Antelope Valley Press

Newsom pressured on Senate seat

- By KATHLEEN RONAYNE Associated Press

SACRAMENTO — Should California get its first Latino US senator or should the 100-member chamber maintain one Black woman’s voice?

That’s a weight on California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s shoulders as he considers his pick to serve out the rest of Vice President-elect Kamala Harris’ Senate term through 2022. That the choice is left to one governor has some observers frustrated with the persistent lack of racial diversity in the Senate and what they view as both parties’ failure to do much about it.

“It’s a false choice and it’s not good for democracy, and it masks the historical exclusion of both communitie­s in the Senate,” said Sonja Diaz, founding director of the Latino Policy and Politics Initiative at UCLA.

Without Harris, the only Black woman in the Senate, the chamber has:

• Two Black senators, Democrat Cory Booker of New Jersey and Republican Tim Scott of South Carolina.

• Two women of Asian heritage, Democrats Mazie Hirono of Hawaii and Tammy Duckworth of Illinois.

• Four people of Hispanic heritage, Republican­s Marco

Rubio of Florida and Ted Cruz of Texas and Democrats Bob Menendez of New Jersey and Catherine Cortez Masto of Nevada. Democratic Rep. Ben Ray Luján of New Mexico will join the Senate in January.

That amounts to 9% of the Senate, while roughly 40% of the US population identifies as a person of color. California is nearly 40% Latino and about 6% Black.

The disproport­ionate whiteness of the chamber isn’t necessaril­y about too few diverse candidates but about too few diverse candidates who are winning. The South saw its highest number of Black Senate candidates ever this year, but none won races outright. In Georgia, Democrat Raphael Warnock, who is Black, is in a January runoff against Republican Sen. Kelly Loeffler.

The only Black woman to be a major party’s nominee for Senate this year — Marquita Bradshaw in Tennessee — was not supported by the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. Bradshaw, an environmen­tal justice activist, surprised her party by defeating the establishm­ent’s preferred candidate for an open seat, a win she said demonstrat­ed voters’ appetite for a candidate with working-class roots.

But the party committee decided the race wasn’t competitiv­e after a popular former Democratic governor lost in 2018 and because Bradshaw hadn’t raised much money.

She won 35% of the vote against Republican Bill Hagerty. She raised just $1.6 million, less than 1% of what Jaime Harrison, another Black Democrat running for Senate, raised in his long-shot race in South Carolina. He also lost.

Bradshaw said the national party should treat any candidate who wins a primary as viable.

“It is supposed to be ‘blue no matter who,’” Bradshaw said. “But that just did not happen for Tennessee.”

Black women's representa­tion in the Senate shouldn’t have come down to California, Bradshaw said, and she’s planning to focus on expanding voter education and supporting Black women as they run for office — and not just in presidenti­al election years.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? As California Gov. Gavin Newsom weighs whom to appoint to the Senate to fulfill the rest of Vice Presidente­lect Kamala Harris’ term, he’s facing pressure to name a Latino or a Black woman.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES As California Gov. Gavin Newsom weighs whom to appoint to the Senate to fulfill the rest of Vice Presidente­lect Kamala Harris’ term, he’s facing pressure to name a Latino or a Black woman.

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