BERKELEY — Never mind the polls: For this evening, Democratic presidential candidate Martin O’Malley was a rock star.

The former Maryland governor was swarmed with adoring supporters as he arrived and as he departed a campaign event at a UC Berkeley auditorium. Inside about 250 people — mostly students taking a quick break from cramming for finals — applauded his stances on economic opportunity, climate change, foreign policy and particularly debt-free college education.

In an hour of speaking and answering questions, O’Malley said the nation thirsts for “new leadership and getting things done.” And, he noted, he’s the only Democratic candidate with 15 years of executive experience, first as Baltimore’s mayor and then as Maryland’s governor.

He touted his record of enacting a living wage law, avoiding public university tuition increases, driving down violent crime and incarceration rates, lowering barriers to voting, establishing marriage equality, imposing strict new gun controls, and signing a state DREAM Act for young people whose parents had brought them to this country illegally. He called them “new American immigrants” and “not-yet-naturalized students.”

He called for raising the minimum wage to $15 per hour, making it easier to join labor unions, guaranteeing equal pay between genders, and expanding paid family leave. He said he has a plan to transition to a 100 percent clean electricity grid by 2050, and he called for a combination of diplomacy, improved intelligence and support of a regional military coalition to defeat the so-called Islamic State. And he blasted Republican frontrunner Donald Trump for “fascist demagoguery.”

Most of his points were punctuated by finger snaps, applause or cheers — a reception almost warm enough to make one forget where he stands in the race.

When O’Malley visited San Francisco in August for some tech-themed campaign events, he had said he believed the first Democratic debates would be crucial for him, letting him get his message out to a wider audience.

But after three nationally televised debates, and with fellow candidates Jim Webb and Lincoln Chafee having already dropped out, O’Malley still lingers at the bottom of the polls. He has only 2.3 percent support nationwide — barely a blip next to Hillary Clinton’s 56.3 percent and Bernie Sanders’ 30.5 percent — according to an average of several recent national polls compiled by Real Clear Politics. O’Malley is at 4.8 percent in Iowa and 5.3 percent in New Hampshire.

“We have to continue to build, expand our organization, every day” — one endorsement, one precinct, one county at a time in those early states — he told reporters Wednesday before departing for a fundraiser in San Francisco.

With most Iowa voters not making up their minds until the two weeks right before the Feb. 1 caucuses, he added, “I think the lane is wide open for us.”

Still, winning applause is easier than winning votes.

Maryland native Ali Ahmed, 19, was among students that O’Malley pulled up onstage to help him illustrate the wide disparity in economic growth over the past 35 years. Afterward, Ahmed, an economics major, said he really likes O’Malley and what he did for Maryland and fears that “the media is not coming out and getting his message” — a progressive message that places him squarely between the centrist Clinton and Sanders’ democratic socialist populism. And Ahmed said that as a Muslim-American, he appreciated O’Malley’s inclusive message.

But asked whether he’ll vote for O’Malley, Ahmed replied, “I would consider it,” though he hasn’t yet made up his mind.

Josh Richman covers politics. Follow him at Twitter.com/Josh_Richman. Read the Political Blotter at IBAbuzz.com/politics.