Imperial Valley Press

Feinstein fights to deny Democratic rival official party nod

- BY KATHLEEN RONAYNE

SACRAMENTO — U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein is tapping into her political Rolodex to convince California Democratic Party leaders to not formally endorse a candidate in her November race against fellow Democrat Kevin de Leon.

She says it’s to avoid an intraparty fight, but her effort if successful will thwart her longshot rival’s very real chance at capturing the party nod when the committee votes Saturday.

A 26-year incumbent like Feinstein wouldn’t ordinarily find herself in this position but does for a couple of reasons: The party has moved farther left in the Trump era, and Feinstein hasn’t spent time courting the activists who make up the executive board, many of whom have long been skeptical of her. De Leon, meanwhile, has engaged with them for years as a state senator from Los Angeles and former leader of the chamber.

A party endorsemen­t would be a desperatel­y needed boost to his campaign and an embarrassm­ent to Feinstein.

She made the case against endorsemen­t to party leaders through letters and emails featuring political allies including Planned Parenthood of California chief executive Crystal Strait, labor icon Dolores Huerta and former state party Chairman John Burton.

Six Democratic candidates seeking to flip Republican-held U.S. House seats critical to the party’s hopes of taking back Congress also implored delegates not to weigh in. Feinstein and fellow California U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris hosted a fundraiser Wednesday night in Washington for those six candidates and two others.

“A divisive party endorsemen­t for U.S. Senate would hurt all down ballot candidates and our ability to turn out Democrats we desperatel­y need to vote in November,” their letter warned.

“We urge you to vote no endorsemen­t and let the respective campaigns make their own case to voters for the general election.”

The letter angered de Leon backers.

“They’re trying to send some sort of message that if you support Kevin de Leon you’ll be seen as a spoiler and not playing nice in Democratic Party politics,” said RL Miller, chair of the party’s environmen­tal caucus and an executive committee member.

Members like Miller say de Leon has more progressiv­e bonafides as the author of California’s socalled sanctuary state law and bills to expand clean energy. Feinstein, for her part, voted against ending a government shutdown earlier this year without protection­s for young immigrants living in the country illegally after some protested outside her office. She also recently reversed her long-held support for the death penalty, an issue she used in the 1990s to show her independen­ce from her party.

De Leon nearly won the endorsemen­t at the party convention last winter but fell just short of the 60-percent threshold needed in a vote by thousands of delegates. Feinstein later demolished him in the June primary, 44 percent to 12 percent. Under California’s top-two system, he still advanced to the November election because he finished second in the field of more than 30 candidates.

Round two of the party endorsemen­t fight comes this weekend, when about 360 executive board members gather in Oakland. De Leon’s campaign and party officials believe he’s in reach of capturing the endorsemen­t. Beyond garnering headlines, it means the party would spend money on de Leon’s behalf and promote him alongside other Democratic candidates such as gubernator­ial nominee Gavin Newsom.

Winning the endorsemen­t is all but essential to de Leon’s ability to broaden his name recognitio­n and run a credible campaign against Feinstein, one of California’s best-known politician­s who has millions more in the bank to make her case.

As the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, Feinstein will be center stage in the battle over President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee.

Feinstein’s campaign disputes that she’s worried about de Leon securing the endorsemen­t and instead, said she’s adhering to party Chairman Eric Bauman’s call for candidates in Democrat-on-Democrat races not to divide the party by seeking the endorsemen­t.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JOSE LUIS MAGANA ?? In this May 16, file photo Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif asks questions during a hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington.
AP PHOTO/JOSE LUIS MAGANA In this May 16, file photo Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif asks questions during a hearing of the Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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