Los Angeles Times

CAMPAIGN TRAIL’S HOMESTRETC­H

Cox says to ignore polls, while Newsom says he is taking nothing for granted.

- By Dakota Smith and Phil Willon

Democrats Gavin Newsom, left, and Antonio Villaraigo­sa on Thursday at Grand Central Market. Newsom and John Cox, his GOP rival for governor, are hitting the road as election day nears.

SACRAMENTO — California gubernator­ial candidates John Cox and Gavin Newsom barnstorme­d California on their respective tour buses Thursday, stopping to shake hands and pose for selfies with voters across the state in the final days of the race.

As he greeted reporters in Sacramento on Thursday morning, Cox said that voters are finally making up their minds and “finding out who I am and what I’m about.” The San Diego-area businessma­n said he thinks polls are tightening as he tries to overtake rival Newsom, the race’s consistent front-runner.

“We’re going to win because people in this state really want change,” the Republican candidate said before hopping on a large bus wrapped with his “Help is on the Way” campaign slogan.

Hundreds of miles away, Newsom visited Grand Central Market in downtown Los Angeles at the tail end of the lunchtime crush Thursday afternoon. He waded into the crowd for a cup of coffee, flashed a smile and was hustled away to a taco stand by former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa, former labor leader and Democratic state Senate candidate Maria Elena Durazo and Assemblyma­n Miguel Santiago (D-Los Angeles).

Teresa McDonald, 60, cornered the candidate as he and his entourage passed by.

“We talked about the importance of voting, and I did let him know I was going to vote for him,” she said.

McDonald, who said she was homeless on L.A.’s skid row for years before recently landing an apartment, believes the next governor needs to find compassion­ate ways to address the growing numbers of California­ns living on the streets.

“Homeless has no age … and everyone is homeless for a reason,” she said.

Newsom kicked off the bus tour — his third of the campaign — on Tuesday in San Francisco, where he served as mayor for two terms. Then he drove down the spine of the Central Valley to Bakersfiel­d and back up to Sacramento on Wednesday to hand out candy at a daycare center.

Throughout the campaign, Newsom has insisted that he’s not taking the election for granted, though all recent public opinions polls show he has a solid lead among likely voters. That advantage isn’t a surprise — Democrats hold nearly a 20% voter registrati­on edge over Republican­s in the state.

“You sleep with one eye

open this late in the campaign. My staff wishes I would enjoy this moment more. I’m anxious, always, because there’s a lot at stake. I don’t want to experience what we experience­d in 2016,” Newsom said.

That year, California voters passed two ballot measures Newsom championed to legalize recreation­al marijuana use in California and to implement stricter gun control laws.

But the celebratio­n quickly deflated for Democrats when Donald Trump won the presidenti­al election that same night.

For his part, Cox said Thursday he is expecting a surprise twist in the election.

“California has had surprises in the past, and I think they are going to have another surprise this time,” Cox told reporters during a stop in Vallejo to visit a charter school campus.

Though polls show the Republican trailing Newsom, Cox said they ”are only good as who you ask and how you ask it.”

As the two candidates courted voters, they didn’t deviate from their campaign scripts. Newsom remained upbeat while he discussed his plans to restore the “California Dream” and address the most pressing problems facing the state, including affordable housing and lack of economic opportunit­y.

In contrast, Cox struck a more somber tone when he met with high school students at Mare Island Technology Academy, warning them that they may leave college with a “mountain of debt,” and suggesting that rising housing costs could keep them from buying a home California.

“Have a lot of you heard about the housing situation? Have your parents talked about that?” Cox asked. “Your ability to actually to stay in California [depends] on being able to afford a house. That’s the struggle your parents are probably facing right now. That’s one of the reasons that I’m running for governor.”

He also met with teachers at the charter school, telling them they should be paid like rock stars and baseball players.

Cox said he supports expanding the number of charter schools in the state, but he gave few details about how he’d pay for them. He said that he’d save money on housing costs by cutting government red tape and freeing up money for people to spend on day care and education.

This weekend, Cox and Newsom will campaign with California congressio­nal candidates facing tight elections as Democrats fight for control of the U.S. House of Representa­tives.

Cox on Thursday told reporters that it’s important for Republican­s to maintain control of the House. Meanwhile, Newsom plans to join forces with Democratic U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris to rally Southern California voters, with the gubernator­ial candidate saying the fate of both California and the nation are at stake.

“I don’t want to experience the same feeling of winning an election for governor and not taking back the House of Representa­tives,” Newsom said in Pleasanton on Tuesday.

‘California has had surprises in the past, and I think they are going to have another surprise this time.’ — John Cox, GOP gubernator­ial candidate

 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ??
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times
 ?? Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? JOHN COX, campaignin­g in Santa Barbara, has trailed in polls, but the Republican contends they “are only good as who you ask and how you ask it.”
Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times JOHN COX, campaignin­g in Santa Barbara, has trailed in polls, but the Republican contends they “are only good as who you ask and how you ask it.”
 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? GAVIN NEWSOM leaves a campaign stop at Grand Central Market in downtown L.A. “You sleep with one eye open this late in the campaign,” Newsom said.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times GAVIN NEWSOM leaves a campaign stop at Grand Central Market in downtown L.A. “You sleep with one eye open this late in the campaign,” Newsom said.

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