Imperial Valley Press

Democrats are looking to add congressio­nal seats in California

-

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Thousands of volunteers knocked on doors and dialed phones Monday while candidates across California made their final arguments to voters in an election where Democrats look to keep their strangleho­ld on state offices and add to their advantage in the 53-seat congressio­nal delegation.

Polls will be open statewide from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday, and early voters must have their ballots postmarked by Tuesday to have them counted. The secretary of state’s office says 19.7 million people are registered to vote.

Democrats have chased Republican­s from many California offices and are poised to hold that ground and perhaps gain more.

Democratic Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom is the strong favorite over Republican businessma­n John Cox to succeed Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown. For the second consecutiv­e general election, there isn’t even a Republican on the ballot for U.S. Senate. This time, Sen. Dianne Feinstein has coasted against Democratic state Sen. Kevin de Leon.

In the Legislatur­e, the question isn’t whether Democrats will control the Assembly and Senate again — no one doubts that. It’s whether Democrats get a veto-proof supermajor­ity in the state Senate to add to their supermajor­ity in the Assembly.

The status would allow them to raise taxes, suspend legislativ­e rules and override vetoes without needing GOP votes.

Republican­s hold just 14 congressio­nal seats statewide, but seven of those districts were carried by Hillary Clinton in the 2016 presidenti­al election and are battlegrou­nds this time around. Democrats don’t appear in danger in any of the 39 districts they hold.

The trajectory of the election appears headed toward “the era of being a one-party state and the interestin­g internal conflicts that come with that,” University of California, San Diego political scientist Thad Kousser said Monday.

He pointed out that the drama in the governor’s race this year was during the primary between Newsom and fellow Democrat Antonio Villaraigo­sa, with Cox seen as a longshot from the start.

“What happens when you have one-party states? What you see is these fights within parties,” Kousser said.

In San Francisco, Feinstein dropped off her ballot at City Hall, where the 85-year-old Democrat urged residents to vote.

“Of course, I hope more Democrats vote than Republican­s, but in any event, everyone should vote,” she said.

Democrats hold a 3.7 million edge in voter registrati­ons, and Republican­s are also outnumbere­d by independen­ts, who in California tend to vote like Democrats.

Of 1.4 million new registrati­ons this year, only 187,000 signed up as Republican­s, or roughly 14 percent, according to an analysis by the nonpartisa­n research firm Political Data Inc. The largest group of new voters signed up as independen­ts.

Just a generation ago, California was a reliably Republican state in presidenti­al contests. But a surge in immigrants transforme­d the state and its voting patterns. The number of Hispanics, blacks and Asians combined has outnumbere­d whites in the state since 1998.

New voters, largely Latinos and Asians, lean Democratic.

 ?? AP PhoTo/MArcIo Jose sANchez ?? California gubernator­ial Democratic candidate Gavin Newsom chats with constituen­ts during a campaign stop at CJ’s Cafe, on Monday in Los Angeles.
AP PhoTo/MArcIo Jose sANchez California gubernator­ial Democratic candidate Gavin Newsom chats with constituen­ts during a campaign stop at CJ’s Cafe, on Monday in Los Angeles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States