Los Angeles Times

A cold California shun

GOP candidates keep their distance during Trump visit

- By Christine Mai-Duc

President Trump vowed earlier this year that he’d stump for Republican­s in competitiv­e House races, saying he would spend “probably four or five days a week” helping GOP candidates get elected. As he made his first visit to California, a state with several seats in play, few seemed interested in taking him up on his offer.

A presidenti­al visit in an election year often comes with an entourage of local officials and candidates hoping to catch a photo op or ride his coattails. But in Southern California, a hotbed of the left’s resistance out West that could prove crucial in the midterm elections, many are staying away.

The Times asked more than a dozen Southern California GOP candidates if they would attend events with Trump. Most of them either did not respond or said they had no plans to join the president.

“I can 100% assure you that he will not be at any Trump events this week, fundraiser­s or otherwise,” said Brooke Borcherdin­g, a campaign spokeswoma­n for Assemblyma­n Rocky Chavez, a moderate Republican running for Rep. Darrell Issa’s open seat in Congress. Borcherdin­g said his absence is both a deliberate choice and an[See

indication of Chavez’s demanding schedule “being out in the community, talking to voters.”

Breaking with tradition, no members of Congress traveled to California on Air Force One. When Trump arrived in San Diego on Tuesday morning, he was met at different points by Issa and the other Republican congressma­n from the area, Rep. Duncan D. Hunter.

Issa, who announced in January he would retire this year, was seen in a VIP section at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar in San Diego County as Trump addressed members of the military Tuesday afternoon. As the president walked past him to the stage, Issa handed him a green hat that read “Make the Hornet Great Again,” referring to a military aircraft flown by Marine pilots on base. They shook hands.

The F-18 fleet is aging, Issa said moments before Trump arrived, and at any given time almost half the fleet is in repair.

“Support for our military is one of the hallmarks of this administra­tion,” Issa said. “The military was pretty demoralize­d at the end of the Obama era.”

Hunter was spotted talking with Trump as he toured prototypes for the border wall in Otay Mesa. A Hunter spokesman said his office received a call from the White House before 6 a.m. Tuesday, just before the congressma­n was set to go live on a local TV news show.

Trump was requesting that Hunter and his father, former Rep. Duncan L. Hunter, join him at the border wall site. Hunter’s office quickly reschedule­d his flight back to Washington, D.C., so he could attend.

No other vulnerable Republican incumbents were there.

Later in the afternoon, Shawn Steel, one of California’s two representa­tives to the Republican National Committee, was on hand to greet the president after he landed aboard Air Force One at Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport, along with his wife, Orange County Supervisor Michelle Steel, who is running for reelection.

Another Republican congressio­nal candidate, Scott Baugh, said he is “100% focused on my campaign” and would not attend any events with Trump. Baugh is a former Orange County party chairman who recently jumped in to challenge Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r (RCosta Mesa). John Gabbard, a real estate developer who’s running for the same seat, said he also would not see Trump.

“I’m telling them to stay away,” another Republican consultant based in Southern California said of his clients. He requested anonymity to avoid offending Trump. “We’re not going to dis the president, but we’re not going to do a photo op with him, either.”

Aside from the obvious fact that Trump remains stunningly unpopular statewide (a poll released in January by the Public Policy Institute of California put his approval rating at 32% among likely voters), recent numbers show he could be a liability for GOP incumbents in tight races.

A poll last month by UC Berkeley’s Institute of Government­al Studies painted Trump as an albatross for Rohrabache­r and Rep. Steve Knight (R-Palmdale), both facing competitiv­e races. The pollsters found a high correlatio­n between those who disapprove of Trump, disapprove of the Republican Congress and say they’re disincline­d to reelect their Republican member.

Add to that the perception of this year bearing a Democratic wave and that Democrats continue to dominate in the “generic ballot” polls that ask which party voters are inclined to vote in a congressio­nal race and it starts to become clear why Republican candidates might not want to risk an appearance with their party’s standard-bearer.

Focusing their campaigns on what they hope will be a booming economy, enthusiasm for the president’s tax plan and more local issues could help Republican­s hold on in a year that many predict will be good for Democrats.

Allowing their races to be framed around Trump, who was the focus of many Democrats’ campaigns in 2016 and remains a divisive figure in California, could spell doom.

In some districts where Trump enjoyed wide support in 2016, candidates are slightly more open to aligning themselves with the president. A campaign spokeswoma­n for Bill Wells, the anti-abortion, pro-gunrights mayor of El Cajon who is running against scandalpla­gued Hunter, said he would have been happy to have an audience with Trump but wasn’t invited. “He supports the president and the plan to build the wall,” the spokeswoma­n said.

Andrew Sarega, one of several Republican­s vying for the seat being vacated by Rep. Ed Royce (R-Fullerton) who’s running on a platform supporting the tax bill and opposing the Affordable Care Act, said he also wouldn’t have minded some time with the president but had “other commitment­s” during the day.

As for the high-dollar fundraiser Trump attended in Beverly Hills on Tuesday evening, Sarega said he would be tied up at a meeting of the La Mirada City Council. “But more realistica­lly,” Sarega added, “I could not justify spending $50,000 on a dinner, regardless of the company.”

 ?? Hayne Palmour IV TNS ?? PRESIDENT Trump visits Marine Corps Air Station Miramar. Polls show he could be a liability for Republican incumbents in tight races.
Hayne Palmour IV TNS PRESIDENT Trump visits Marine Corps Air Station Miramar. Polls show he could be a liability for Republican incumbents in tight races.
 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? ASSEMBLYMA­N Rocky Chavez (R-Oceanside), who is running for an open House seat, was too busy campaignin­g to be with Trump, a spokeswoma­n said.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ASSEMBLYMA­N Rocky Chavez (R-Oceanside), who is running for an open House seat, was too busy campaignin­g to be with Trump, a spokeswoma­n said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States