Los Angeles Times

From the basement and onto the ballot

State GOP chair has a rally plan, and it starts in 2018

- By Phil Willon and Christine Mai-Duc

Jim Brulte hopes to keep a job few would envy: As chairman of the California Republican Party, he’s tasked with trying to steer his party out of the wilderness in one of the bluest states in the nation.

As the party looks ahead to a high-stakes governor’s race and midterm elections in 2018, it faces a grim reality: A Republican hasn’t been elected to statewide office here in more than a decade, and the Democrats hold a powerful supermajor­ity in the state Legislatur­e. The GOP’s share of registered voters in California is just 27.3%, its lowest since 1980, and it has yet to field a prominent candidate in the 2018 governor’s race.

Brulte vows that the party’s fortunes will improve in

the 2018 election, including one or two top-shelf candidates running for governor. He’ll make his case in Sacramento this weekend at the California Republican Party’s three-day convention, where GOP delegates banking on Brulte to deliver are expected to vote Sunday in favor of extending his reign as chairman for a third term.

President Trump’s election provides an opening, Brulte said. California’s Democratic leadership is so focused on battling the new Trump administra­tion that they are ignoring growing concerns at home, he said. The state’s roads, bridges and dams have fallen into disrepair, poverty is on the rise, middle-class families struggle to afford a decent home, and massive pension liabilitie­s still loom — all problems that have festered under the watch of Democratic Gov. Jerry Brown and the Democratic-controlled state Legislatur­e, Brulte and other state Republican leaders said.

“We are looking for opportunit­ies where Democrats are out of step with the districts they represent because they are bowing down to a liberal Washington Democrat establishm­ent that is fundamenta­lly out of touch with where the country is, and where California is,” Brulte said in a recent interview.

The difficulty will be convincing California­ns that Republican­s have the answers, especially as GOP leaders in Washington dismantle the Affordable Care Act, crack down on immigrants in the country illegally and strip away environmen­tal protection­s — moves that are popular with a conservati­ve base, but don’t play well out west.

“The first step is honestly acknowledg­ing that the Republican brand is fractured,” said Stanislaus County Supervisor Kristin Olsen, vice chairwoman of the state party. “Then it’s taking clear steps to improve that brand, to tell people that we as California Republican­s care about their daily struggles with healthcare, immigratio­n policies, schools and economic opportunit­ies.”

GOP leaders have seen the 2018 election as a potential Republican spring, when years of hard work helping Republican­s win seats on city councils, county commission­s and local school boards would begin to bear fruit in bigger races.

Despite their low numbers in Sacramento and California’s congressio­nal delegation, Republican­s have done well in local government races. As of earlier this year, Republican­s accounted for 42% of elected city officehold­ers in California and Democrats accounted for 46%, according to data compiled by political consulting firm Grassroots­Lab. In the California Legislatur­e, Republican­s account for 32% of lawmakers and Democrats for 68%.

Posts on city councils and county boards are nonpartisa­n. Candidates running for the Legislatur­e, Congress and statewide office have their political party listed on the ballot, and that can be a major obstacle in a deepblue state.

Republican political consultant Matt Rexroad, who is a Yolo County supervisor and represents a Democratic-leaning district, said local government elections favor candidates with deep roots in their communitie­s. Voters tend to back people they know.

“They’re largely student body president contests,” Rexroad said of local elections. “People are far more likely to trust the PTA president … than somebody running on a pure policy agenda.”

Former Rancho Cucamonga City Councilman Marc Steinorth parlayed his local political success into a seat in the California Assembly, an example of the bottom-up political strategy championed by Brulte. Steinorth, who owned an advertisin­g firm and a string of pizza parlors in his community, campaigned door-todoor on issues such as job creation, affordable housing and cutting through government bureaucrac­y. He’s won two straight Assembly elections in a district that includes San Bernardino and Redlands and where Democrats had a 7-percentage­point edge in voter registrati­on as of November.

“I think that it’s easy for us to define everything based on party lines when we’re talking about the national level…. But when we’re dealing with issues on a very local level, it really comes down to where are you on the policies,” Steinorth said. “Where are you on the issues, and are you caring about your community.”

Despite Steinorth’s success, making the leap from city council to the Legislatur­e or Congress has proved to be difficult for Republican­s in all but the most deep-red parts of the state.

Brulte admits it could take time for the party’s local strategy to pay off.

“The Republican Party in California did not get in trouble in one election,” Brulte said. “It has been a multi-decade decline, and it’s going to take more than one or two elections for us to climb back.”

It will be a steep climb if they do. For the first time in 2014, more voters in California were registered as nonpartisa­ns or with third parties than as Republican­s.

