The Mercury News

O’Rourke resuming run with ‘major’ speech

- By Will Weissert

WASHINGTON >> Beto O’Rourke will formally rejoin the presidenti­al race today, resuming a campaign that has been suspended for nearly two weeks with what he promises will be a “major address to the nation” from his hometown of El Paso, Texas, where a mass shooting killed 22 people.

The Democratic former congressma­n will outline “the path forward” for his presidenti­al campaign “and for the future of the country.” He will then resume traveling the nation as a 2020 White House hopeful, though his advisers have yet to announce where he’ll go.

O’Rourke was campaignin­g in Nevada on Aug. 3 when a gunman who denounced immigrants in an online screed opened fire at a Walmart in El Paso, a U.S.-Mexico border town. O’Rourke rushed home and has tried to help his city cope. He missed scheduled visits to California, Colorado and Iowa, forgoing the state that opens presidenti­al primary voting during the state fair, when nearly every other Democrat in the crowded presidenti­al field was there.

Canceling a high-profile Iowa stop immediatel­y began clamor in Texas and beyond that O’Rourke could scrap his presidenti­al bid and return to Texas to challenge Republican Sen. John Cornyn, who is up for reelection next year.

O’Rourke, who became a political star by nearly unseating Republican Sen. Ted Cruz last year, entered the race for the White House with strong buzz and fundraisin­g but has seen both fade.

Still, O’Rourke’s campaign manager, Jen O’Malley Dillon, dismissed that notion, saying in a statement to The Associated Press: “Now more than ever, this country needs the honest leadership Beto continues to demonstrat­e — and that is why he is running for president.”

O’Rourke aides also say privately that the El Paso shooting only strengthen­ed the candidate’s resolve to be president since he feels President Donald Trump helped cause it.

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