Biden makes late push across West aiming to deliver votes for Democrats
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 — to try and deliver votes for Democrats.
"What a governor does matters," the president said, giving a pep talk to volunteers who were making Friday night calls for gubernatorial hopeful Tina Kotek and other candidates. "It matters! It matters, it matters, it matters!"
Before he left Portland on Saturday, the president planned to attend a reception for Kotek and speak about his administration's efforts to bring down costs for Americans.
It 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 Mr. Biden can be helpful, but steer clear of places where a visit from a president with approval ratings under 50% may not be as welcome.
Throughout the trip, Mr. Biden had to compete for the spotlight and contend with a troubling new inflation report and rising gas prices.
In Oregon, Democratic officials hope that the president 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.
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 the president'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," Mr. 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."
But his remarks came as the government reported that consumer prices, excluding volatile food and energy costs, jumped 6.6% in September from a year ago — the fastest such pace in four decades. Mr. Biden acknowledged that people were being "squeezed by the cost of living. It's been true for years, and folks don't need a report to tell them they're being squeezed."
Democratic candidates have been far more likely to appear with the president at official White House events underscoring their achievements than at overt campaign events. In California, Mr. Biden was joined by state lawmakers and the city's mayor, and he called them out individually. Rep. Karen Bass, who is running for mayor of Los Angeles, made a takeout run with Mr. Biden to a taco shop.
The president raised $5 million at a fundraiser in the Brentwood backyard of TV producer Marcy Carsey. Guests included fashion designer Tom Ford and actor-filmmaker Rob Reiner.
In Colorado, the president designated the first national monument of his administration at Camp Hale, a World War II-era training site, with a group of Democrats by his side. His audience in a canyon of stunning views, tall pines and bright yellow aspens included Sen. Michael Bennet, who is facing a tough reelection campaign and had worked for the new monument. Democrats hope the designation, popular in the state, will boost Bennet's numbers.
Early voting is underway in California and begins next week in Oregon and Colorado. The president notably stayed away from states where his presence could hurt Democrats, so far skipping Nevada and Arizona, where Democratic senators are in tough races.
Democrats are trying to retain power in the face of widespread economic uncertainty and the traditional midterm headwinds against the party in power. Republicans, aiming to regain the House and Senate, think they can capitalize on gas prices, inflation and the economy.
During his taco stop, Mr. Biden's chicken quesadilla order ran to $16.45, but he handed the clerk $60 and asked him to use the change to pay the next patron's bill.
It was the kind of personal connection the president loves. But while the moment was unfolding, the headlines in Los Angeles focused on a bitter City Council clash over racist remarks, while in Washington, it was all about how the House voted to subpoena former President Donald Trump on his role in the Jan. 6 insurrection.