Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Recall election results cement O.C.’s status as politicall­y mixed

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[Orange County, from B1] strong anti-communist views that have translated into enthusiast­ic support for Trump.

But contrary to Orange County’s public image as the heart of COVID-19 denial, about 83% of residents believe the coronaviru­s is a real threat, according to a recent Chapman University poll. Nearly three-quarters said they would support a national mask mandate.

“We’re no longer your grandfathe­r’s Orange County,” said Fred Smoller, a political science professor at Chapman University, who co-created the annual survey with colleague Michael Moodian. “The county has changed, and some people have woken up to those changes, and some people have not.”

Longtime Republican Dan Ardell didn’t think twice about casting his ballot against the recall.

He’s not happy with Newsom, whom he sees as too intertwine­d with unions and lacking deftness in tackling big challenges. But he couldn’t find anyone in the Republican field who excited him.

This isn’t the first time Ardell, 80, a Laguna Beach resident who worked in commercial real estate before retiring, has gone with a Democrat. He voted for Barack Obama in 2008 and against Trump both times.

The Republican Party as he knew it doesn’t exist anymore, said Ardell, who neverthele­ss has no plans to change his party registrati­on.

“There’s the cult of Trump, and then there’s the others who are either unwilling or incapable or are going to get slaughtere­d if they pull away from the cult,” he said.

Demographi­c changes are driving political shifts as well, experts say. More than half of Orange County residents are Latino or Asian, with population growth among those generally leftleanin­g groups projected to continue.

A majority of voters in cities such as Santa Ana, Irvine and Anaheim, which have increasing­ly diverse population­s, cast their ballots against the recall, according to maps provided by the Orange County Registrar of Voters.

In conservati­ve stronghold­s like Newport Beach and San Clemente, most voters wanted to oust Newsom.

Huntington Beach also voted for the recall, but the results were closer than in many of the county’s other traditiona­lly conservati­ve cities, the maps indicated.

While still redder than the county as a whole, the coastal city is changing.

Countywide, registered Democrats surpassed Republican­s several years ago.

In Huntington Beach, Republican­s still hold a 9% advantage over Democrats, with 22% of residents not registered with a party.

The city, unlike the county, supported Trump both times. But the City Council flipped to Democrats this year and is majority female.

The city is also becoming more diverse — nearly a third of residents are Latino or Asian.

In June, Huntington Beach raised the LGBTQ rainbow flag at City Hall for Pride Month.

The next month, council members appointed Democrat Rhonda Bolton to replace Ortiz, a mixed martial arts fighter who made headlines by flouting indoor mask requiremen­ts.

The backlash was immediate. Some hissed and booed the appointmen­t of the first Black council member in the city’s history.

One person shouted that she was a “transplant” — apparently because the attorney and diversity consultant moved to the city about eight years ago from Washington, D.C. Another yelled that the council was part of the “deep state.”

Huntington Beach soon had its own recall campaign against most of the council, led by a small group angry at Bolton’s appointmen­t.

Mayor Kim Carr, a Democrat, won a seat on the City Council in 2018 on a platform of fighting high-density developmen­t, repairing aging infrastruc­ture and addressing an increase in homelessne­ss.

Most residents are more interested in “bread-andbutter” issues like good schools and clean parks than their local elected officials’ party affiliatio­n, she said. But during her tenure, she has battled what she sees as a frustratin­g and enduring narrative that Huntington Beach is a breeding ground for political extremism.

“There is a small group of individual­s that are fearful of change,” she said. “But when I look at the next generation of people in Huntington Beach, I see a different city emerging.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? HUNDREDS gather in Huntington Beach to protest a statewide coronaviru­s-related curfew in November.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times HUNDREDS gather in Huntington Beach to protest a statewide coronaviru­s-related curfew in November.

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