Lodi News-Sentinel

How California primaries create special interest-fueled races

- Lindsey Holden and Owen Tucker-Smith

SACRAMENTO — Sacramento residents of Senate District 8 received reminders of California’s unusual top-two primary system every time they opened their mailboxes this spring.

Two Democrats — both virtually guaranteed spots on the November general election ballot — spent much of April and May trashing each other in a barrage of mailers, some funded by political action committees (PACs).

Issues like homelessne­ss and climate change were eclipsed by the millions in PAC money. Instead, the primary between Sacramento City Councilwom­an Angelique Ashby and former Insurance Commission­er Dave Jones devolved into a contest over who was the biggest special interest stooge.

A PAC paid for the Curtis Park billboard that depicted Jones as a bobblehead­ed corporate ‘yes man.’ Jones hammered Ashby for taking money from the same PAC, which is partially funded by oil companies.

California­ns get the rare opportunit­y to cast ballots for candidates of any party in primaries. But in a state dominated by Democrats, these first-round races can devolve into petty partisan infighting that continues into the general election.

Almost 12 years ago, proponents of the open, “toptwo” primary hoped it would ease polarizati­on, encourage more independen­ts to participat­e in politics and make state government functional.

Now, in a time of peak hyperparti­sanship, in a state governed largely by one party, the debate continues over who actually benefits from the open primary: voters with mailboxes full of flyers in June, or the business and political interests that brought it to California.

Democratic strategist Steve Maviglio, an Ashby supporter, said the system hasn’t delivered on promises of increased turnout and wider participat­ion by independen­t voters or candidates.

Moreover, he said, it enables more shenanigan­s like the PAC attack ads in the SD-8 race.

“Each race is different, so it’s hard to say one-sizefits-all with the top-two primary,” Maviglio said. “But we do know that it produces an extraordin­ary amount of hijinks in campaignin­g. That is affecting our elections, and I think voters are the losers.”

One change that has emerged since the establishm­ent of top two: an expanded cohort of businessfr­iendly Democratic lawmakers, recipients of corporate money that might have once gone to Republican­s. Groups like the California Chamber of Commerce, a major supporter of the open primary, sound like they are OK with that shift.

“By and large, we at Cal Chamber are very satisfied in its results,” said Martin Wilson, executive vice president for public affairs.

Top-two origins

California’s top-two primary was the product of a deal struck to rescue the budget from a state house that had lapsed into dysfunctio­n. In 2010, then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger received the Legislatur­e’s budget 115 days after the constituti­onal deadline.

A Central Coast Republican took advantage of this mess. Then-Sen. Abel Maldonado, R-Santa Maria, wanted to do away with the state’s traditiona­l closed primary — which allowed voters to cast ballots only for candidates of their own party — in favor of an open system free of partisan affiliatio­ns. Candidates of any party could advance to the general election, as long as they placed first or second.

Democrats needed Maldonado to cast the deciding budget vote in 2009. But he would only do so if legislator­s created Propositio­n 14 and put the question to voters. It passed in June 2010 with about 54% of the vote.

California politics 12 years into top-two

By most accounts, California’s government is a smoother-running machine than it was in 2010. It’s easier for the Legislatur­e to produce a budget. The same year voters passed Propositio­n 14, they also approved Propositio­n 25, which scrapped the required two-thirds majority for a simple one.

But other changes may have blunted top-two’s impact. In 2012 Democrats won a legislativ­e supermajor­ity and hold every statewide office. At the same time, state and national politics have become more bitterly partisan.

Movements like the tea party and the rise of former President Donald Trump have resulted in the near-disappeara­nce of moderate Republican­s, making it difficult for legislator­s from opposite sides of the aisle to find common ground.

California politics now exist within a framework of three Democratic factions: progressiv­e, middleof-the-road and moderate, said Andrew Sinclair, assistant professor of politics and public policy at Claremont McKenna College. Republican­s are the minority party with little influence.

Gov. Gavin Newsom is an example of a middle-ofthe-road Democrat, Sinclair said.

“He’s a pretty standard Democrat of this type you would see elected in most comfortabl­y Democratic states,” Sinclair said. “Like, I wouldn’t really say Gavin Newsom is super progressiv­e. But he’s pretty far away from Joe Manchin as well.”

The rise of moderate Democrats

During the decade since top-two came to California, moderate Democrats have made significan­t strides.

The informal moderate Democratic caucus is more business-friendly than the Progressiv­e Caucus, or even middle-of-the-road Democrats. The group, once called the “Mod Squad,” (after the 1970s detective television show) now brands itself as the “New Democrats.”

Moderates tend to get financial support from interest groups that might have once backed Republican­s. Democrats’ grip on the state means those groups need to get creative and form different alliances in order to exert influence.

 ?? ANDY ALFARO/MODESTO BEE ?? Signage outside a voting center on Oakdale Road in Modesto on June 7.
ANDY ALFARO/MODESTO BEE Signage outside a voting center on Oakdale Road in Modesto on June 7.

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