Hillary Clinton with Shari Schenk (left) and Dr Sonia Ancoli Israel. Clinton is holding a butterfly she painted in 2008 for the Butterfly Project in San Diego  to remember child victims of the Holocaust. Photo by Fred Schenk
Hillary Clinton with Shari Schenk (left) and Dr Sonia Ancoli Israel. Clinton is holding a butterfly she painted in 2008 for the Butterfly Project in San Diego to remember child victims of the Holocaust. Photo by Fred Schenk

Hillary Rodham Clinton attended a breakfast fundraiser for her Democratic presidential campaign Friday at the La Jolla home of Qualcomm co-founder Irwin Jacobs and his wife, Joan.

Guests at what was billed as a “Conversation with Hillary” paid $1,000 and $2,700, the maximum individual contribution for a candidate seeking his or her party’s nomination under federal law.

The breakfast event was the next-to-last stop on a four-day, five-state fundraising trip that began Tuesday with events in Colorado in Aspen and Denver, and included stops in Utah, Oregon, Northern California and Los Angeles.

After the event in La Jolla, Clinton was scheduled to fly to McAllen, TX.

The former first lady’s La Jolla hosts were major financial backers of President Barack Obama’s presidential campaigns. Irwin Jacobs contributed more than $2 million to super PACs that supported Obama in 2012 and $23,000 directly to Obama and the Democratic Party, according to the political news website Politico.

This was the 67-year-old Clinton’s first visit to San Diego since she declared her candidacy. She was last in the city in June 2014, when she signed copies of her book, “Hard Choices,” and later spoke at a biotech conference.

In Los Angeles on Thursday, Clinton met with a group of home care providers, praising the work they do and the contributions they make to the nation’s health care system, and  attended a $2,700-per-person fundraiser at the Brentwood home of music industry talent manager Scooter Braun and his wife, Yael.

As she did in her previous Los Angeles-area fundraisers, Clinton discussed her commitment to being a champion for everyday Americans and outlined the “four fights” that are the focus of her campaign — building an economy of tomorrow; strengthening America’s families; defending America and its core values; and revitalizing democracy, according to a campaign aide who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

— City News Service

Chris Jennewein is founder and senior editor of Times of San Diego.