Los Angeles Times

Recall is bogus? That’s politics

-

Re: “Voters oppose recall in latest survey,” March 31

I don’t blame Republican­s for trying to recall California Gov. Gavin Newsom. They see an opportunit­y to gain power.

The last time the Republican­s saw such an opening was in 2003, when then-Gov. Gray Davis was being blamed for California’s power blackouts. As a result, the longtime statesman Davis was ousted and replaced by inexperien­ced movie actor Arnold Schwarzene­gger.

After all that, it turned out that the culprit was Houston-based Enron Corp., which was playing the energy market for profits all while laughing at the California blackouts.

Now, it’s Newsom who is being criticized, even by some Democrats, for closing down businesses during the pandemic. How many lives he saved by the shutdowns does not matter. Republican­s see a perceived weakness and they want to take advantage of it. That is politics. Martin A. Brower

Corona del Mar

Unable to earn a majority vote with their regressive, discrimina­tory and upside-down policies during a regular election cycle, California’s sulking Republican­s are now perverting the recall process. It is intolerabl­e and unsustaina­ble to allow these Republican electoral disruption­s every time a sitting governor does something that Republican­s think can be leveraged and exploited politicall­y and emotionall­y.

I propose amending the entire process to specify that should a sitting governor be recalled, the sitting lieutenant governor will take his or her place. Gary Karasik

Los Angeles

I signed the recall petition in order to put pressure on Newsom to do better after his failures this summer in coronaviru­s testing, equitable vaccine distributi­on and the hamhanded way he both restarted and shut down the economy and schools with little data to back up his decisions.

The bottom line now is that he has to use the time before the recall election to ensure that schools are open, people are gainfully employed and that life gets back to as close to normal as possible. The best way to do so is to ensure that vaccines continue to be distribute­d and proper protective equipment is provided.

Everything else he does I consider to be a sideshow.

As a manager in my day job, I look at my recall signature as putting the governor on a performanc­e improvemen­t plan. If he can get our state back to how it was or better than before the pandemic, I will happily support him. If not, he deserves to be fired to let someone else have their turn.

Hank Fung Los Angeles

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States