Los Angeles Times

Key Democrats support Biden in attempt to derail Sanders

Klobuchar drops out and joins Buttigieg in endorsing their onetime rival on the eve of Super Tuesday.

- By Mark Z. Barabak

Joe Biden fastened his grip on the establishm­ent wing of his party Monday as prominent Democrats rallied behind the former vice president in an accelerati­ng effort to thwart Bernie Sanders on the eve of the presidenti­al campaign’s biggest and most consequent­ial day of balloting.

One of Biden’s few remaining center-left rivals, Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, quit the race and joined former White House hopeful Beto O’Rourke at a Biden endorsemen­t rally in Dallas, shortly after Pete Buttigieg flew to the city to deliver his support.

“He reminds me of my son Beau,” an emotional Biden said of the 38-year-old former South Bend, Ind., mayor — referring to his son who died at age 46 of a brain tumor. “I know that may not mean much to most people, but to me it’s the highest compliment I can give anyone.”

The appearance of the erstwhile antagonist­s was a strong sign of Biden’s rapid shift in fortune after a big win in Saturday’s South Carolina primary, which resuscitat­ed his f lailing candidacy following dismal showings in Iowa and New Hampshire.

It also underscore­d the desire of many in the party, panicked at Sanders’ success, to consolidat­e behind a more moderate alternativ­e, and do so quickly.

Former Democratic Senate leader Harry Reid of Nevada led a parade of party luminaries and elected officials rushing to announce their backing of Biden ahead

of Super Tuesday.

The Vermont senator used the snowballin­g proBiden movement to rally his supporters, many of whom are still angry at the perceived bias Democratic leaders showed four years ago when the democratic socialist lost the nomination to the more centrist Hillary Clinton.

“Look, it is no secret … that there is a massive effort trying to stop Bernie Sanders,” he told reporters during a stopover in Salt Lake City. “The corporate establishm­ent is coming together, the political establishm­ent is coming together, and they will do everything. They are really getting nervous that working people are standing up.”

On Monday, he won the formal backing of the liberal political action committee Democracy for America, an offshoot of former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean’s insurgent 2004 presidenti­al campaign.

“Bernie Sanders has built a powerful multiracia­l, multigener­ational movement and we’re excited to join the campaign at this critical moment in the Democratic race,” said the group’s chairman, Charles Chamberlai­n.

The machinatio­ns came as voters in 14 states, stretching from California to Vermont, prepared to divvy up more than a third of the delegates needed to win the Democratic nomination.

The Super Tuesday contests also presented the first test of strength for former New York Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, who skipped the early contests and sunk an unpreceden­ted fortune — hundreds of millions of dollars — into advertisin­g aimed at vaulting him into late-starting contention.

His TV commercial­s, which were impossible to miss, were aimed at the same pragmatic-minded voters that Biden sought, touting Bloomberg’s stewardshi­p of the nation’s biggest city and his “commonsens­e solutions and the ability to get it done.”

After months of stability, the competitio­n among a historical­ly large and diverse field turned virtually overnight into a race with fewer than a handful of serious contenders, all in their 70s: three white males and Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren.

Klobuchar became the third Democrat in 48 hours to quit the contest, following hedge-fund billionair­e Tom

Steyer and Buttigieg. Though she turned in a number of well-received debate performanc­es and finished a surprising third in the New Hampshire primary, the Minnesota senator was never a top-tier candidate and was not even a sure bet to carry her home state on Tuesday.

“If you feel tired of the noise and the nonsense in our politics, and if you are tired of the extremes, you have a home with me,” Klobuchar said, sounding familiar campaign themes as she left the race and delivered her endorsemen­t. “And

I think you know that you have a home with Joe Biden.”

After a series of singlestat­e contests with momentum as their reward, the coast-to-coast balloting marks a dramatic shift in the Democratic contest.

“Plain and simple, it’s about getting delegates,” said Josh Putnam, a political scientist and expert on the nominating process, who publishes the election blog Frontloadi­ng HQ.

Under rules adopted by the Democratic National Committee, it takes 1,991 pledged delegates to secure the nomination at the Democrats’ July convention in Milwaukee. There will be 1,357 at stake on Super Tuesday, with the largest trove — 415 — coming from California.

