Community, in Los Angeles, on June 7.

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