Advertisement
YOU ARE HERE: LAT HomeCollectionsConferences

Obama meets with mayors to unify party

In a private gathering including Villaraigosa and other ex-Clinton backers, he vows to address urban needs.

CAMPAIGN '08: RACE FOR THE WHITE HOUSE

June 22, 2008|Phil Willon, Times Staff Writer

MIAMI — In a push to coalesce Democrats, Sen. Barack Obama on Saturday huddled in a hotel conference room with Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and other influential city leaders who earlier had supported Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton for president.

The private meeting occurred shortly before he addressed an overflowing ballroom at the U.S. Conference of Mayors in South Florida, where he promised, if elected, to use both federal money and muscle to address the urban needs for affordable housing, roads and funding for schools that he said have been neglected by the Bush administration.


Advertisement

But the clear, underlying goal of Obama's two-day campaign swing through Florida was to unite party loyalists after the protracted primary campaign and dispute over seating of the state's delegates to the national convention.

"Obama still has a lot of work to do. Neither Obama or Clinton did any campaigning in Florida," said Miami Mayor Manuel A. Diaz, who was among five Democratic mayors who met with the likely Democratic nominee.

Florida is viewed as a crucial state this November, as it has been in recent general elections. But for Obama to win, he will have to work hard to appeal to South Florida's large bloc of Latino voters, who have historically trended Republican, and to independents in the crucial corridor connecting Tampa and Orlando, Diaz said.

The Obama campaign requested the private meeting with the mayors, who, along with Villaraigosa and Diaz, included Martin Chavez of Albuquerque and David Cicilline of Providence, R.I., all of whom had backed Clinton but came out in support of Obama after he locked up the nomination. The meeting was sponsored by Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley, one of Obama's staunchest backers.

"He just said he was happy to have all of us on board," said Villaraigosa, who had been a national co-chairman for Clinton and campaigned on her behalf in California, Texas, Nevada, Iowa and New Hampshire. "I said to him that I was going to work as hard for him as I did for Sen. Clinton."

Immigration reform and the pressing needs of many of America's largest cities were also discussed during the meeting, which lasted about half an hour.

Obama used his address to the full conference of mayors to criticize Sen. John McCain, the presumptive GOP nominee, as being more concerned about protecting tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy than about Americans living with inadequate schools, street crime and crumbling infrastructure. Obama pointed to the deadly flooding in the Midwest and McCain's votes against federal flood protections.

Los Angeles Times Articles
|