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Julián Castro endorses Elizabeth Warren for the White House

“There’s one candidate I see who’s unafraid to fight like hell to make sure America’s promise will be there for everyone,” Castro said of Warren in an endorsement video.

Elizabeth Warren and Julian Castro embrace as Bill de Blasio and Amy Klobuchar greet one another on the debate stage.
Elizabeth Warren and Julian Castro embrace as Bill de Blasio and Amy Klobuchar greet one another on the debate stage.
Elizabeth Warren and Julián Castro embrace as Bill de Blasio and Amy Klobuchar greet one another at the first Democratic presidential debate in Miami in June 2019.
Photograph by Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Emily Stewart
Emily Stewart covered business and economics for Vox and wrote the newsletter The Big Squeeze, examining the ways ordinary people are being squeezed under capitalism. Before joining Vox, she worked for TheStreet.

Just days after ending his own White House bid, former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro is endorsing Sen. Elizabeth Warren for president.

Castro, who suspended his campaign on January 2, announced his decision to back the Massachusetts Democrat in a video released Monday morning. “There’s one candidate I see who’s unafraid to fight like hell to make sure America’s promise will be there for everyone,” Castro says. “Who will make sure that no matter where you live in America or where your family came from in the world, you have a path to opportunity too. That’s why I’m proud to endorse Elizabeth Warren for President.”

The video features the pair speaking with one another in Warren’s kitchen at her Massachusetts home as her dog, Bailey, looks on.

“You know, I started my campaign off, and we lived true to the idea that we want an America where everyone counts,” Castro says. “It’s the same vision that I see in you, in your campaign, in the America that you would help bring about.”

Castro’s endorsement is an important — if a little unsurprising — get for Warren. Of the 2020 Democrats who have dropped out of the race so far, he is one of only three to have endorsed another candidate, and he is the highest profile: former Sen. Mike Gravel endorsed Sen. Bernie Sanders, and Rep. Tim Ryan endorsed former Vice President Joe Biden. As Astead Herndon at the New York Times notes, Castro’s endorsement of Warren isn’t necessarily a shock — the pair clearly share an affinity for one another. There has also been some speculation that Castro may be a potential vice presidential pick for Warren should she win the nomination.

Other notable Warren endorsers include the Working Families Party, Sen. Ed Markey, Rep. Ayanna Pressley, soccer star Megan Rapinoe, and writer Roxane Gay.

Warren might hope that Castro’s endorsement will inject some fresh energy into her campaign. After steadily rising in the polls over the summer, her numbers have stalled somewhat in recent months. Her fourth-quarter fundraising numbers, while strong, lagged behind Sanders, South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg, and Biden. New polling over the weekend shows Warren in fourth place in Iowa, behind Sanders, Biden, and Buttigieg, and third in New Hampshire, behind Sanders and Biden. According to a RealClearPolitics average of polls, Warren is polling at 14.4 percent nationally, behind Biden at 29.3 percent and Sanders at 19.9 percent.

Castro will travel to New York to campaign with Warren at a rally at the Kings Theater in Brooklyn on Tuesday.

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