Los Angeles Times

RACES FOR U. S. HOUSE GROW HOTTER

Major parties pour money into California contests as they look ahead to 2016.

- By Jean Merl

Both major political parties and groups of their deep- pocketed supporters are playing big in the handful of fiercely fought congressio­nal races in California this year.

With Republican­s widely expected to keep— even add to— their House majority in November, the interest from national groups appears to be all about future elections. The parties are positionin­g themselves for 2016, when the nation will next elect a president and when the political climate could be very different, and even beyond to 2018, experts said.

“Republican­s want a cushion against the risk of future losses,” said John J. “Jack” Pitney Jr., a Claremont McKenna College political scientist and former GOP official. “Democrats want to limit GOP gains this year so that they will be in a better starting position for when their prospects are brighter.”

As a result, tough battles have developed in half a dozen districts. In four of those, Democrats, buoyed by strong turnout for President Obama, wrested the seats from Republican­s in 2012.

Another is in the Central Valley, where Democrats hope Amanda Renteria, alocal native who hasworked in Washington, can dislodge Rep. David Valadao ( RH anford) from the seat he won that year.

The other is in the Inland Empire, where the parties are fighting it out over who will succeed retiring Rep. Gary Miller ( R- Rancho Cucamonga) in a Democrat tilting district.

The closest contests are widely believed to be those involving three first- term Democrats.

In Northern California, Rep. Ami Bera of Elk Grove faces former Republican Rep. Doug Ose of Sacramento.

In Southern California, Republican­s recruited Assemblyma­n Jeff Gorell of Camarillo to take on Rep. Julia Brownley of Westlake Village, and former San Diego City Councilman Carl DeMaio, seen by some as a rising GOP star, is challengin­g Rep. Scott Peters of San Diego.

The nonpartisa­n Cook

Political Report labels each of the three contests a tossup. Cook gives a slight edge to the fourth Democratic freshman, Rep. Raul Ruiz of Palm Desert, opposed by GOP Assemblyma­n Brian Nestande, also of Palm Desert, but concludes the Central Valley district probably will stay in the Republican column.

The fierce competitio­n is fanned by spending by groups that are not part of the candidates’ own campaigns. The Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee has so far spent roughly $ 3 million against DeMaio, Gorell and Ose, according to campaign reports filed with the government.

Another Democratic group, House Majority PAC, has pumped almost half a million dollars into efforts to defeat Gorell and Ose.

The National Republican Congressio­nal Committee reported spending about $ 1.5 million to oppose Bera and Peters.

Other groups involved in some of these races include the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, which has spent about $ 600,000 to support Ose and Valadao and more than $ 300,000 to oppose Bera.

Likewise, Defending Main Street Super PAC Inc., which supports incumbent Republican­s, spent $ 100,000 for Ose and $ 29,000 for Valadao.

With a month to go until election day, other interests have signaled they’ll get involved, including the conservati­ve American Action Network, which has reserved television advertisin­g time.

Some of the strongest attacks have surfaced in the Peters and Brownley races.

In San Diego, the National Republican Congressio­nal Committee launched a TV ad last week implying that Peters had used his position in Congress to engage in insider trading, a federal felony. The Peters campaign called the ad “a false, egregious and purely political attack” that its lawyers were working to have taken down.

The local ABC affiliate, 10 News, and its Civility Project, which analyzes political advertisin­g, called it “outrageous” and gave it an “F” grade.

The Brownley camp has invested heavily in trying to knock down Gorell’s record as a work- across- the- aisle moderate in a district where Democrats hold a slim registrati­on edge.

No sooner had Gorell disavowed the tea party as “too extreme” than Brownley supporters dug up a 2009 YouTube video showing him addressing the ultra- conservati­ve group at a rally with a tea bag around his neck.

Gorell cited an analysis by the nonpartisa­n Sunlight Foundation that reviewed voting records and showed him to be one of the most moderate members of the state Legislatur­e. He predicted his record, his military service in a district flush with veterans and his strong local ties would win the day.

“I’m going to prove that you can win a congressio­nal seat in this part of the state by running a positive campaign,” Gorell said.

On Thursday, the Brownley campaign issued a news release portraying Gorell as anti- immigrant, noting, among other things, that he had once defended Propositio­n 187, the controvers­ial 1994 ballot measure intended to deny most public services to those in the country illegally.

Gorell strategist Reed Galen said his client’s record shows he is “staunchly in favor of comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform.” Brownley and her allies “have spent millions distorting Gorell’s record to avoid having to talk about her own,” Galen said.

Brownley and the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee have said she is more in line with district voters on most issues, including healthcare access and women’s rights.

Longtime Democratic strategist Darry A. Sragow said it was no accident that many of the Democratic campaigns in competitiv­e districts this year are trying to brand their Republican opponents as tea party candidates.

In the past, social issues such as abortion and the death penalty were used to mobilize voters, Sragow said. Today, it’s the teaparty.

“To a lot of voters, especially Democratic voters,” Sragow said, “‘ tea party’ is a pejorative.”

Not all candidates are running in the middle. Republican Iraq War veteran and business owner Paul Chabot is competing with Redlands Mayor Pete Aguilar for an Inland Empire seat that most analysts say offers Democrats their best chance for a pickup this year. The Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee has spent about $ 523,000 against Chabot.

Aguilar is emphasizin­g his support for schools and business growth and touting endorsemen­ts from several prominent local Republican­s as evidence that he can work effectivel­y across party lines.

But the campaign strategist for Chabot, who opposes abortion and is endorsed by the National Rifle Assn., says his conservati­ve views are shared by a majority of the district’s voters, including many Democrats.

“This district does have a lot of Democrats,” said the strategist, John S. Thomas, acknowledg­ing the rival party’s modest registrati­on edge.

But headded, referring to one of Los Angeles’ most liberal bastions, “These are not Westside L. A. Democrats.” jean. merl@ latimes. com Twitter: @ jeanmerl Times researcher Maloy Moore contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? REP. JULIA BROWNLEY rallies supporters at Thousand Oaks’ 50th anniversar­y parade last month.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times REP. JULIA BROWNLEY rallies supporters at Thousand Oaks’ 50th anniversar­y parade last month.

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