Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Biden’s late push across West aims to deliver votes for Dems

- By Colleen Long

President Joe Biden strode into the telephone bank at a crowded union hall and eagerly began making calls and eating doughnuts — one frosted, one glazed — as he tries every page in the political playbook to deliver votes for Democrats.

“What a governor does matters,” Biden said in a pep talk to volunteers who were making Friday night calls for Oregon gubernator­ial hopeful Tina Kotek and other candidates. “It matters! It matters, it matters, it matters!”

Before leaving Portland on Saturday, the president attended a union hall reception for Kotek as he tried to boost her chances in a three-way race that could cost Democrats a reliably blue governor’s seat. He also gave a speech at a community center, warning that his administra­tion’s progress “goes away, gone” if Republican­s take control of Congress in the midterm elections.

Portland was the final stop on a four-day swing through Oregon, California and Colorado that has encapsulat­ed Biden’s strategy for turning out voters on Election Day, Nov. 8: flex the levers of government to help boost candidates, promote an agenda aimed at strengthen­ing an uncertain economy and haul in campaign cash.

And this: show up for

candidates when Biden can be helpful, steer clear of places where a visit from a president with approval ratings under 50% isn’t necessaril­y a good thing.

Throughout the trip, Biden had to compete for the spotlight and contend with a troubling new inflation report and rising gas prices.

“Folks are still struggling. We can’t kid ourselves about that,” Biden said Saturday.

He touted Democratic legislatio­n that he says will fight climate change with clean energy incentives and limit the cost of prescripti­on drugs, saying that “we’re fighting for folks who need our help.”

In Oregon, Democratic

officials hope that Biden can help consolidat­e the party’s support behind Kotek. The party is in danger of losing the governor’s race in the traditiona­l Democratic stronghold as Betsy Johnson — who has quit both the Democratic and Republican parties — has run a well-financed race against Kotek and the GOP nominee Christine Drazan.

Biden said Kotek has the “heart of a lion,” and he described her as “an articulate, tough, committed woman.”

The settings throughout the president’s trip were tailor-made for him.

In Los Angeles on Thursday, at a constructi­on site for an extension on the city’s subway line, he spoke

about his massive infrastruc­ture law. Giant cranes rose up behind him as he stood before bulldozers and excavators. Many on hand were hard-hat workers in constructi­on orange.

The stop neatly combined many of Biden’s agenda’s successes: investment­s in infrastruc­ture, job creation, fighting climate change by promoting mass transit.

“When you see these projects in your neighborho­od — cranes going up, shovels in the ground, lives being changed — I want you to feel the way I do: pride,” Biden said. “Pride in what we can do when we do it together. This is what I mean when I say we’re building a better America.”

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden holds a box of doughnuts during a volunteer event with the Oregon Democrats in Portland on Friday.
CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden holds a box of doughnuts during a volunteer event with the Oregon Democrats in Portland on Friday.

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