Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bannon brings heat in Calif.

Rallies conservati­ve voters as elected officials stay away

- By Phil Willon and Seema Mehta Los Angeles Times

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Former

Trump administra­tion strategist and GOP activist Steve Bannon on Friday told California Republican­s, whose state party has fallen in membership and political influence, that their salvation lies in putting aside their difference­s and getting to work — just as they’ddonetohel­pmovepresi­dent Donald Trump to his surprise victory in November.

“Wehaveapro­blemwithun­derstandin­g how to win. Nothing else matters,” Bannon told hundreds of Republican delegates gathered in Anaheim for the state party’s fall convention. “If you want to take your state back … you have to roll your sleeves up.”

Welcomed with a standing ovation, Bannon clung to themes of “economic nationalis­m” in his speech, putting the interests and fortunes of American workers ahead of the Republican establishm­ent. He laughed off the small number of protesters outside, saying their liberal message would repel voters.

Bannon’s fiery remarks evoked praise and consternat­ion among Republican­s at the convention at an Anaheim hotel. Few state or federal elected officials attended his speech. But it was a popular ticket among the party’s most conservati­ve members, as was demonstrat­ed when Bannon’s harsh criticism of former President George W. Bush and Sen. John McCain, R-ariz., was greeted with boos in agreement.

A few dozen protesters — outnumbere­d by police and reporters — chanted outside the hotel, riled by the person widely considered to be one of the primary architects of Trump’s victory in November.

National and state Democrats pounced before Bannon’s appearance, arguing that it showed how out of step the California GOP is with the state’s voters.

“Steve Bannon is a race-baiting thug masqueradi­ng as a pseudo-intellectu­al,” said Eric Bauman, chairman of the California Democratic Party. Bannon’s speech Friday also drew out the divide among California Republican­s over whether embracing or rebuffing Trump will improve the party’s fortunes in the state.

“Bannon is a uniter, not a divider. With the establishm­ent working with instead of trying to crush the conservati­ve movement, we win,” said former state Assemblyma­n Tim Donnelly, a favorite of the state’s tea party members.

But Republican political consultant Luis Alvarado said Bannon’s appearance at a state party event sends the wrong message. He noted that four Republican members of Congress from Orange County, where the convention is being held, represent districts that voted for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election and are being targeted by Democrats in 2018.

“I see a downside if the party embraced what Steve Bannon is selling,” Alvarado said.

In California, Clinton beat Trump by more than 4 million votes in November. Opinion polls show the president remains widely unpopular in the state.

Bannon took special aim at laws enacted by California’s legislator­s to counter the president’s agenda, such as the “sanctuary state” bill California Gov. Jerry Brown signed this month.

“Trust me, if you do not roll this back, and I’m talking about the people in this room, 10 or 15 years from now the folks in Silicon Valley and the progressiv­e left in this state is going to try to secede from the union,” Bannon said.

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