Biden holds LA fundraiser as Trump courts Michigan

US President Joe Biden (L) speaks alongside former president Barack Obama during a star-studded campaign fundraiser in Los Angeles on June 15, 2024

Los Angeles (AFP) - US President Joe Biden brushed aside jet lag Saturday, flying straight from the G7 in Italy to Los Angeles to a star-studded fundraiser bringing millions of dollars for his election fight against Donald Trump in November.

The president was joined by Barack Obama, the previous Democratic commander-in-chief, at an event which included remarks by actors Julia Roberts and George Clooney, as well as singing icon Barbra Streisand.

Despite the Hollywood heavyweights, Biden turned serious when he spoke of his rival Trump, and how whoever wins the election will likely have at least two new Supreme Court nominations to make.

"The idea that if he's reelected he's going to appoint two more flying flags upside down," Biden said, referring to recent tumult over a conservative sitting justice who was recently confirmed to have had an inverted American flag -- a symbol of Trump's false election fraud claims -- raised outside his home in 2021.

Trump -- making an unprecedented bid to win back the White House while running as a convicted felon -- was also on the campaign trail, boasting in Detroit, Michigan that his own fundraising is "the highest in the history of politics."

Michigan is a must-win state for Biden in November's electoral mathematics.

Aiming to eat into Biden's key electoral support from African Americans there, Trump visited a Black church in Detroit and told hundreds of voters that "crooked Joe Biden has done nothing for you except talk."

Trump then headed to a starkly different venue: a convention of high-profile hard-right Republicans and supporters of his attempt to overturn the 2020 election.

At the Turning Point USA convention, Trump railed against Biden's climate protection package, mocked Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as a "salesman," and renewed his incendiary rhetoric about what he branded the "Biden migrant invasion," saying he will stop it with the biggest deportation operation in American history.

In a characteristically rambling 80-minute speech -– frequently interrupted by loud cheering -- Trump claimed that help for migrants leaves US war veterans "lying in the streets," and veered into everything from extended complaints about modern showers to repeating his lie that his 2020 election loss was "rigged and stolen."

"We have a rigged country. We have rigged elections, we have open borders," he said.

Glitz

Biden, meanwhile, was hoping to inject star power and hard cash into his battle.

Hollywood stars joined Obama for the gala evening that Biden's campaign says has already raised $28 million.

"It's the largest Democratic fundraiser ever," Clooney said.

Outside the fundraiser, groups of chanting protesters were kept away by a phalanx of police in riot gear.

Obama meanwhile took the stage with Biden, his former vice president, for a conversation moderated by late-night US comic Jimmy Kimmel.

"We have someone to worry about," Obama told donors, referring to Trump. "And there's a whole agenda that we should be concerned about. But we can take pride in affirming the extraordinary work that Joe has done."

Biden's turn with the stars means he skipped a huge international peace conference for Ukraine Saturday in Switzerland, with Vice President Kamala Harris attending instead.

The glitz marked a change for 81-year-old Biden after a recent run of grueling foreign travel and geopolitics focused on the conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza.

At the Group of Seven rich nations summit, Biden helped seal a deal for a $50 billion loan for Ukraine using frozen Russian assets, and signed a 10-year security accord with Zelensky.

The week before he was in Normandy, France, for the 80th anniversary of the World War II D-Day landings.

Biden was accompanied on arrival in LA by relatives including daughter Ashley and granddaughters Maisy and Naomi. The show of family support comes at a difficult time for Biden following the conviction this week of his son Hunter on gun charges.

Fundraising battle

Biden's shift to US electioneering also marks the start of a more intense campaign phase ahead of November's knife-edge election.

Polls show him and Trump largely neck-and-neck, with many voters turned off by a rematch between the nation's oldest president and a 78-year-old convicted felon.

They have been in a fundraising battle too, with Biden raking in more for months but Trump doing better recently as supporters rally over the guilty verdict in his porn star hush money trial.

The two are also gearing up for the first blockbuster debate of the campaign, on June 27.

The Democrat is expected to go on the offensive on issues like abortion and democracy where his campaign thinks Trump is vulnerable.

But he will also be preparing for how to deal with full-frontal personal attacks by the former reality TV show host.

© Agence France-Presse