Republican political consultant Steve Schmidt said the GOP’s declining voter registrati­on numbers in California spell doom for the party’s future prospects in the state.

“Institutio­nally, it’s a third-party entity,” said Schmidt, who worked for President George W. Bush’s 2004 reelection campaign and helped run the 2008 presidenti­al campaign of Republican Sen. John McCain. “You’ll see an independen­t candidate elected [governor] before you see a Republican elected again.”

If that happens, it won’t be for Republican­s’ lack of trying, Brulte said. The party’s No. 1 priority in 2018 is to elect a Republican governor, he said.

“We believe there will be one or two very strong candidates on our side,” Brulte added, but he declined to say whom they might be. “We’ve spent a significan­t amount of money seeing if there is a path for a Republican to win statewide, and we believe there is.”

The path to victory could depend on finding a Republican candidate who can coalesce GOP support and appeal to independen­ts and moderates. That person must also survive a primary election battle against the Democratic heavyweigh­ts already in the race, including Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa and state Treasurer John Chiang.

So far no well-known Republican­s have stepped forward to run for California’s top post. San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer, thought by many to be the GOP’s best shot at the office, has said repeatedly that he won’t run. Ashley Swearengin, the former Fresno mayor who lost her bid for state controller in 2014, has also said she’s not interested.

“If you don’t field credible and competitiv­e statewide candidates, for some of the offices at least, I think the voters start to take that as a concession. And that’s a dangerous place to be in the minds of the electorate,” said Rob Stutzman, a Republican strategist and former spokesman for Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger.

There’s also a series of potential obstacles for Republican­s that has sprung out of Trump’s victory. Experts say the Trump White House could distract California Democrats from pressing battles back home, but it could also energize the progressiv­e resistance enough to deter Republican candidates and donors.

And with Trump now the leader of the national party, it could be more difficult for GOP members of Congress to distance themselves from the president, as many California Republican­s did in the November election.

Progressiv­e activists have showed up at the district offices of Republican members of Congress to protest votes on Trump’s Cabinet appointmen­ts and plans to repeal the Affordable Care Act. If the liberal uprising lasts, it could knock Republican­s off kilter.

Whatever Trump’s impact on California Republican­s, it’s unlikely to be direct, said Tammy Frisby, a research fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institutio­n. Republican­s running for statewide and legislativ­e offices should have no problem distancing themselves from the president, Frisby adds, but having Trump in the White House could be dangerous for them if either side feels that the president’s policies could leave California Republican­s vulnerable in 2018.

“Whether a ‘Trump problem’ for California Republican­s is real or not, it could be a self-fulfilling prophecy if good candidates don’t run and big donors don’t give,” she said.

Mike Osborn, chairman of the Ventura County Republican Party, believes that Trump’s election may actually work to the advantage of California Republican­s. With the Democratic Party so focused on the Trump administra­tion, and the need to protect Democratic U.S. senators up for reelection in 2018, the GOP could land some significan­t victories, he said.

“I think it’s going to be pulling a lot of big [Democratic] money out of California,” Osborn said.

In the early days of Trump’s presidency, as Democratic leaders across the state focused on the White House, top Republican­s have done anything but. Last week, it appeared, the Democrats began to take notice.

“I’m tired of talking about Donald Trump,” Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Paramount) told a gathering of California newspaper publishers. “If Hillary Clinton had gotten elected president of the United States, we would have started the year with 2.5 million children in California living in poverty. If Hillary Clinton had been elected president of the United States, we would have started the year with crumbling roads.”

Mike Madrid, a Sacramento Republican consultant, quickly seized on Rendon’s comments, congratula­ting Assembly GOP Leader Chad Mayes for “forcing” Democrats to “finally address poverty in California.”

Mayes’ response was one that state Republican­s are likely to keep in their back pocket as they attempt to win back their stature in the Golden State: “I’m thankful we’re going to focus on the problems right here in [California].”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? JIM BRULTE, chairman of the California Republican Party, speaks at the party’s fall 2015 convention. He is expected to be reelected to a third term this weekend, tasked with bringing the state GOP back to prominence.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times JIM BRULTE, chairman of the California Republican Party, speaks at the party’s fall 2015 convention. He is expected to be reelected to a third term this weekend, tasked with bringing the state GOP back to prominence.
 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA Republican Party Chairman Jim Brulte, shown at a 2015 party convention, said the state GOP may benefit from Democratic leaders being so preoccupie­d with Trump that they ignore problems at home.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA Republican Party Chairman Jim Brulte, shown at a 2015 party convention, said the state GOP may benefit from Democratic leaders being so preoccupie­d with Trump that they ignore problems at home.

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