Los Angeles Times

Candidates f lood delegates’ inboxes

Democrats at convention vie for endorsemen­ts in races for governor, Senate.

- By Phil Willon and Seema Mehta

Seeking endorsemen­ts, Democrats pull out all the stops.

SAN DIEGO — Ingrid Gunnel must feel like the most popular voter in Southern California.

Text messages from Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom routinely popped up on her cellphone. Insurance Commission­er Dave Jones, who is running for attorney general, penned her a handwritte­n letter. Entreaties from dozens of other politician­s have appeared in her mailbox and Facebook timeline for weeks.

“I get text messages every five minutes, it feels like at least,” said Gunnel, a former teacher from Glendale who is now a union representa­tive for United Teachers Los Angeles.

She is among more than 3,000 delegates in the California Democratic Party who were lavished with attention before they set out to help decide which candidates to endorse this weekend at the state party convention in San Diego. The delegates weigh endorsemen­ts in races for governor, the U.S. Senate and a bevy of other contests up and down the state.

California’s June 5 primary might seem far away to most voters, but for the delegates there’s been no escaping it. One delegate told party chairman Eric Bauman he received 245 text messages, nine missed calls, 1,052 voicemails and countless emails — in just the past month.

The stakes couldn’t be higher.

With Gov. Jerry Brown leaving office because of term limits, one of the most coveted political prizes in California is up for grabs for the first time since 2010.

The intrigue surroundin­g California’s U.S. Senate

race is also on the upswing. Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, running for her fifth full term, is trying to beat back a challenge from the left by state Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León of Los Angeles.

Nabbing the party endorsemen­t not only sends a clear signal to California Democrats who haven't been paying much attention to the races, it also comes with financial support from the state party. In the 2016 Senate race, the state Democratic Party spent more than $500,000 backing then-Atty. Gen. Kamala Harris’ campaign against fellow Democrat Loretta Sanchez, the former Orange County congresswo­man. Harris won the endorsemen­t overwhelmi­ngly at the party’s convention in San Jose that year.

The schmoozing began as soon as the convention kicked off Friday. On Saturday, De León dished out tacos to delegates and the Feinstein campaign hosted an early breakfast to start the day.

The night before, Feinstein was mobbed when she walked through the hall, and De León snapped selfies with new fans and greeted longtime supporters. Backers trailed him waving signs bearing his name as they chanted, “Kevin! Kevin! Kevin!”

He ran into Jones, who was also followed by a crowd. “It’s like the two armies meeting,” Jones said. The hopeful for attorney general hosted an ice cream social for delegates that evening.

When Treasurer John Chiang, a candidate for governor, walked into the San Diego convention center with an entourage Friday afternoon, delegates swarmed around him wanting to know what he had to offer.

“You coming to karaoke tomorrow night? I can’t wait to hear you sing,” one delegate yelled to Chiang, who said he was not only going, he was one of the event’s sponsors.

On Friday night, the candidates also began their run through the gantlet of caucus meetings that represent various factions of the Democratic Party, including labor unions, progressiv­es, Chicanos and Latinos and veterans.

All of the top candidates for governor and Senate and several candidates for downballot seats stopped by the labor caucus to pay homage to unions as they sought votes in Saturday’s endorsemen­t contests.

Gubernator­ial candidate Antonio Villaraigo­sa, the former Los Angeles mayor, received the sourest response from the labor caucus, one of the party’s largest. The one-time union organizer who later castigated teachers’ unions as mayor was greeted with loud boos as he addressed the packed convention hall.

“I’ve been fighting for working people my whole life,” he said as a man in the crowd yelled, “Union buster!”

Jones scored a coveted speaking slot at the party's progressiv­e caucus meeting, where leaders said they were restrictin­g other candidates’ stump speeches, while making an exception for him. He used the opportunit­y to bash opponent Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra for supporting the death penalty and “refusing to endorse” a single-payer healthcare bill in the Legislatur­e. Brown appointed Becerra, a former Los Angeles congressma­n, as attorney general in 2017 after Harris was elected to the U.S. Senate.

“Now tomorrow, we’re going to have a vote, and it’s going to be a close vote,” he told the delegates. “But I’m confident with the support of each and every one of you that I will be the endorsed candidate of the Democratic Party.” The crowd chanted his name as he made his way to the exit.

Gunnel, who was elected as a Democratic delegate last year after running with a slate of progressiv­e Bernie Sanders supporters, said it’s Jones who’s lobbied her the hardest. Along with the letter, he’s called her twice personally.

