Imperial Valley Press

Stark contrast emerges in fight for California US House seat

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LOS ANGELES ( AP) — Former Trump administra­tion appointee Connie Conway is headed to a June runoff election for a vacant U.S. House seat in California, and what makes her stand out is unusual in politics: If she wins, she intends to serve just months in Congress.

If elected, Conway plans to serve only as a caretaker for the remainder of the term of former Rep. Devin Nunes, who resigned the 22nd District seat to lead former President Donald Trump’s social media company. If victorious in the June runoff, she’d serve only until early January.

The 71-year-old Conway, a former Republican leader in the state Assembly and a one-time county supervisor, said in an interview Wednesday that her decision reflects practical politics. With redrawn House districts across California, Nunes’ old territory was broken apart and absorbed elsewhere. In the new districts, her congressma­n is House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy, who could become speaker if the GOP seizes power in November’s midterm elections.

A neighborin­g district is where another Republican, Rep. David Valadao, is seeking reelection.

“I’m not going to challenge another Republican,” Conway said. Moreover, she didn’t want to be a “steppingst­one candidate” -- someone only building name recognitio­n in advance of another run for office.

“It’s not a steppingst­one. It’s an avocation for me. The district needs representa­tion, and it doesn’t have it now,” she added.

It might take days to determine who is awarded the second runoff slot in the Central California district, a region sometimes called the nation’s salad bowl because of its vast agricultur­al production.

Because no candidate was able to claim a majority of the vote Tuesday and win outright, only the top two finishers advance to a runoff that will coincide with the statewide primary election June 7.

In preliminar­y returns, Conway had 35% of the vote among six candidates, with Democrat Lourin Hubbard in the second spot, with about 20%. Mail-in ballots can arrive as late as April 12, provided they are postmarked by Tuesday, the day of the election.

If the vote trend holds, it could set up a showdown between Conway, the conservati­ve former Trump appointee, and the progressiv­e Hubbard, who supports universal health care and a pathway to citizenshi­p for millions of people who entered the country illegally. He also opposes a wall on the border with Mexico, a signature Trump project.

A matchup with Conway would be a “quintessen­tial political fight between Trump conservati­sm versus the progressiv­e movement,” Hubbard, 33, a manager for the state Department of Water Resources, said in an interview.

He tweeted Tuesday, “A black man from a working class background isn’t supposed to shock the state. But that’s exactly what I did. ... On June 7th we’re going to shock the nation!”

In a Republican- leaning district that supported Trump in the 2020 election, Conway’s first-place finish Tuesday leaves her in a strong position to capture the post in the runoff.

Conway served as the California executive director of the Agricultur­e Department’s Farm Service Agency during the Trump administra­tion, and she says she would support Trump if he ran for president in 2024.

Others trailing Conway and Hubbard included Eric Garcia, a Marine and Iraq War veteran, and Republican Matt Stoll, a former Navy combat pilot and small business owner.

Garcia and Stoll also are running in the June statewide primary in a newly drawn district — the 21st — that includes a slab of Nunes’ territory. In that race, they will be taking on Democratic Rep. Jim Costa, and it’s obvious they hope a victory on Nunes’ old turf will be a springboar­d to winning the new district.

A runoff would be politicall­y tricky for either of them. In that case, a candidate’s name would appear twice on the June ballot — once in a runoff for the vacant Nunes seat, and a second time in a new House district for the term that starts in 2023. Voters easily could be confused seeing the same name twice.

Hubbard, like Conway, only is seeking the unexpired Nunes term.

 ?? AL DRAGO/POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? U.S. Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., speaks during a House Intelligen­ce Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, in 2021.
AL DRAGO/POOL PHOTO VIA AP U.S. Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., speaks during a House Intelligen­ce Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, in 2021.

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