Los Angeles Times

Facing recall, Newsom goes all in with vaccine

Governor’s political survival could hinge on how California­ns view rollout effort.

- By Taryn Luna

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom said he chose to get vaccinated on camera to boost confidence in the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine, but his longawaite­d shot in the arm also symbolizes how mass vaccinatio­ns could help inoculate the governor against the pending recall.

Newsom’s political survival hinges on how California­ns feel about their lives and their governor in the fall when they will probably cast their ballots. And already, voters are more confident about the future — and Newsom — as vaccinatio­ns increase in the state and more people begin to envision a return to normal life.

On Thursday, California widely expanded vaccine eligibilit­y to all residents age 50 and older, a change that allowed the 53-year-old governor to qualify for an appointmen­t and added millions of others to the priority line.

“It’s been an extraordin­arily challengin­g year,” Newsom said Thursday at a vaccine clinic at Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza. “So much fear, so much anxiety. But now, growing optimism about our fate and future — not only here in Los Angeles, in Southern California, but all across our state.”

More than 30% of California­ns have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, with 18 million

shots administer­ed so far, Newsom said. Expecting an increase in supply, his administra­tion is expanding eligibilit­y again on April 15 to include the entire adult population and older teens — all people 16 and over.

If the supply holds, L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said this week that 80% of eligible Angelenos could be vaccinated against COVID-19 by the end of June.

That timeline bodes well for Newsom, said Dan Schnur, who previously worked as a spokesman for Gov. Pete Wilson and now teaches political communicat­ions at USC and UC Berkeley.

“Every vaccinatio­n gets him a little bit closer to defeating the recall,” he said. “If people think about the pandemic in the past tense, then Newsom almost certainly survives the recall.”

A Public Policy Institute of California poll conducted in March found that 79% of likely voters believe the worst of the pandemic is over and only 40% supported the recall. The vast majority of those in favor of removing Newsom were Republican­s.

“The only way that he can lose this recall is if discontent is wide enough among independen­ts and Democrats,” said Bruce Cain, a political scientist at Stanford University. “The most likely outcome is that we’ll be back to some kind of normality and people’s memory of what happened fades.”

But Cain warned that unforeseen problems, such as the proliferat­ion of COVID-19 variants that are resistant to vaccines or the refusal of a large percentage of California­ns to be inoculated, could present challenges for Newsom if the state’s progress is halted.

Newsom said Thursday that California expects to receive 2.4 million doses next week, up a third from two weeks ago, and has noted that the only hurdle to quickly inoculatin­g California­ns is a stretched federal supply chain.

At the same time, perspectiv­es among voters about the state’s distributi­on of vaccines have improved in recent months, from about 28% who gave California positive marks in January to 45% in March, according to PPIC.

The new optimism comes after a difficult year for the governor, whose administra­tion struggled to lead the most populous state in the nation through an unpreceden­ted pandemic. While some of those difficulti­es could be attributed to the extraordin­ary challenges of COVID-19 and the absence of federal guidance, others were self-imposed, such as his decision to attend a dinner party at the French Laundry restaurant.

Republican political operatives supporting the recall campaign say they have yet to begin to call attention to Newsom’s major vulnerabil­ities, such as long delays in payments for jobless benefits and other issues.

The recent arrival of the single-shot J&J vaccine in California, which received Food and Drug Administra­tion authorizat­ion in February, provides the opportunit­y for the state to inoculate residents more quickly. On Thursday, Newsom became the latest top official in his administra­tion to receive that vaccine at a public event in hopes of easing any concerns about its efficacy.

Experts say it’s difficult to compare vaccines because they were tested in different parts of the world at different times. The J&J shot was found to have 85.4% efficacy against severe disease and hospitaliz­ation 28 days after inoculatio­n and was tested in clinical trials against COVID-19 variants first identified in South Africa and Brazil, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti received his first vaccine in January and other politician­s were inoculated weeks before Newsom, but the governor was careful to not give the appearance that he was cutting the line.

“He really didn’t have a choice,” Schnur said. “Some politician­s have the luxury of getting vaccinated right away. A governor who attended a fancy dinner and sends his children to private school simply didn’t have that luxury.”

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? REGISTERED NURSE Bryan Phan, left, administer­s the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine to Linda Davis at a clinic on Wednesday at Whispering Fountains Senior Living Community in Lakewood.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times REGISTERED NURSE Bryan Phan, left, administer­s the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine to Linda Davis at a clinic on Wednesday at Whispering Fountains Senior Living Community in Lakewood.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States