Los Angeles Times

Beto O’Rourke ends his campaign

Ex-congressma­n from El Paso gradually fell out of contention after joining Democratic race amid unusual hype.

- By Mark Z. Barabak and Melanie Mason Barabak reported from San Francisco and Mason from Des Moines.

DES MOINES — Beto O’Rourke abruptly ended his presidenti­al bid Friday, bowing to the realities of tepid fundraisin­g and an underwhelm­ing performanc­e that never matched the hype that swept him into the Democratic contest.

The former congressma­n from El Paso announced his decision on Twitter, as erstwhile rivals gathered in Des Moines for a party bash that kicked off the rush to the Feb. 3 Iowa caucuses — a contest in which O’Rourke hadn’t mattered very much.

“Our campaign has always been about seeing clearly, speaking honestly, and acting decisively,” he wrote. “In that spirit I am announcing that my service to the country will not be as a candidate or as the nominee.”

Later, speaking to a small gathering of disconsola­te supporters in chilly downtown Des Moines, O’Rourke pledged to remain “in the middle of this fight” and said he would do all he could to help the eventual nominee.

“This has been the honor of my lifetime,” he said, ringed by supporters as he stood on a wooden soapbox with his name stenciled on it. “I love you all and know I’ll be seeing you down the road.”

His exit was a dramatic — if not unexpected — comedown for the 47-year-old former political phenom.

Waging an uphill battle for the U.S. Senate in 2018, O’Rourke raised a stunning $80 million and built a national following by nearly besting Republican incumbent Ted Cruz in their deeply conservati­ve state.

With his toothy grin and tousled hair, O’Rourke was likened to the Kennedys. His fan base included former President Obama and Oprah Winfrey, among other celebritie­s. He was the subject of an HBO documentar­y and was ushered into the presidenti­al contest with his portrait on the cover of Vanity Fair magazine.

The trajectory was mostly downward from there.

There was little to make O’Rourke stand out in a field that, at one point, reached two dozen contestant­s. His positions were mostly standard Democratic fare: gun control, paid family leave, universal healthcare, LGBTQ rights, a $15-perhour minimum wage, campaign finance reform, a more humane immigratio­n policy.

His campaign was amateurish — at least before he gave in and surrounded himself with some more seasoned profession­als — and often seemed aimless.

The spring day he announced his policy to fight global warming, he was in Yosemite Park — invisible to a national audience for all intents — on a hike with a local climate change researcher and an environmen­tal justice advocate

“His chances at the presidenti­al level were never really good and he never was anywhere near a top-tier candidate,” said Jim Henson, who closely watched O’Rourke’s rise and fall as head of the Texas Politics Project at the University of Texas at Austin.

“From the beginning, the attributes that made him seem like an attractive presidenti­al candidate were based on a very different kind of race,” Henson said. “They weren’t likely to transfer into the very different nature of a presidenti­al nominating contest. Especially one this crowded.”

O’Rourke finally seemed to find his voice and purpose when tragedy struck his hometown. In August, a gunman targeting Latinos killed 22 people at a Walmart in El Paso.

Overnight, the former congressma­n turned his campaign into a crusade for gun control, breaking sharply with others in the party by calling for a mandatory buyback of militaryst­yle assault weapons. “Hell, yes, we’re going to take your AR-15, your AK-47,” he said at the Democrats’ third presidenti­al debate in Houston, drawing no seconds from his rivals.

As a candidate, O’Rourke seemed liberated. He abandoned the convention­al stops in Iowa and other early-voting states and blazed his own, less convention­al path, visiting soup kitchens, rehab centers and scenes of racial and domestic terrorism.

But if O’Rourke was energized, voters were less so. He barely registered in polls and his fundraisin­g slowed to a trickle compared with the torrent of his Senate campaign and its aftermath.

After raising more than $6 million in March in his first 24 hours as a candidate, he pulled in just $4.5 million for the three months ending Sept. 30.

Henson said there is still time for O’Rourke to enter the 2020 race against Texas’ senior Republican senator, John Cornyn.

“The conditions now are a lot different than they would have been had he gotten in at the beginning” with several Democrats already in the race, Henson said. “But it will be the topic of a lot of discussion in Texas this weekend.”

O’Rourke, however, seemed to rule out any interest in the Senate — as he has over the last several months, adamantly and repeatedly — with his statement that he had no intention of running for any other office.

 ?? Tony Gutierrez Associated Press ?? BETO O’ROURKE campaigns in Texas this month. On Friday, he told supporters after exiting the presidenti­al race: “This has been the honor of my lifetime.”
Tony Gutierrez Associated Press BETO O’ROURKE campaigns in Texas this month. On Friday, he told supporters after exiting the presidenti­al race: “This has been the honor of my lifetime.”

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