Lodi News-Sentinel

Valley Democrat takes lead in last remaining undecided House race

- By Mark Z. Barabak and Maya Sweedler

Democrat TJ Cox moved ahead of Republican incumbent David Valadao on Monday to take the lead in the country's sole remaining undecided congressio­nal race, positionin­g Democrats to pick up a seventh House seat in California and 40th nationwide.

Cox, who trailed by nearly 4,400 votes on election night, has steadily gained as ballot counting continues nearly three weeks after the Nov. 6 election, a pattern consistent with the state's recent voting history.

On Monday, he pulled ahead by 438 votes after Kern County updated its results.

The mostly rural 21st Congressio­nal District, which Cox and Valadao are competing to represent, takes in portions of Fresno, Kern, Kings and Tulare counties. Several thousand ballots remain to be counted before the state's Dec. 7 deadline for county election officials to certify their results

A Cox victory would give Democrats a sweep of the California districts they targeted this election and expand the party's biggest gain nationally since Watergate — more than enough to take control of the House in January.

A loss by Valadao, a threeterm incumbent and perennial Democratic target, would be another significan­t setback for a Republican Party struggling to keep a meaningful toehold in a state the GOP dominated for much of its history. It would give Democrats 46 of California's 53 House seats — leaving Republican­s with their smallest share of the state's delegation in more than half a century.

In a further blow to the party nationally, two-term Rep. Mia Love of Utah — once seen as rising Republican star — conceded defeat Monday to Democratic Salt Lake County Mayor Ben McAdams after a prolonged vote count.

Love, who was taunted by President Donald Trump in a post-election news conference, returned the animus Monday.

The day after the election, when the outcome of the race was still very much in doubt, Trump declared Love the loser and had blamed her for keeping him at arms' length. “Mia Love gave me no love and she lost,” Trump said then. “Too bad. Sorry about that, Mia.”

Trump's derisive comment, Love said in Salt Lake City as she conceded, “gave me a clear vision of his world as it is: No real relationsh­ips, just convenient transactio­ns.”

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