When he was a littleknow­n state assemblyma­n from Sacramento, Jones won the Democratic Party’s endorsemen­t in his 2010 campaign for state insurance commission­er over fellow Democrat Hector de la Torre, a state lawmaker from Los Angeles. Jones went on to win the Democratic primary and was elected to back-to-back terms as the state’s top insurance regulator.

“That was probably the defining moment of his campaign,” Jones campaign strategist Parke Skelton said of the party endorsemen­t.

To sew up the state Democratic Party endorsemen­t, candidates must receive at least 60% of the votes from credential­ed delegates or their proxies. That can be a tough mark to hit, especially when multiple Democrats are in the running. Delegates also have the option of checking a box for “no endorsemen­t.”

Bauman said he could not recall this many endorsemen­t contests at a convention in recent memory.

“This seems to be the most contested that I can remember,” he said. “Every delegate is aware that giving the candidates the party’s imprimatur in the primary can greatly effect the result on primary day. People will be taking their duty to be considerat­e in the endorsemen­t process very, very seriously.”

Bauman said candidates run the risk that their aggressive outreach to delegates through a high volume of communicat­ions can backfire.

“It’s irritating as hell,” he said.

Tomas Vera, a member of Placer County’s Democratic Central Committee, said his mailbox has been stuffed with shiny campaign mailers for weeks. Newsom has also texted him frequently. One recent message: “Hi Tomas, it’s Gavin (really). Hopping on to our texting app to connect with delegates & will be checking in when I can. What matters to you? Be honored to win your support — can I count on you?”

Gunnel said she planned to vote to endorse Newsom, who is backed by her union. Vera said he was leaning toward voting for Eastin.

“I know she’s a long shot. But there’s a certain earnestnes­s,” Vera said. “Newsom’s popular because he always expresses the popular opinion.”

A study of California Democratic Party endorsemen­ts in the 2012 election by researcher­s from UC San Diego, the University of Denver and the Public Policy Institute of California found that an endorsemen­t could buoy a candidate's support by seven to 15 points.

“What this study does show is that those who receive this one endorsemen­t get a substantia­l advantage in the primary election, and this is an endorsemen­t worth fighting for,” the researcher­s wrote in 2015. “This study also shows that parties are more than just cheerleade­rs for particular candidates; they can make them or break them."

Endorsemen­t campaigns can cost in the neighborho­od of five figures and some candidates — notably Newsom and Chiang — have been working this group of delegates for years.

Newsom, who won two statewide elections for lieutenant governor, has in the past hosted flashy parties at the convention. He’s rented venues such as the Grammy Museum at LA Live in downtown Los Angeles, and closed streets in Sacramento to host events featuring celebritie­s including rapper Common and singer Gavin DeGraw.

“One thing we said we are going to do is not take our party for granted,” Newsom said. “One, it’s respect, because they’re the base of the party, they’re the zeitgeist of energy of our party. They deserve that. Number two, I want to represent the entire party. I don’t want to represent one faction of the party.”

Chiang, a well-known face at these political confabs, has also been working feverishly to win support. He’s been elected to statewide office three times, twice as controller and most recently as treasurer.

Villaraigo­sa hasn’t been a fixture at the party convention­s or run for statewide office. That didn’t stop him from taking a swipe a Newsom, who ran for governor in 2009 only to drop out after Brown signaled his interest in running. Newsom ran for lieutenant governor instead, winning twice, and declared his candidacy for governor in 2015.

“Gavin’s been running for eight years, officially running for three,” Villaraigo­sa said. “I am working at a disadvanta­ge, but I’m going to work hard to get as much support at the convention as possible.”

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? LT. GOV. Gavin Newsom, who is among the top candidates for governor, speaks during the state Democratic Party’s convention Saturday in San Diego.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times LT. GOV. Gavin Newsom, who is among the top candidates for governor, speaks during the state Democratic Party’s convention Saturday in San Diego.
 ?? Photograph­s by Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? MEMBERS OF Cal Berkeley Democrats take snapshots at a photo booth Saturday during the state Democratic Party’s convention at the San Diego Convention Center.
Photograph­s by Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times MEMBERS OF Cal Berkeley Democrats take snapshots at a photo booth Saturday during the state Democratic Party’s convention at the San Diego Convention Center.
 ??  ?? STATE Treasurer John Chiang, who is running for governor, speaks to the environmen­tal caucus during the Democrats’ convention Saturday in San Diego.
STATE Treasurer John Chiang, who is running for governor, speaks to the environmen­tal caucus during the Democrats’ convention Saturday in San Diego.

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