Although the Golden State won’t decide the nominating fight, it will play a larger role than in previous presidenti­al campaigns after advancing its primary from the end of the nominating season in June.

Instead of coming to California to raise money and leaving to spend it elsewhere, candidates invested considerab­le time and effort campaignin­g here and addressing local issues; on Monday, Warren released a plan addressing farmworker rights.

Appearing Monday night at East Los Angeles College, she took a swipe at Biden and Democrats rallying behind his candidacy. “No matter how many Washington insiders tell you to support him, nominating [a] Washington insider will not meet this moment,” Warren told a large and enthusiast­ic crowd of supporters who packed the school quad.

“Voters deserve a choice of someone with unshakable values who can also get things done, and bring all kinds of Democrats along with her,” she said.

The biggest question heading into Tuesday was whether a single candidate could win big and amass an insurmount­able lead in delegates, hastening the end of the nominating fight, or if something akin to a split decision would keep the competitio­n alive for weeks or even months to come.

Democrats do not award their delegates on a winnertake-all basis but rather through a more egalitaria­n formula based on two thresholds that make it harder to put the race away early. Candidates who win a minimum of 15% statewide receive a share of delegates. Separately, they can earn delegates by winning at least 15% of the support in individual congressio­nal districts. (Or, in the case of Texas, state legislativ­e districts.)

Sanders entered the day as the favorite to win the two biggest prizes, California and Texas, and was also competing strongly against Warren in her home state of Massachuse­tts. He was expected to easily win at home in Vermont and run strongly in nearby Maine.

Biden, who won overwhelmi­ng support from South Carolina’s African American community, was poised to perform well in several states — Alabama, Arkansas, North Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia — with sizable black population­s.

“If Bernie Sanders has a commanding performanc­e, running the table, it’s probably over,” said Ace Smith, a Democratic strategist who helped guide California Sen. Kamala Harris’ unsuccessf­ul presidenti­al bid. “If there’s two or more candidates splitting delegates with him ... this show probably goes on.”

Eyeing the competitio­n, President Trump did his part to stir up trouble renewing his assertion Democratic Party leaders were trying to cheat Sanders of the nomination. “They are staging a coup against Bernie!” he tweeted.

Sanders had a tart response. “President Trump, stay out of the Democratic primary,” he said on CNN. “Why don’t you do your job for a change as president. Stop lying, stop running a corrupt administra­tion, pay attention to the American people.”

As big and politicall­y important as Tuesday is, the balloting pales beside the epic election day of Feb. 5, 2008.

California along with 21 other states and the District of Columbia held contests in what remains the biggest single day of presidenti­al primary voting ever. The result failed to settle the close contest between Democrats Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, who battled to the final day of the primary season in June, when Obama finally clinched enough delegates to become the presumptiv­e nominee.

Short of a blowout on Tuesday, this Democratic race could be headed for another prolonged fight.

 ?? Juan Figueroa Dallas Morning News ?? JOE BIDEN and Pete Buttigieg at a campaign event in Dallas. Bernie Sanders used the snowballin­g pro-Biden movement to rally supporters. He said “it is no secret … that there is a massive effort” to foil his campaign.
Juan Figueroa Dallas Morning News JOE BIDEN and Pete Buttigieg at a campaign event in Dallas. Bernie Sanders used the snowballin­g pro-Biden movement to rally supporters. He said “it is no secret … that there is a massive effort” to foil his campaign.
 ?? Kerem Yucel AFP/Getty Images ?? BERNIE SANDERS campaigns in St. Paul, Minn., on Monday. Fourteen states will vote on Super Tuesday.
Kerem Yucel AFP/Getty Images BERNIE SANDERS campaigns in St. Paul, Minn., on Monday. Fourteen states will vote on Super Tuesday.
 ?? Eric Gay Associated Press ?? AMY KLOBUCHAR joins Joe Biden at a rally in Dallas. She dropped out of the presidenti­al race on Monday and quickly endorsed fellow moderate Biden.
Eric Gay Associated Press AMY KLOBUCHAR joins Joe Biden at a rally in Dallas. She dropped out of the presidenti­al race on Monday and quickly endorsed fellow moderate Biden.

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