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Kamala Harris is the early favorite among Hollywood donors in the 2020 race

Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.) appears at the NAACP Image Awards on March 30 at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood.
(Chris Pizzello / Invision)
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Sen. Kamala Harris of California drew some of the most powerful players in Hollywood to her recent reception at the Pacific Palisades home of filmmaker J.J. Abrams of the “Star Wars” franchise.

Television producer Shonda Rhimes, actress Elizabeth Banks and music giant Quincy Jones were among the guests enjoying hors d’oeuvres and drinks under a full moon.

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Harris, who lives in Los Angeles, has emerged as the entertainment industry’s early favorite in the swelling field of Democrats running for president, according to some of the party’s top Hollywood fundraisers.

“I think she’s really trying to corral this community as her donor base,” said Hannah Linkenhoker, the senior political strategist at ICM Partners and co-founder of the L.A. Women’s Collective donor group. “To some extent, that’s working. She’s definitely had the most events, and the most high-profile.”

More than a dozen of the senator’s White House rivals have traveled to Los Angeles in recent months in a scramble for entertainment industry money, a pillar of Democratic fundraising.

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Guarded from public view, their gatherings with high-dollar donors in Beverly Hills, Brentwood and the Hollywood Hills can be crucial to keeping their campaigns alive for the early 2020 contests in Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada and South Carolina.

Some of the candidates — Sens. Cory Booker of New Jersey, Kirsten Gillibrand of New York and Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, to name a few — have worked the circuit of L.A. donors for years in races for lower office.

None, however, can match the bonds that Harris forged with Hollywood political players as she ran twice for state attorney general and once for U.S. Senate. Over the last decade, she has collected more than $1.7 million from the entertainment industry, a Times analysis found.

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Elizabeth Banks has donated to several of Kamala Harris' campaigns for public office.
(Dia Dipasupil / Getty Images)

Jane Fonda, Leonardo DiCaprio, Barbra Streisand, Halle Berry, Reese Witherspoon, Ben Affleck, Kerry Washington, Charlize Theron and a long roster of studio executives gave money to Harris in the years before she launched her campaign for president.

Her husband, Douglas Emhoff, an attorney at DLA Piper, raised money from fellow entertainment lawyers and other Harris supporters last month at a reception in Century City.

The first look at Harris’ donor list for the presidential race will come Monday, the deadline for public disclosure of contributions and spending in the first quarter of 2019.

Appalled by President Trump, many in Hollywood have stepped up their political activities in hopes of bouncing him from office next year. The industry’s opposition to previous Republican presidents was less intense, said Donna Bojarsky, a longtime Democratic political consultant in Los Angeles.

“You almost have to look back on Ronald Reagan quaintly,” she said. “It’s a whole different level, and the danger is at a whole different level. We’re arguing about the existence of climate change? This is just insane.”

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Last fall, Democrats trying to oust Republicans in Congress drew packed crowds at Hollywood fundraisers. Television celebrities, including Alyssa Milano and Kaitlin Olson, canvassed and campaigned for candidates in L.A. and Orange County races.

Now, the anti-Trump fervor is yielding money earlier in the election cycle than normal for White House contenders.

“This is building upon the energy in the midterms as if donors recognize that was step one, and now we’re on to the main event,” said Andy Spahn, one of the industry’s top fundraisers.

Some donors are giving to multiple candidates, at least for now, but others are waiting to see who emerges as Trump’s most viable challenger.

Harris could soon face serious competition in Hollywood from Joe Biden, who is preparing to join the race for the Democratic nomination.

Kamala Harris, with husband Douglas Emhoff, greets then-Vice President Joe Biden in January 2017.
(Kevin Wolf / Associated Press)
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In a sign of his enduring support among donors, the former vice president stopped in Los Angeles in October to raise money for his American Possibilities PAC.

Biden picked up $5,000 checks from director Steven Spielberg, DreamWorks co-founder Jeffrey Katzenberg, Paramount Pictures Chief Executive Jim Gianopulos and Sony motion picture Chairman Tom Rothman.

The new curiosity in town is Pete Buttigieg, who got a rousing reception at a recent stop in West Hollywood. The mayor of South Bend, Ind., will return next month to raise money in Beverly Hills.

“I think he’s really starting to pick up momentum,” Linkenhoker said.

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Notably absent in the chase for Hollywood money is Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who recently swore off the kind of private gatherings with donors that she held in Los Angeles during her 2018 Senate reelection race.

Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg plans to return to California next month to raise money.
(Ethan Miller / Getty Images)
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Bernie Sanders, a democratic socialist with scant support in the industry, is also a minimal presence.

The Vermont senator, who is popular with small donors, is the top fundraiser in the Democratic field, followed by Harris. Sanders says he collected $18 million in the first three months of 2019, well ahead of the $12 million that Harris says she raised.

Beto O’Rourke, who joined the race a month ago, has a history of raising money in Southern California but has not traveled to the West Coast since the launch of his campaign for president.

The staggering $80 million that O’Rourke collected for his failed 2018 campaign to unseat Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas included more than $1 million from film, television and music business donors, according to the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.

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Some candidates with a limited track record of raising money in Los Angeles have taken a go-slow approach, introducing themselves around town and, in some cases, postponing any overt requests for money.

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Buttigieg, Booker, Klobuchar, Gillibrand, Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado, Washington Gov. Jay Inslee and former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper have each held free meet-and-greets, typically with five to six dozen potential donors.

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