Los Angeles Times

Latino voters may decide the governor’s race

- In sacramento

Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom shouldn’t be called the front-runner anymore in the race for California governor. Former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa has essentiall­y caught up.

“It’s a virtual toss,” says Mark Baldassare, president and pollster of the nonpartisa­n Public Policy Institute of California.

Newsom’s once significan­t lead over fellow Democrat Villaraigo­sa has slowly eroded and the two are now statistica­lly tied, based on a new PPIC poll of likely voters.

How’d that happen? Latinos are flocking to Villaraigo­sa, the poll shows. And this could be the year that Latinos actually vote in powerful numbers, inspired by their disdain of President Trump’s rants about illegal immigratio­n.

The candidates’ first goal is to finish among the top two in the June 5 primary. Those two, regardless of party, will advance to the November runoff to decide who succeeds the termedout Gov. Jerry Brown.

Newsom and Villaraigo­sa seem headed to the runoff, based on the PPIC survey.

The results: Newsom 23%, Villaraigo­sa 21%. The margin of error is 4 percent-

age points.

The two leaders were followed at a distance by a large field: Democratic state Treasurer John Chiang, 9%; Republican Assemblyma­n Travis Allen of Huntington Beach, 8%; Republican businessma­n John Cox, 7%; Democratic former state schools chief Delaine Eastin, 4%; and Republican former U.S. Rep. Doug Ose of Sacramento, 3%.

There are a lot of undecided voters. Most people have never heard of the candidates other than Newsom and Villaraigo­sa, or didn’t know enough about them to have an opinion.

Do the math: If there weren’t three Republican­s running and splitting the GOP’s gradually declining vote, one might have a fighting chance of making it into the top two.

The field could still change. The candidate filing deadline isn’t until March 9.

A PPIC poll in November also showed upward movement for Villaraigo­sa. He trailed Newsom then by 5 percentage points. Since that time, the former L.A. mayor and state Assembly speaker has picked up 3 points while Newsom has stood still.

A USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll in October found Newsom leading Villaraigo­sa by 10 percentage points.

A recent online poll by the USC Rossier School of Education showed Newsom with a 15-point lead over Villaraigo­sa. That survey identified Villaraigo­sa as a businessma­n, not a former mayor.

Latinos are the story of the PPIC poll.

Villaraigo­sa led Newsom among Latinos by 35 points. Among whites, Newsom led by 15. A whopping 67% of Latinos had a favorable opinion of Villaraigo­sa; 37% did of Newsom. That translated into a 40% favorable rating for both candidates among all likely voters.

State Senate leader Kevin de León (D-Los Angeles) wasn’t benefiting nearly as much from Latinos in his uphill race against U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein. She was leading 46% to 17%, and Latinos supported her 47% to 29%.

Villaraigo­sa would be the first Latino to be elected California governor. One Latino, Romualdo Pacheco, was chief executive for a few months in 1875 after ascending from lieutenant governor when the governor, Newton Booth, was elected to the U.S. Senate.

Villaraigo­sa also would be the first former L.A. mayor to be elected governor. In the poll, Villaraigo­sa had an 18-point lead in Los Angeles County. But the runner-up was Chiang, one point ahead of Newsom. Newsom, a former San Francisco mayor, was running far ahead of Villaraigo­sa in the Bay Area by 33 points.

Bay Area voters have been turning out for elections more reliably than Angelenos. And Latinos, regardless of their growing population numbers, have basically been no-shows at the ballot box. Villaraigo­sa’s fate depends on his ability to turn out L.A. and Latino voters.

“If in any year Latinos are going to vote, this is the year,” says Roger Salazar, a Democratic political consultant who’s not involved in the gubernator­ial campaign.

“I’d really like before I get done with this [career] to see Latinos vote in the same percentage­s as their population. If we can’t do it in a year like this, it might never happen.”

Mike Madrid is a longtime Republican consultant who has practicall­y given up on the GOP and is working for Villaraigo­sa. He thinks there could be a large Latino turnout and cites four reasons for his optimism.

First, Trump has particular­ly angered Latinos.

“The [Latino] giant went to sleep for 20 years and woke up stronger in 2016” when Trump was elected, Madrid says.

There was evidence of it in November during a Virginia gubernator­ial election, he adds. Latinos had an unusually good turnout.

The PPIC poll found that 82% of Latino voters disapprove of Trump’s job performanc­e. Among all voters, 67% do.

Asked which is the most important issue for the governor and Legislatur­e to address, the No. 1 answer by far was immigratio­n, especially among Latinos. “Sanctuary state” policies “to protect the legal rights of undocument­ed immigrants” were favored by 80% of Latinos, and 58% of all voters.

Second, Madrid says, Villaraigo­sa has always benefited from good Latino turnouts in his election races.

Third, there’ll be major Latino candidates running for five statewide offices this year. Each presumably will attract Latino voters.

Fourth, Madrid adds, there are a record number of Latinos running in local races. And those contests have been consolidat­ed with the state elections.

“There’s a confluence of events,” Madrid says. “Any one of them could have a significan­t impact.”

Trump already has had an impact by riling Latinos and boosting Villaraigo­sa.

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 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? FORMER L.A. MAYOR Antonio Villaraigo­sa is now statistica­lly tied with Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom in the race for governor, based on a new poll of likely voters. Above, Villaraigo­sa, foreground, at a debate last month.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times FORMER L.A. MAYOR Antonio Villaraigo­sa is now statistica­lly tied with Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom in the race for governor, based on a new poll of likely voters. Above, Villaraigo­sa, foreground, at a debate last month.

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