Los Angeles Times

Galvanized by Trump, state voters leave the sidelines

- Victoria.kim@latimes.com jazmine.ulloa@latimes.com Times staff writers Mark Z. Barabak, Michael Finnegan, Christine Mai-Duc, Maya Sweedler and Phil Willon contribute­d to this report.

not want to give her age other than to say she was in the last quadrant of her life, drove 90 minutes from her home in West Los Angeles to volunteer for Democrat Katie Porter, a first-time candidate challengin­g Republican Rep. Mimi Walters in an Orange County district that has never sent a Democrat to Congress.

“I remember Hitler and Mussolini,” Lindgren said. “I don’t want to be alarmist, but it feels the same.”

Not everyone was captivated by the election or its stakes or, most especially, its associated clamor. In a state with 20 million registered voters — many of whom are likely to sit out Tuesday — it was not hard to find some, like Jason Gates, who were indifferen­t.

His mailbox has been stuffed daily with campaign mailers — his three young kids sometimes draw on them before they go into the trash — and ads barrage him on social media. (Gates, 40, who works in informatio­n technology, doesn’t have a TV at home.)

No matter. He’s skipping this election, like all others.

“It seems really polarized lately. It used to be a bit more of a pleasant discourse,” Gates said as he walked out of an Irvine hardware store with painter’s tape. “It now seems to be my side versus your side.”

Kyra Kirkwood, 47, could not be more different.

The community college journalism professor studied her choices — on every issue, every candidate, every local ballot measure — more carefully than usual before tilting Democratic on the ballot she plans to mail in.

Still, the constant phone calls, text messages and campaign advertisem­ents and door-knockers were finally getting to her, Kirkwood

said as she walked through a farmers market in Buena Park with a basket of cauliflowe­r and kale.

“It makes me actually angry because all that money and effort and resources, it’s just going in the tra—,” Kirkwood began before catching herself and saying, “recycling bin.”

For others, though, the election, if not exactly a lifeor-death-matter, is neverthele­ss a matter of urgency.

Wearing a red United Farm Workers T-shirt, Escobedo, 41, hit the streets of the Central Valley on Saturday morning while it was still chilly, going door to door in one of California’s hottest congressio­nal races, pitting incumbent Rep. Jeff Denham (R-Turlock) against Democrat Josh Harder.

Escobedo has harvested almonds and grapes for two decades and fought for farmworker­s’ rights for five years. This election, she said, her efforts are all in the name of her daughter, Fabiola, 23, whose fate hangs in the balance after Trump, with support from Republican­s in Congress, rescinded protection­s for immigrants brought to the country illegally as children.

“There are still a lot of undecided voters, and people are getting flooded and confused by the ads,” Escobedo said. “We have to explain to them what Harder is really about.”

About 350 miles to the south, in a corporate lowrise in Irvine, Marylee Sanders and her husband, Grayson, were dialing their way through a list of telephone numbers, working to reelect Walters and ensure the House stays in Republican hands.

It’s been years since either of them volunteere­d in a political campaign. She worked for George W. Bush. He passed out “I like Ike”

signs for Dwight D. Eisenhower back in the 1950s.

Marylee, 74, said she was motivated after watching Kavanaugh’s emotionall­y wrought Supreme Court confirmati­on hearing, feeling he was treated unfairly.

Grayson, 78, echoed his wife and said he liked Trump’s “policy rather than his personalit­y.” A lifelong Republican, he said the stakes Tuesday were high enough to get him to volunteer for the first time in half a century.

“What made this society great is enterprise, federalism and individual freedom,” said Grayson, who runs a real estate investment firm. “We have a lot of really great momentum going on from the last two years.”

Samuels also was drawn from the sidelines by Trump, though he’s hardly a fan. “I get sick watching the news,” he said. “I’m sick of the lies.”

He last knocked on doors in 1964, Samuels said, as a precocious 13-year-old in Winnetka, Ill., working to reelect President Lyndon B. Johnson. Much has changed in the five decades since he last canvassed, Samuels observed as he stood outside Porter’s campaign headquarte­rs in a Tustin office park. He had to return twice to learn how to use the smartphone app that instructed him on which doors he should knock on.

Once he got that figured out, talking to voters wouldn’t be a problem, the semi-retired business attorney said — he’s good with juries.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? SUPPORTERS of the “Yes on Prop. 6” campaign, which seeks to repeal the gas tax, rally outside Rep. Mimi Walters’ headquarte­rs on Saturday in Irvine.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times SUPPORTERS of the “Yes on Prop. 6” campaign, which seeks to repeal the gas tax, rally outside Rep. Mimi Walters’ headquarte­rs on Saturday in Irvine.

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