Los Angeles Times

Elder won’t seek rematch with Newsom in 2022

- By Phil Willon

SACRAMENTO — Conservati­ve talk show host Larry Elder, who topped the field of candidates trying to replace Gov. Gavin Newsom in September’s failed recall, on Tuesday announced he will not run in California’s 2022 gubernator­ial election.

Elder, a Los Angeles native, said that he has instead formed a political action committee, Elder for America PAC, to help Republican­s running for the Senate and House of Representa­tives put Congress back in GOP control. The committee also will support some local candidates focused on public safety and education.

“Today, we don’t just have a state to save, we have a country [to] save,” Elder said in a statement released Tuesday. “The radical left’s woke agenda is destroying America. Our major cities look like warzones thanks to ‘progressiv­e’ district attorneys and other pro-criminal policies. The distinctio­n in quality of life between areas controlled by leftists and those that are not highlights the failure of the woke movement.”

After the recall failed, Elder told supporters he would consider challengin­g the governor’s reelection, saying they should “stay tuned.”

Other top Republican­s who tried unsuccessf­ully to unseat Newsom in the recall, including former San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer and 2018 gubernator­ial candidate John Cox, also said they would assess whether to go after Newsom once again. Neither has launched an active campaign, and the primary is just over six months away.

Elder in early December hinted that he would likely forgo the governor’s race, telling The Times he wasn’t sure “it made a whole lot of sense” given the dominance

of the Democratic Party in California. Democratic voters outnumber Republican­s in California by nearly 2 to 1, and most independen­t voters, who account for nearly a quarter of the electorate, tend to vote Democratic.

During the recall, Newsom portrayed the campaign to oust the governor as a “life and death” battle against “Trumpism” and far-right anti-vaccinatio­n activists.

He attacked Elder for being a political ally of former President Trump, and for Elder’s opposition to abortion rights and COVID-19 vaccinatio­n and mask mandates.

Elder topped the field of replacemen­t candidates in the recall with 48.4% of the vote, far ahead of the pack. Still, 42% of the voters who cast ballots left blank the question of who should replace Newsom.

Democratic YouTube personalit­y Kevin Paffrath and Faulconer received 9.6% and 8%, respective­ly. Cox, who was trounced by Newsom in the 2018 governor’s race, received 4.1% of the vote, and Assemblyma­n Kevin Kiley (R-Rocklin) won 3.5%.

Among the more than 8.4 million California­ns who voted in September, 61.9% favored keeping Newsom in office, and 38.1% supported ousting him.

Elder said last month that he would write a book about his experience­s during the recall attempt.

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? LARRY ELDER, shown at a pro-recall rally in September, now aims to help the GOP regain Congress.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times LARRY ELDER, shown at a pro-recall rally in September, now aims to help the GOP regain Congress.

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