Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Will Democrats find a presidenti­al hopeful at city hall?

- By Thomas Beaumont and Bill Barrow

DES MOINES, IOWA » Democrats searching for potential presidenti­al candidates may find some in an unlikely place: city hall.

A handful of Democratic mayors from around the country are considerin­g the race in 2020, taking early steps in Iowa, which holds the first major contest of the presidenti­al campaign.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti was visiting Iowa Friday in hopes that his experience running a big city and facing touchy issues like immigratio­n might distinguis­h him in a field with few traditiona­l contenders.

No mayor has ever gone straight from city hall to the White House, though former mayors have served as president. But could a mayor make the leap? “I don’t see why not,” said New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu, among the Democrats seeking to raise their profiles.

“We’re practical people. We’re focused on getting things done,” Garcetti told reporters Friday after touring a carpenter’s union training center in suburban Des Moines. “While Washington plays politics, we’re getting the job done.”

Being governor has been a more reliable stepping stone to the White House, but of the 50 states, only 16 have Democratic governors today, and few seem to be weighing 2020 campaigns. Democrats hold only half of the governorsh­ips they did 25 years ago.

Garcetti said mayors are more pragmatic than typical elected officials, yet still handle big budgets involving public health, safety and economic issues that directly affect people.

And while Sens. Bernie Sanders, a Vermont independen­t who challenged Hillary Clinton for the 2016 presidenti­al nomination, and Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., get attention in Washington, some mayors are getting attention by taking actions on issues on which congressio­nal Democrats, in the minority party in Congress, have been stymied.

Mayors interested in running include New York’s Bill De Blasio, Pete Buttigieg of South Bend, Indiana, and Julian Castro, a former San Antonio mayor who served as housing secretary in the Obama administra­tion.

Landrieu leaves office in New Orleans next month, and he’s already ramping up a national book tour promoting his efforts to remove some Confederat­e monuments in his iconic city.

Garcetti’s mission in Iowa is to make it clear to activists that his big-city experience is attractive on the national stage.

His city has roughly 4 million people, about a million more than the entire state of Iowa. He heads a police department of 30,000 and oversees the nation’s busiest seaport.

De Blasio, whose city is more than twice the population of Los Angeles, was the guest at a Democratic­leaning activist group’s annual dinner in December.

Garcetti and others have stepped forward on national issues such as immigratio­n, a burning concern for Democrats in Iowa angry with the Republican­controlled Legislatur­e and GOP governor for enacting legislatio­n last week outlawing “sanctuary cities.” That’s a term for jurisdicti­ons that limit local involvemen­t in federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

Garcetti promotes his opposition to such measures in Los Angeles, among cities that don’t assist with federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t, where he has created a $10-million legal defense fund for immigrants threatened with deportatio­n and defied U.S. Justice Department calls for local police to assist with enforcemen­t of federal immigratio­n laws when no serious crime has been committed.

 ?? DENIS POROY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (FILE) ?? In this Saturday, Feb. 24, 2018, file photo, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti speaks at the 2018 California Democrats State Convention in San Diego. Garcetti, like other Democratic mayors considerin­g the presidenti­al race in 2020, is hoping to show...
DENIS POROY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (FILE) In this Saturday, Feb. 24, 2018, file photo, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti speaks at the 2018 California Democrats State Convention in San Diego. Garcetti, like other Democratic mayors considerin­g the presidenti­al race in 2020, is hoping to show...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States