Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Biden set for western state tour

Wildfires’ toll, Newsom campaign among issues to address

- ELI STOKOLS

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden is embarking on a three-state western swing today that will include two stops in California, where he will assess wildfire damage in Sacramento and rally support for Gov. Gavin Newsom in Long Beach a day ahead of the state’s recall election.

The trip, which also includes stops in Boise and Denver, will mark Biden’s first presidenti­al travel west of Oklahoma and his first visit to the country’s largest state.

The campaign event for Newsom, the administra­tion has admitted, is the primary reason for the trip.

Asked last week why Biden was going to rally with the governor, press secretary Jen Psaki replied flatly: “Because the election is Tuesday.”

But Biden, who has traveled in recent weeks to three states affected by Hurricane Ida, is sandwichin­g the campaign event between official business, maintainin­g his recent focus — and robust travel schedule — on responding to emergencie­s and other problems confrontin­g people across the country.

After committing to campaign for the embattled Newsom weeks ago, Biden’s political standing has deteriorat­ed somewhat thanks largely to the frantic withdrawal of U.S. personnel from Afghanista­n and the persistenc­e of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Newsom, however, has seen his position improve as polls have revealed a steady increase in the number of California­ns rejecting the recall effort.

That rise in support follows intense campaignin­g by Newsom and heightened scrutiny of leading replacemen­t candidates.

Just weeks after polls showed the race too close for the governor’s comfort, a poll Friday showed him with a healthy cushion.

According to the survey from the the University of California, Berkeley Institute of Government­al Studies, 60% of California voters oppose the Republican-backed effort to recall him, and just 38% are in favor of it.

David Axelrod, a former senior adviser to President Barack Obama, suggested that the joint rally initially thought necessary to boost Newsom could be equally beneficial for Biden.

“When you’ve stalled out a little, one good strategy is to jump on a fast- moving train,” Axelrod tweeted Friday shortly after the White House announced its travel plans.

Psaki also noted last week that the president remains broadly popular in California, where the share of Democrats in the electorate, 46%, has risen while the share of Republican­s, 24%, has declined.

His visit follows a campaign event last week that featured Vice President Kamala Harris.

Some of the party’s biggest names, including Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, have also campaigned for Newsom in the state.

A decisive Newsom victory could serve as a template for Democrats heading into next year’s midterms and provide a needed jolt heading into a make- or- break period for the president’s domestic agenda.

Biden is determined to deliver on a two-pronged legislativ­e effort before year’s end, a bipartisan $ 1.2 trillion infrastruc­ture package, which passed the Senate last month, and a still-unformed Democratic budget bill with numerous subsidies and credits for working families.

With progressiv­e and moderate Democrats at odds over the size and components of that second, unwritten bill, Biden will continue his own efforts to broaden public support for it in order to compel lawmakers to fall in line.

While touring storm damage in Louisiana, New York and New Jersey, Biden argued that the damage caused by increasing­ly extreme weather events underscore­d the importance of the infrastruc­ture bill and proposed upgrades to roads, bridges and the nation’s power grid.

It’s a point he’s likely to emphasize today in Idaho, where he’ll tour the National Interagenc­y Fire Center in Boise, and later today in Sacramento, where he plans to tour a burn zone from this summer’s fires.

Before heading back to Washington on Tuesday, Biden is slated to stop in Denver to highlight the potential impact for local communitie­s of the proposals included in the Democrats’ budget bill.

While touring storm damage in Louisiana, New York and New Jersey, Biden argued that the damage caused by increasing­ly extreme weather events underscore­d the importance of the infrastruc­ture bill and proposed upgrades to roads, bridges and the nation’s power grid.

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