Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

A partisan crowd gathers outside Long Beach City College to let opinions be heard ahead of Biden’s arrival.

- By Hunter Lee hlee@scng.com White House pool reports contribute­d to this report.

Long Beach City College’s Liberal Arts campus was devoid of students and faculty on Monday afternoon and into the evening.

Police barricades circled the school and blocked off a few nearby residentia­l streets.

Yet, in the hours before President Joe Biden and Gov. Gavin Newsom stepped on stage at City College in a final campaign push to oppose recall efforts, the mood was anything but serene.

Rather, it was a chaotic microcosm of the partisan tensions gripping the nation and California in particular — about 10 months after a controvers­ial presidenti­al election and on the eve of a recall election whose proponents are trying to oust Newsom.

Hundreds rallied at the corner of Clark Avenue and Carson Street — two streets surroundin­g the campus — all but a small pocket of whom were Biden and Newsom critics.

They held signs supporting the recall. They circled the area in vehicles bearing recall flags and other political accoutreme­nt, with drivers blaring their horns in solidarity with the crowd.

“We have a corrupt governor and an even more corrupt president,” said Sheila Wong, a resident who lives a few blocks from the campus. “We’re here to show that our governor needs to go.”

Much of the reasoning behind the effort to kick Newsom out of office is about his handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which led to mass business closures and churches being unable to hold services inside for months.

Biden, meanwhile, has been criticized recently on numerous issues, including the mandate that federal workers be vaccinated and the withdrawal from Afghanista­n, which ended America’s longest war — but left 13 service members dead during attacks on the airport in Kabul, that nation’s capital.

Indeed, a smatter of posters were emblazoned with the number 13, a reference to those service members.

And, of course, a lot of the chatter during the protest centered around the false idea that former President Donald Trump lost last year’s presidenti­al election because of voter fraud.

Not everyone who gathered outside Long Beach City College was there to protest, however.

Biden’s motorcade arrived at the campus shortly after 6:30 p.m., and near the entrance a line of families waited to welcome the president.

A few blocks away, meanwhile, a small group gathered to back the president and the governor — and oppose the recall.

One of those, Nicholas Maldonado, won’t actually get a say in Tuesday’s recall. He is, after all, from Florida.

But his appearance at Long Beach City College — after flying in from the Sunshine State — underscore­d the national implicatio­ns surroundin­g the recall.

“We need love right now,” Maldonado said. “And while Biden is not perfect he is a president for the people.”

Police officers, meanwhile, maintained a perimeter between the two groups as tensions began escalating closer to the NewsomBide­n rally’s start time.

Not everyone near City College, though, was part of the scene. Rather, they looked upon it askance.

Norma Norris, for example, said the large gathering just a block away from her house posed safety risks.

“They’re standing in the street,” she said, “and parking all over our block.”

But there was nothing she could do about it:

America’s election angst had come to Long Beach.

 ?? LEONARD ORTIZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Protesters gather outside Long Beach City College near Clark Avenue and Carson Street in Long Beach on Monday to protest Biden’s visit.
LEONARD ORTIZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Protesters gather outside Long Beach City College near Clark Avenue and Carson Street in Long Beach on Monday to protest Biden’s visit.
 ?? HUNTER LEE — STAFF ?? Hundreds rally near Long Beach City College’s Liberal Arts Campus hours ahead of Biden’s arrival, where he joined Newsom and Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia for a rally.
HUNTER LEE — STAFF Hundreds rally near Long Beach City College’s Liberal Arts Campus hours ahead of Biden’s arrival, where he joined Newsom and Long Beach Mayor Robert Garcia for a rally.
 ?? LEONARD ORTIZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? President Joe Biden waves as he exits Air Force One after landing at Long Beach Airport on Monday. Biden was in town to support Gov. Gavin Newsom in the recall election.
LEONARD ORTIZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER President Joe Biden waves as he exits Air Force One after landing at Long Beach Airport on Monday. Biden was in town to support Gov. Gavin Newsom in the recall election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States