Los Angeles Times

Newsom enjoys a solid lead over rival Cox

Survey shows a strong Democrat in governor’s race and new voting strategies for top-two primary.

- By Seema Mehta and Phil Willon

Democrat Gavin Newsom has a dominant lead over Republican John Cox in California’s race for governor, a contest in which a significan­t number of voters appear to have cast ballots strategica­lly to sway the outcome of the state’s top-two primary, according to a new USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll.

Forty-five percent of registered voters who said they planned to vote in the November race intend to support Newsom, while Cox won the support of 28% of those who plan to cast ballots, according to the poll. Twenty-seven percent of those voters were undecided.

The post-primary survey also indicated that some California­ns are adapting their behavior in response to the state’s relatively new top-two primary, in which the pair of candidates with the most votes move on to the general election regardless of party.

Three out of 10 California­ns who voted for Cox said they did so primarily because they wanted to ensure a Republican was on the November ballot, as opposed to supporting him because he reflected their beliefs and values, or another reason, the survey found.

“Voters are learning how to strategica­lly game the system,” said Bob Shrum, director of the Jesse M. Unruh Institute of Politics at USC. “I think we’re going to see more of this in California.”

Two-thirds of voters polled said they cast ballots in the June 5 primary for the candidate who best re-

flected their beliefs, or who they believed would be the best to lead the state. But 1 in 5 voters said they decided whom to support with the goal of making sure someone from their party advanced to the November general election or for a Democrat-on-Democrat contest.

The GOP faced the prospect of a November ballot without a Republican contender because of the stronger Democratic field of candidates and the Democrats’ significan­t edge in voter registrati­on in the state. In the months running up to the election, Cox and Democrat Antonio Villaraigo­sa jockeyed for second place in public polling.

For Villaraigo­sa, roughly equal numbers of voters in the poll said they chose him to ensure that two Democrats advanced to the general election as did those who said their decision was based on his values. He finished third, and received only 13% of the vote to Cox’s 26% and Newsom’s 34%.

GOP strategist Mike Murphy, an analyst for the poll, doubted voters cast ballots strategica­lly in the race. There was no evidence that Republican­s crossed party lines to back Villaraigo­sa, who was a more moderate choice than Newsom and had a better chance of victory in November than Cox, he said. If they had, that would have been a true example of strategic voting, he added.

The USC/LAT poll of 893 California­ns was in the field immediatel­y following the primary. Conducted online in English and Spanish from June 6 to Sunday, the poll’s margin of error is 4 percentage points in either direction, and larger for subcategor­ies of voters based on registrati­on, voting behavior, age, ethnicity, party affiliatio­n and other demographi­c indicators.

The polling shows Newsom won nearly every subgroup the Democrats competed for — liberal and moderate Democrats across age groups, education attainment levels and in each area of the state. The sole exception was Latinos; Villaraigo­sa received nearly double the support Newsom did in the survey.

According to the survey, the problem for Villaraigo­sa was that Latinos, along with other voters he was relying upon, including those in Los Angeles County, failed to turn out in the numbers he needed to boost his bid.

About 14% of Latinos voted, compared with 41% of whites, the poll shows. According to election returns, about 23% of voters in Villaraigo­sa’s home turf of Los Angeles cast ballots, while 39% did in the Bay Area, Newsom’s base of support due to his time as mayor of San Francisco. About 23% of voters without a college degree turned out, the poll shows, while 37% of those with degrees cast ballots.

“I just don’t think [Villaraigo­sa] ever got off the ground,” Murphy said. “He just didn’t do what he had to do. He did better among Hispanics than he did anywhere else, but he didn’t do well enough…. The Villaraigo­sa campaign fell flat.”

Meanwhile, Cox was able to consolidat­e support among GOP voters, allowing him not only to beat Republican rival Travis Allen by a wide margin but to surge past Villaraigo­sa to claim the second spot in the primary.

Any hope Villaraigo­sa had of competing for moderate Republican votes because of his positions on healthcare and education were dashed, according to the poll. He received strong support from charter school advocates, who poured $23 million into an effort backing him — the largest independen­t expenditur­e effort in a gubernator­ial primary in California history. The former Los Angeles mayor also expressed some concerns over launching a California single-payer healthcare program supported by Newsom, calling it unaffordab­le.

Shrum pointed to President Trump’s endorsemen­t of Cox as a game changer. The nod was seen as an attempt to elevate Cox among state conservati­ves so he would have enough Republican support to finish in the top two and land on the November ballot, in turn helping to boost GOP turnout and Republican candidates in tight congressio­nal races.

“The Trump embrace told Republican­s, ‘You need to vote for him,’ ” Shrum said.

But Cox’s ties to Trump and his policies stand to harm him with the voters he needs to court in the general election, Murphy said. Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton trounced Trump in California in the 2016 election, beating him by more than 4 million votes.

The potential political downside of Cox’s affiliatio­n with Trump surfaced on Monday. While in Sacramento to campaign for a ballot propositio­n to repeal the state’s increased gas tax, Cox was peppered with questions from reporters about the Trump administra­tion’s policy of separating immigrant parents from their children at the U.S.Mexico border. Cox called it “horrendous,” but he called on Congress to fix the policy and refrained from directly criticizin­g Trump.

Along with touting Trump’s endorsemen­t, Cox’s opposition to the socalled sanctuary state policy, which limits state and local law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n with federal immigratio­n agents, will probably help consolidat­e his support among conservati­ves in November. But his positions are likely to repel Democrats and many independen­t voters, and Cox needs to expand his support far beyond the GOP to succeed in November.

“There’s really no path for Cox to get out of the primary box he’s painted himself in,” Murphy said. “He is in a state where there is very little oxygen for a Republican to breathe.”

Cox is pinning his campaign on the Republican-led effort to repeal the 2017 increase in gas taxes and vehicle fees. Among California­ns who supported repeal, Cox had a 9-percentage-point lead over Newsom, according to data from polls conducted before and after the primary.

The tax is unpopular, but Shrum said Cox could be overestima­ting how many voters he’ll win over by tying himself to the repeal effort.

California­ns opposed to the new levies might not agree with Cox on other big issues, including immigratio­n and healthcare, Shrum said.

“You can repeal the gas tax without voting for Cox for governor,” he said.

The poll shows the most important issues to Democrats include healthcare, education and affordable housing, all of which the Newsom campaign has said the candidate will address in office. Along with being an early advocate for a statespons­ored single-payer healthcare system in California, Newsom is advocating for an expansion of early childhood education and lowering college tuition.

Fiscal issues including taxes and state spending were the most crucial to Republican­s, according to the survey, along with illegal immigratio­n.

“There are two different worlds here,” Murphy said.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? THREE OUT of 10 California­ns who voted for John Cox said they did so primarily because they wanted to ensure a Republican was on the November ballot.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press THREE OUT of 10 California­ns who voted for John Cox said they did so primarily because they wanted to ensure a Republican was on the November ballot.
 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? ANTONIO Villaraigo­sa, left, with Gavin Newsom at Homegirl Cafe in L.A., drew primary voters seeking two Democrats in the general election, the poll found.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ANTONIO Villaraigo­sa, left, with Gavin Newsom at Homegirl Cafe in L.A., drew primary voters seeking two Democrats in the general election, the poll found.
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