Los Angeles Times

The GOP repeats its California mistakes

Trump’s Republican Party has embraced policies that alienate Latinos.

- By Kurt Bardella

The 50th Congressio­nal District is one of the last Republican stronghold­s in California. Encompassi­ng large swaths of San Diego County, it’s also where I grew up. As a student at Escondido High School, I got my first experience in politics, speaking out at local City Council meetings. I never imagined that I’d end up in Washington, D.C., some years later, working for members of Congress who represente­d my community.

It’s been more than 15 years since I’ve lived in San Diego County, but I still think of it as home. With each election cycle, I’ve watched the margin between Republican and Democratic candidates narrow. Mitt Romney won the 50th District by more than 20 points in 2012. Donald Trump won it by 15 in 2016. Voters registered as Republican still enjoy a double-digit advantage over voters registered as Democrats in the district, but a poll released this week found that Joe Biden has a 3-point lead over President Trump. The survey also showed the race for the House seat vacated by former Congressma­n Duncan Hunter in a virtual deadlock, with Republican Darrell Issa (my former boss) in a statistica­l tie with Democrat Ammar Campa-Najjar.

What’s happening in the 50th District should sound alarms throughout the Republican Party. It is both a harbinger of things to come and a continuati­on of things already underway. Orange County, that other GOP firewall, flipped blue in the 2018 midterm election. Inexplicab­ly, Republican­s on the national stage don’t see California’s shifting politics as a warning. Instead, they view it as cause for mockery.

Consider the attacks at the Republican National Convention. “If you want to see the socialist Biden-Harris future for our country, just take a look at California,” Kimberly Guilfoyle, a Trump campaign fundraiser and girlfriend of Donald Trump Jr., declared during her speech. Ironic when you consider that Guilfoyle, who was once married to Gov. Gavin Newsom, could have been California’s first lady. In his address, Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida characteri­zed California as a “horror film” run by “woke-topians.”

The speakers clearly took their cues from the president. California is one of Trump’s favorite punching bags. In a recent tweet, he blamed the state’s rolling blackouts on liberal politician­s and Democratic climate policies: “In California, Democrats have intentiona­lly implemente­d rolling blackouts — forcing Americans in the dark.… The Bernie/Biden/AOC Green New

Deal plan would take California’s failed policies to every American!”

You wouldn’t know it from any of this rhetoric, but just 25 years ago, the Republican Party was thriving in California.

Pete Wilson, a Republican, had been decisively reelected as governor by 15 percentage points. Republican candidates for attorney general, secretary of state, treasurer and insurance commission­er had all won statewide races. Republican­s even held a majority in the state Assembly. The governor’s mansion hadn’t been occupied by a Democrat in more than a decade.

Today, Republican­s occupy zero statewide offices. In the 2018 midterm election, voters gave Democrats supermajor­ities in the state Assembly and Senate. Statewide, Republican­s have fallen behind both Democrats and independen­ts in voter registrati­on. In 2½ decades, the California Republican Party went from dominance to irrelevanc­e.

Trump and other Republican leaders may want to note what precipitat­ed their problem in America’s most populous state. The decline started with the party’s embrace of Propositio­n 187, a ballot initiative that sought to deny immigrants who were in the country illegally from receiving a host of public benefits, including healthcare and education.

Although the measure was approved by voters, it never became law. Still, the damage was done: Republican­s positioned themselves against the fastest-growing demographi­c in the state.

The party never recovered. By the middle of 2015, Latinos were the largest ethnic group in California.

Propositio­n 187 was to the California Republican Party of the 1990s what “Build the wall!” is to the Republican Party of 2020. The shifting demographi­c realities, too, are similar. According to projection­s by the Census Bureau, the U.S. will have a majority-minority population by 2045. And yet, as the country becomes more and more diverse, Trump and his party are doubling down on an anti-immigrant agenda.

To know how this story ends, all the GOP need do is look at its trajectory in California. Trump and his colleagues may think vilifying the state is an effective strategy, but their racist rhetoric and policies could soon alienate a majority of the national electorate, and permanentl­y. In the long run, it is a guaranteed recipe for political failure.

The philosophe­r George Santayana wrote that “those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” Party stalwarts who are blindly following President Trump would be wise to consult some California Republican­s — if they can find any.

Kurt Bardella is a senior advisor to the Lincoln Project. He previously worked as an aide to Congressme­n Darrell Issa and Brian Bilbray and in the California Senate and Assembly. @KurtBardel­la

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