Marysville Appeal-Democrat

California gubernator­ial poll shows Newsom with lead over Cox

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

SACRAMENTO – Democratic Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom enters the final weeks of California’s 2018 governor’s race with a solid lead over Republican businessma­n John Cox, according to a new University of Southern California Dornsife/los Angeles Times poll.

The survey’s findings provide little hope to Cox’s long-shot campaign in the leftleanin­g state as vote-by-mail ballots begin arriving at homes and Newsom, with an immense fundraisin­g advantage, floods television­s and cellphones across the state with a steady stream of campaign ads.

According to the survey, 54 percent of likely voters in the state favored Newsom for governor compared to 31 percent who support Cox. The rest were undecided.

“Cox has Mount Everest to climb when you look at these (numbers). Barring some massive event, it’s very difficult to see how he makes up this,” said Robert Shrum, codirector of USC’S Center for the Political Future and a longtime Democratic strategist.

One of the most telling indicators of which candidate California voters favor is seen in their starkly divergent opinions about President Donald Trump. His performanc­e as president got a thumbs down from more than two-thirds of the likely voters in the state, the survey found. Among likely voters who disapprove of Trump, 77 percent support Newsom. Among those who approve of Trump, 87 percent back Cox.

Shrum said the animosity toward Trump is expected to increase voter turnout in California to a level higher than usual in a midterm, election. That would only add to Newsom’s advantage in November; the Democrats have close to a 20-percentage­point edge over the GOP in voter registrati­on in California.

Trump endorsed Cox for governor before the June 5 primary, giving the Republican’s campaign a boost by helping him consolidat­e the Republican vote. Cox went on to defeat his top GOP rival in the race, Assemblyma­n Travis Allen of Huntington Beach, an ardent supporter of the president.

Newsom’s campaign ran ads highlighti­ng Cox’s support of Trump and gun owner rights. That politicall­y strategic move helped the Republican emerge from the crowded primary field of candidates, including beating out former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigo­sa and state Treasurer John Chiang, Newsom’s top Democratic challenger­s in the campaign.

But Trump’s support will probably make Cox more vulnerable in November, when he goes one on one against Newsom in an election to be decided by California’s energized, left-leaning electorate.

“California is still California. So in a Democratic state, in a Democratic year, with Democratic intensity, it’s good to be Gavin,” said longtime Republican strategist Mike Murphy, the other co-director of the Center for the Political Future. “He could be a bag of horseshoes and still do well.”

Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom during media tour of UCLA’S Early Care and Education Center at University Village in Los Angeles, on Sept. 26. Candidate John Cox on his campaign bus during a stop in Irwindale on Sept. 26.

The survey’s findings provide a different picture of the race than a poll released in late September by the nonpartisa­n Public Policy Institute of California. That survey found Cox on the rise and trailing Newsom by 12 percentage points.

According to the poll, Newsom leads Cox among both men and women, Latinos and across voter income and education levels. The former San Francisco mayor also dominates California’s two biggest population centers, the San Francisco Bay Area and Los Angeles County, home to just under half the voters in the state.

Cox, a wealthy real estate investor from Rancho Santa Fe, was favored over the Democratic rival in the region comprising Orange, San Diego, Riverside and San Bernardino counties and was neck-and-neck with Newsom among voters living in California’s inland interior. The Republican also drew even with Newsom among white men and voters who said illegal immigratio­n is a major driver of their vote, according to the survey.

Not surprising­ly, both candidates had

strong support from voters in their own parties. Newsom had more robust support among voters who registered as “no party preference,” although nearly a third of those independen­t voters remained undecided, the poll found.

Newsom also entered the final stretch of the 2018 campaign with a substantia­l financial advantage over Cox. The Newsom campaign had $16.2 million in cash on hand as of Sept. 22 compared with the $1.7 million Cox had in the bank, according to the latest campaign finance reports filed with the state. The vast majority of the money raised by both candidates is being poured into campaign ads, airing on broadcast and cable stations as well as Facebook and other social media platforms.

The poll, conducted between Sept. 17 and Oct. 14, has a margin of sampling error of 4 percentage points in either direction and larger for subcategor­ies of voters based on voting behavior, age, ethnicity, party affiliatio­n and other demographi­c indicators.

For more informatio­n about the poll, visit bit.ly/uscpolldat­a

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