Imperial Valley Press

Republican­s held their own in the primary, but it’s uphill to November

- BY BEN CHRISTOPHE­R CALmatters

With primary-election ballots still being tallied across the state, things are looking good for the California Republican Party— that is, not catastroph­ically bad.

It may be as close to good as the state’s second biggest political party can hope for in California in 2018.

Assuming preliminar­y results hold, both Democrats and Republican­s fought to a virtual standstill on Election Day, avoiding the nightmare scenarios that political insiders had been fretting about for months.

Republican­s made it into the top two spots in some of the most important contests for statewide office. That includes a decisive second-place finish by San Diego businessma­n John Cox, who will go on to face Democratic Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom in the race for governor. That could prop up conservati­ve turnout in November even as Newsom tries to rally his base against the candidate he calls a “foot soldier” of President Trump.

But Republican­s failed to make it into the November race for U.S. Senate (which was largely expected), lieutenant governor (not quite as expected) and insurance commission­er (though a former Republican with no current party affiliatio­n came in first).

Republican­s do not appear to have shut Democrats out of any competitiv­e congressio­nal races— despite the Democrats’ own worries about that— boosting the latter’s hopes of regaining control of the House in November.

Republican turnout was not suppressed by Trump, his low statewide approval ratings notwithsta­nding.

So now what for the California GOP?

“They’re looking to charge up the base in seven key congressio­nal districts,” said Mike Madrid, referring to seven Republican-held districts in which a majority of voters supported Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton in 2016. “In California Republican politics, that’s about all you can consider a victory at this point.”

Madrid is a Republican political consultant who worked for Democrat Antonio Villaraigo­sa’s gubernator­ial campaign and is sharply critical of the party under Trump.

A Republican hasn’t been elected to any of the statewide constituti­onal offices or the U.S. Senate since 2006. Party registrati­on has been sliding ever since, dipping below the share of voters without a party affiliatio­n earlier this month.

Republican­s may have placed second in a number of statewide races this time, but if recent trends continue, that merely forestalls defeat in November. At last count, the various Democratic candidates for governor cobbled together more than 60 percent of the vote, compared to less than 40 percent for the Republican­s.

In the attorney general’s race, where Republican­s also managed to avoid a shutout, incumbent Xavier Becerra leads retired judge Steven Bailey, who placed second, by 20 percentage points.

One right-of-center candidate scored a first-place victory, though he isn’t listed as a Republican. Steve Poizner, who served as the state’s Republican insurance commission­er from 2007 through 2010, ran for his old job without a stated political party preference. The lack of an “R” next to his name may have helped.

“We understand that we’re the underdogs,” said state party chairman Jim Brulte. For months he has argued that the party’s way forward is to consistent­ly remind voters that Democrats have controlled every lever of power in Sacramento for eight years—and are therefore responsibl­e for any problems facing the state.

“They own it, they broke it, and we’re the fix,” he said. “Their strategic reason for wanting to mention Donald Trump in every other sentence is because even though they’re in charge, they don’t want to take credit for California.” Democrats get it. “It’s going to be Trump, Trumpism and the Resistance,” said Newsom spokesman Nathan Click, describing the campaign ahead. In his speech on election night, the lieutenant governor described Cox as “a foot soldier in Trump’s war on California.”

Cox responded in his own speech the same night: “It wasn’t Donald Trump who made us the highest tax state in the country. It was Gavin Newsom and the Democrats.”

Hammering Democrats on taxes, particular­ly on the recent increase in the state’s gas tax, will be a central talking point for Republican­s in the coming months.

In one unequivoca­lly good piece of news for the state’s GOP in this election, voters overwhelmi­ngly opted to fire Josh Newman from his state Senate seat in Orange County. The successful recall campaign strips Democrats of their supermajor­ity control of the state Senate, although they hope to win it back in the fall.

It also provides Republican­s with a political game plan for the months ahead.

“People who supported the gas tax [increase] are going to have a lot of explaining to do,” said Brulte.

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