Los Angeles Times

When a party member strays

San Bernardino Assembly race could define what it means to be an Inland Empire Democrat.

- CHRISTINE MAI- DUC christine.maiduc@latimes.com Twitter: @ cmaiduc

What happens when a Democratic lawmaker strays from party leaders on a key piece of Gov. Jerry Brown’s policy agenda? One assemblywo­man who held back support for a sweeping climate- change bill last year is starting to find out.

Assemblywo­man Cheryl Brown ( D- San Bernardino) was among a group of business- aligned Democrats who objected to a provision in the bill, SB 350, that would have cut California’s motor vehicle petroleum use in half by 2030.

Now Brown, a moderate, is facing what could be a bruising reelection fight against an intraparty challenger from the left, attorney Eloise Gomez Reyes. The race raises a question: What does it mean to be a Democrat in San Bernardino, where concerns over jobs often compete with those about the environmen­t?

Some early signs indicate Brown could be in trouble. Protesters have showed up at her events. Some of her supporters have defected, endorsing Reyes early in the fight.

“Do you ever feel that something is not going quite right?” Brown asked in a recent phone interview. “They are after me, and I still don’t know why. I don’t know who ‘ they’ are. But I will find out soon.”

Last week, Brown’s suspicions began to crystalliz­e when a dozen students in breathing masks from San Bernardino Valley College threw themselves on the f loor of a town hall meeting she was hosting.

Brown was there to discuss the region’s logistics industry and its vast network of trucking and distributi­on centers, which deliver everything from headphones to heads of lettuce to big- box retailers and Amazon customers throughout Southern California.

At the event, Brown supporter John Husing, an economist with the Inland Empire Economic Partnershi­p, discussed SB 350’ s scrapped petroleum provision, which was removed after Brown and other Democrats objected to its inclusion. Husing came to Brown’s aid, arguing that lower- income families might have been harmed by potential rising energy costs that may have resulted from the provision.

“That’s fine if you live in San Francisco and can afford a Tesla,” Husing said. “It’s not fine if you’re a poor family living in downtown San Bernardino … and the folks that stopped that deserve a welcome thanks.”

A group of twentysome­things interrupte­d him, calling Brown “a corporate hack.” They held up signs that read “People over Profits” and “Don’t Sell Us Out.”

But as the business community comes to Brown’s defense, a handful of unions that endorsed Brown in 2014 have thrown their weight behind Reyes, including the Central Labor Council of the AFL- CIO of Riverside- San Bernardino, which represents more than 289,000 workers in the Inland Empire. An online campaign has highlighte­d the thousands of dollars Brown has accepted from oil companies.

Two Democratic state senators have endorsed Reyes. But nearly three months after asking state Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León for his support, Brown has yet to receive a response.

Though Reyes has not held political office, she’s no novice: She ran against Rep. Pete Aguilar ( D- Redlands) for an open congressio­nal seat in 2014. Though she came in fourth in that primary, she received more votes in Brown’s district — where more than 50% of registered voters are Latino — than any other candidate, according to an analysis by the California Target Book.

Reyes has proved to be an able fundraiser, bringing in $ 123,638 in the last six weeks of the year after entering the race in mid- November. She had nearly all of it banked at the end of 2015, while Brown raised $ 126,416 during the last quarter, with $ 156,644 cash on hand.

So far, Reyes has raised money mostly from individual donors, including a large chunk from family members, and some from unions and businesses. Her campaign could benefit if the unions and environmen­tal organizati­ons that have endorsed her decide to open their deep pockets.

In Sacramento, where incumbents are fiercely guarded, the Democratic establishm­ent has largely rallied around Brown, who has received endorsemen­ts from Aguilar, state Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris and a laundry list of Assembly Democrats.

But Brown is no stranger to how California’s “jungle primary” — which allows the top two primary finishers to advance regardless of party — can change fortunes in a hurry.

The surprise victory of Assemblywo­man Patty Lopez ( D- San Fernando) over a Democratic incumbent two years ago has become a cautionary tale, and in 2012, Brown herself beat seasoned politico Joe Baca Jr., who had the backing of the state party and strong labor support. Brown scored a come- frombehind victory after a second- place showing in the primary.

Reyes says she offers voters an alternativ­e who “puts the interests of the community first.”

“There is a difference between Cheryl Brown and myself, and the future I see for my district,” Reyes said. “I want a safer environmen­t, I want a cleaner environmen­t, I want protection­s for our workers.”

The air over San Bernardino County often has the highest ozone levels in the region, due mostly to winds that sweep in pollution from Los Angeles.

The region’s truck- to-warehouse pipeline hasn’t helped, either.

“The people of San Bernardino want clean air quality, and we do want jobs,” said Jason Martinez, 21, one of the student demonstrat­ors at Brown’s event. ““But we don’t want lowwage jobs, warehouse jobs.”

Labor unions that previously endorsed Brown have since renounced her actions on some issues. Key among their grievances, Brown helped block a 2013 bill aimed at penalizing employers with large shares of workers on Medi- Cal. She also voted against a 2015 bill that would have put a 90day freeze on firing grocery store employees after ownership changes.

“When you take a look at her record as a whole, there’s not one thing that I can point to that has benefited our members,” said Joe Duffle, secretary- treasurer of UFCW Local 1167.

Brown says she has voted consistent­ly in the interest of her constituen­ts in the Inland Empire, where only about 20% of adults 25 or older have bachelor’s degrees and about one in five live in poverty, according to census data. Voters there have shown that they’re lukewarm on environmen­tal issues and climate change action, according to a 2012 study by the Public Policy Institute of California.

“Those are the people that I represent, and I should be their voice,” Brown said. “For me, that’s an important issue that’s lost sometimes in that beautiful building over there.”

Several of Brown’s colleagues who attended the town hall, including both leaders of the state’s Democratic moderate caucus, rushed to her defense.

Assemblyma­n Jim Cooper ( D- Elk Grove), who is co- chairman of the caucus, told the audience that Brown is “someone that’s not just going along with what everybody says, because what’s good for San Francisco or the coastal communitie­s may not be good for San Bernardino.”

Mary Petit, who runs a community garden nonprofit, says Brown has done a good job balancing the complex, cross- cutting issues in the region.

Some of her votes “may not support the people who came in here and protested, and that’s OK,” Petit said. “Other times, it may not support the people who are in here today supporting her.”

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? ASSEMBLYWO­MAN Cheryl Brown ( D- San Bernardino), left, a moderate, is facing what could be a bruising reelection f ight against an intraparty challenger from the left, attorney Eloise Gomez Reyes.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ASSEMBLYWO­MAN Cheryl Brown ( D- San Bernardino), left, a moderate, is facing what could be a bruising reelection f ight against an intraparty challenger from the left, attorney Eloise Gomez Reyes.
 ?? Cheryl A. Guerrero Los Angeles Times ??
Cheryl A. Guerrero Los Angeles Times

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