The Mercury News

Buttigieg rallies in California

Sanders, Klobuchar, Trump also headed to state ahead of March 3 primary

- By Casey Tolan ctolan@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SACRAMENTO >> Presidenti­al candidate Pete Buttigieg swung through Northern California to rally his supporters and raise money at two fundraiser­s Friday, enjoying his newfound status as a top-tier contender after surprising­ly strong performanc­es in Iowa and New Hampshire.

The former South Bend, Indiana, mayor’s trip kicked off a twoand-a-half-week sprint to California’s March 3 primary, with several other Democratic White House hopefuls — as well as President Donald Trump — campaignin­g across the state over the next few days.

“So much depends on what happens when the future-oriented, forward-looking, racially diverse, justice-minded state of California has its say,” Buttigieg told several thousand cheering fans at a downtown Sacramento park.

After notching a photofinis­h win in Iowa and a close second place in New Hampshire, behind Sen. Bernie Sanders, Buttigieg is hoping that his success in the early states will give him momentum leading up to the Golden State’s primary.

Many attendees said they were still deciding on which candidate to support and had shown up in part because of Buttigieg’s early strength. His most diehard supporters were thrilled with his record so far.

“When he first announced, we were like, ‘Pete who?’ ” said Mark Workman, an Air Force veteran and NASA employee from Mountain View, whose wife, Jan, carried a homemade Pete sign covered in glitter. “Now we’re totally on board.”

But Buttigieg and the other candidates who are moving on from the first two contests of the primary season will have to prove they can hold their own in the far more diverse states coming up on the calendar: Nevada, which caucuses on Saturday; South Carolina, which votes on Feb. 29; and Super Tuesday states like California and Texas.

Buttigieg’s Sacramento crowd was overwhelmi­ngly white, and he has struggled to substantia­lly raise his poll numbers among African American and Latino voters. Just over half of California’s voting-age population is nonwhite, according to a study by the UC Davis Center for Regional Change.

California will send 416 pledged delegates to the party’s convention in Milwaukee this summer — more than double the delegates from all four of the early states combined.

Polls have shown Sanders leading in California, followed by Sen. Elizabeth Warren and former Vice President Joe Biden. Buttigieg has trailed far behind, although the latest surveys were taken before Iowa and New Hampshire voted.

Meanwhile, former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg has been climbing in the polls and picking up a long list of California endorsemen­ts as he’s spent millions to blanket the state’s airwaves with TV ads promoting his candidacy.

Other presidenti­al contenders are headed to California over the next few days, most popping over from campaign trips in neighborin­g Nevada.

Sen. Amy Klobuchar, who also did well in New Hampshire with a surprise thirdplace showing, will be in San Francisco for a fundraiser today, although her campaign hasn’t announced any public events.

Sanders will headline a rally in Richmond on Monday to promote his campaign’s effort to encourage early voting and organize independen­t voters.

And Trump is set to swing through Los Angeles, Riverside County and Bakersfiel­d for fundraiser­s and other events Tuesday and Wednesday.

Trump’s itinerary includes a fundraiser at the Palm Springs-area estate of Oracle Chairman Larry

Ellison, the most high-profile show of support so far for Trump’s reelection campaign by a major Silicon Valley leader. Tickets for the event with Trump are going for up to $250,000, according to The Desert Sun, which first reported the fundraiser.

Buttigieg also held two fundraiser­s Friday at the National LGBTQ Center for the Arts in San Francisco and the University Club in Palo Alto. At the San Francisco event, he was interrupte­d by three LGBT protesters who objected to him meeting with donors instead of community members — a line of attack that his White House rivals have used in the past.

“I respect your activism, but this is a gathering for supporters of our campaign, and I just got a question about my husband and I’m really excited to answer it,” Buttigieg told the protesters, according to a pool report.

On the sidewalk outside the center, protesters calling themselves “Queers Against Pete” shouted back and forth with some Buttigieg supporters. They said they oppose Buttigieg over his moderate policies and his ties to wealthy donors.

“He’s not representa­tive of our community,” said Jethro Patalinghu­g, a gay filmmaker and Sanders supporter from San Francisco who attended the protest, adding that Buttigieg was “using his gay card to propel his campaign.”

At his Sacramento rally, an energetic Buttigieg was introduced by one California supporter, Lt. Gov. Eleni Kounalakis, and was

asked mostly softball questions by another, West Sacramento Mayor Christophe­r Cabaldon. Buttigieg pitched himself as a candidate who could unite the party and bring in Republican voters in the general election.

When asked what he was doing to win the support of African American voters, Buttigieg laid out his policies on issues such as supporting minority-owned businesses.

“Sometimes they talk about the black vote like it’s some guy,” Buttigieg said. “Let’s respect that this is not a monolithic community; there are a lot of different experience­s that make up the black experience in America.”

He also took a veiled shot at Klobuchar and former San Francisco hedge fund chief and Democratic presidenti­al candidate Tom Steyer, who were stumped when asked to name Mexico’s president in Telemundo interviews Thursday night. Buttigieg named President Andrés Manuel López Obrador in his own interview with the Spanish-language news channel.

“I thought it was a trick question, and it turned out that not everybody knows about this,” Buttigieg said, calling López Obrador “one of the most important internatio­nal leaders for the U.S. to be in dialogue with.”

And on Valentine’s Day, Buttigieg’s most crowdpleas­ing answer was about first meeting Chasten, his husband. The former mayor told supporters the two had their first date at a time when he “had been actively avoiding love for a very long time, and tiptoed out to see

what it would be like.”

“First I saw these eyes, this smile I just had to see in person — so I swiped right,” Buttigieg said, referring to the method of showing one’s affection on dating apps like Tinder. “It’s the most millennial thing I’ve done.”

Many attendees said they were still making up their minds on which candidate to support but were impressed with what they’d heard.

Tim Busch, a 47-year-old civil engineer, said he had narrowed down his choices to Buttigieg and Klobuchar. He liked Buttigieg because “he’s moderate and normal and not 90.” (Sanders and Bloomberg are 78, while

Biden is 77.)

“I don’t want a dinosaur as the next president,” Busch said.

Rinda Pope, 67, whose son Alexander was killed in Iraq in 2007, said she planned to vote for Buttigieg in part because the former mayor served as an intelligen­ce officer in the U.S. Navy Reserve, including a seven-month tour in Afghanista­n.

“He chose to defend our country just like my son did,” Pope said. “We need someone like that.”

 ?? DOUG DURAN STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Pete Buttigieg talks to supporters at Cesar Chavez Plaza in Sacramento on Friday.
DOUG DURAN STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Democratic presidenti­al candidate Pete Buttigieg talks to supporters at Cesar Chavez Plaza in Sacramento on Friday.

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