Fort Bragg Advocate-News

Orange County’s stubborn conservati­ve streak

- Dan Walters

Ronald Reagan chose Mile Square Park, in the heart of Orange County, for a Labor Day rally in 1984 to kick off his final push for a second term as president.

As large as the park is — a square mile — it was jammed with thousands of flag-waving, cheering Reagan supporters, attesting to Orange County’s status as a bastion of California Republican political strength.

Although Democrats had had some momentary success in the county a decade earlier, by 1984 virtually every local congressio­nal, legislativ­e and local government office was held by a Republican. It was the barb on what political junkies called the “fishhook” of GOP-voting counties that dominated statewide politics at the time.

Even as Republican power waned in the state after the turn of the century, Orange County retained a fairly strong GOP tilt — until Donald Trump came along. In 2016, for the first time in 80 years, Orange County’s voters opted for a Democratic presidenti­al candidate, Hillary Clinton, and two years later showed their disdain for Trump again by ousting several Republican congressio­nal members.

There was, however, more to the county’s political evolution than just dislike of Trump. Like the rest of California, Orange County had undergone a demographi­c change, particular­ly a decline in its white population — in part due to the collapse of the aerospace industry — and an increase in Asian and Latino residents. It also had become less rigid in its attitudes on social issues, such as abortion and same-sex marriages.

With Donald Trump seeking another term, this year’s election appeared to be another opportunit­y for Democrats to expand their Orange County presence, and in a sense they did. Orange County again voted Democratic for president and two Republican state senators, John Moorlach and Ling Ling Chang, were ousted by Democratic challenger­s.

However, two Democrats who had won previously Republican congressio­nal seats in 2016, Gil Cisneros and Harley Rouda, lost them after serving just one term. And in other ways, this year’s election indicated that Orange County is still, relative to other coastal counties, fairly conservati­ve.

Joe Biden walloped Trump by a nearly 2-to-1 landslide in California, but in Orange County, based on the unofficial returns, Biden’s margin was much narrower, just 10 percentage points.

Candidate contests at any level are only partial tests of ideologica­l bent because personalit­ies — such as Trump’s bombastic ways — enter into the equation. A better gauge is the vote on ballot measures in which personalit­ies play little or no role.

With their votes on the most ideologica­lly distinct ballot measures this year, the innate political conservati­sm of Orange County voters was still evident.

Propositio­n 15, a labor union-backed measure to increase property taxes on commercial real estate such as hotels and office buildings, failed by a few percentage points statewide, but in Orange County it lost by a 3-to-2 margin.

Propositio­n 16, which would have restored affirmativ­e action in public college admissions, hiring and contractin­g, failed with just over 40% of the statewide vote but in Orange County, support was nearly 10 percentage points smaller.

Propositio­n 22, a measure backed by Uber, Lyft and other app-based transporta­tion services to exempt their contract drivers from a new state law that would have made them employees, won by a 3-to-2 margin statewide, but the “yes” vote was 8 percentage points higher in Orange County.

Clearly, Orange County is no longer the impregnabl­e Republican fortress it was in 1984, but neither is it as blue as Democrats have hoped. One could say that it’s purple with a stubborn streak of conservati­sm that sets it apart from the rest of coastal California.

Dan Walters has been a journalist for nearly 60 years, spending all but a few of those years working for California newspapers.

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