East Bay Times

Feinstein delivered results but irked ideologues

- By George Skelton George Skelton is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2023 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein, California's most accomplish­ed senator, became an anachronis­m. She practiced civility and compromise­d with the other side.

That's how the state's first female senator has gotten so many important things done in an increasing­ly antagonist­ic political world.

It's the way major legislatio­n used to be passed before social media and cable “news” provided wide-ranging platforms for demagogues and nurtured the ideologica­l extremes on both sides.

Now, civility and compromise are considered too old-fashioned, particular­ly among many younger political activists.

Republican voters in California never have really accepted the Democrat, who's California's longest-serving senator — 30 years — and currently the Senate's oldest member. That's largely, I suspect, because her hometown is uber-liberal San Francisco.

And polarized progressiv­es of her own party have become increasing­ly intolerant of the pragmatic centrist, contending she's too soft and out of touch with today's smash-mouth politics.

“I like to work in a bipartisan way,” she told me two years ago. “Some people on the left don't like that. But that's what the Senate should do. It benefits people.”

One of her inexcusabl­e “sins” was hugging a Republican.

OK, maybe it wasn't the smartest gesture, given the heated political climate.

She was the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee in 2020 when President Trump's third Supreme Court nominee, conservati­ve Amy Coney Barrett, was up for confirmati­on. Feinstein was criticized by liberals for an alleged weak performanc­e. But there was nothing any Democrat could have done to block Barrett from the court. Republican­s controlled the Senate.

After the hearings concluded, Feinstein congratula­ted committee Chairman Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., for that day's well-run session.

“I shook his hand and he gave me a hug and I got holy hell,” she told me later.

“If I can't have good relationsh­ips with someone simply because they're a Republican … that's not good.”

The whole hugging controvers­y seemed bizarre. Watch any profession­al basketball or football game and you'll see the players embracing after a contest. But that's no longer allowed in America's most important game: government.

Another Feinstein sin: Publicly hoping that the Republican president would get his act together. Sure, it was the offensive, noclass Donald Trump. But have we really become so polarized that it's taboo to wish an American president well?

“Look, this man is going to be president, most likely, for the rest of this term,” she told San Francisco's Commonweal­th Club in 2017. “I think we have to have some patience. I just hope he has the ability to learn and to change. And if he does, he can be a good president. And that is my hope.” Boos from the audience.

“I have to be able to get things done,” she said. “You have to work with people. And a punch in the nose isn't going to do it.”

But Trump became more abysmal.

And Feinstein often denounced his policies, which included trying to drill for oil off the California coast, implementi­ng a “hateful deportatio­n program” and “placating American Nazis.”

Yet, she was considered too soft. Soft?

Battling the CIA and the intelligen­ce community for years to expose the un-American torture of terrorism suspects was hardly soft.

Neither was fighting the gun lobby to pass a 10-year federal ban on assault weapons. She paid a political price for that.

Feinstein's greatest sin, of course, was growing old. She's 89 and suffers memory lapses, it has been widely reported.

“I don't feel my cognitive abilities have diminished,” she said in December 2020 when I asked her about it. “No, not really. Do I forget something sometimes? Quite possibly.”

But it apparently has gotten worse. She was under pressure from party activists and pundits to resign or at least announce she won't run for a sixth term. I'm guessing she didn't need the pressure. She's a realist.

On Tuesday, Feinstein announced what was anticipate­d: She'll serve out her term and retire at the end of next year.

“This time has come,” she told reporters outside the Senate chamber. “There's time for all things under the sun.”

Former political writer Jerry Roberts, who wrote a Feinstein biography that centered on her tenure as San Francisco's first female mayor, said: “When she started her career, she was a raven-haired beauty and everyone thought of her as a show horse. But she was a workhorse.”

Thankfully she decided to finish out her term. So, millions of California voters will choose her replacemen­t — not one governor.

 ?? DREW ANGERER — GETTY IMAGES ?? Sen. Dianne Feinstein walks through the Senate subway to a procedural vote on the Respect for Marriage Act on Nov. 28, 2022, in Washington.
DREW ANGERER — GETTY IMAGES Sen. Dianne Feinstein walks through the Senate subway to a procedural vote on the Respect for Marriage Act on Nov. 28, 2022, in Washington.

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