Chattanooga Times Free Press

Calif. GOP nixes endorsemen­t fight in Newsom recall

- BY MICHAEL R. BLOOD

LOS ANGELES — The California Republican Party voted overwhelmi­ngly Saturday not to endorse any candidate in the looming recall election that could remove Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom from office, sidesteppi­ng a potentiall­y nasty fight over a GOP favorite that threatened to divide Republican­s and depress turnout in the nationally watched race.

The lopsided vote to skip an endorsemen­t — supported by about 90% of delegates attending at a virtual party meeting — reflected concerns that an internal feud among candidates and their supporters would cleave party ranks and sour Republican­s who wouldn’t bother to vote if their candidate of choice was snubbed.

There are 24 Republican­s on the recall ballot, with leading contenders including talk radio host Larry Elder, former San Diego mayor Kevin Faulconer, businessma­n John Cox, state legislator Kevin Kiley, former Olympian and reality TV personalit­y Caitlyn Jenner and former congressma­n Doug Ose.

Two of the state party’s most powerful figures — Republican National Committee members Harmeet Dhillon and Shawn Steel — earlier helped set the stage for an endorsemen­t vote. But they reversed course Friday and urged delegates to avoid it.

“The polls are showing that the recall is in a statistica­l tie, and we cannot afford to discourage voters who are passionate about a particular candidate, yet may not vote because their favored candidate didn’t receive the endorsemen­t,” they warned in an email obtained by The Associated Press.

In the recall election, voters will be asked two questions: First, should Newsom be removed, yes or no? The second question will be a list of replacemen­t candidates from which to choose. If a majority votes for Newsom’s removal, the candidate who gets the most votes on the second question becomes governor.

Republican­s feared that fallout from an endorsemen­t squabble could sap support from the critical first question on the ballot — whether or not to remove Newsom. If that vote fails to reach a majority, the results on the second question are irrelevant and the governor retains his job.

The party’s decision was not without risk. Republican voter registrati­on in the heavily Democratic state is a paltry 24%. Some party leaders believed the best route to victory in the Sept. 14 election was concentrat­ing the GOP’s money and volunteers behind a single candidate.

Some will see the decision as a setback for Faulconer, who was considered an early favorite for the endorsemen­t. Faulconer had been seeking the nod, but his campaign later shifted gears, saying he no longer believed it was in the party’s interest to back a single candidate.

Cox, a conservati­ve, earlier accused party insiders of trying to steer the endorsemen­t to Faulconer, a political centrist elected in Democratic San Diego who some saw as a more viable statewide candidate in strongly Democratic California. Cox, in protest of what he viewed as a rigged process, said he wouldn’t seek the endorsemen­t.

 ?? WATCHARA PHOMICINDA/THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER VIA AP ?? California Gov. Gavin Newsom makes a gesture as he speaks Friday during a news conference at San Bernardino Unified School District Office after visiting Juanita B. Jones Elementary School in San Bernardino, Calif.
WATCHARA PHOMICINDA/THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER VIA AP California Gov. Gavin Newsom makes a gesture as he speaks Friday during a news conference at San Bernardino Unified School District Office after visiting Juanita B. Jones Elementary School in San Bernardino, Calif.

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