New York Post

TOO BLUE FOR CALIF.?

- Rich lowry Twitter: @RichLowry

CALIFORNIA Gov. Gavin Newsom is a princeling of progressiv­ism who has ascended to the summit of political power in one of the bluest states in the country and yet is in real danger of suffering a humiliatin­g defeat.

In a few weeks, he could be recalled and, after a lifetime of political striving, replaced by a conservati­ve talk-radio show host who has thought about holding elected office for about five minutes.

Recall is a blunt instrument. There’s no denying that it is bizarre that Larry Elder, the leading alternativ­e candidate, could replace Newsom after getting less than 20 percent of the vote.

But the way the recall works is that voters are first asked whether to recall Newsom. If a majority says “yes,” he’s gone. Then, whichever candidate gets the most votes on the replacemen­t ballot, even if it’s a small plurality, becomes governor.

Recall is a well-establishe­d feature of the California system. It has been in the state’s Constituti­on since 1911, and, of course, was used most recently when Gray Davis was recalled and replaced by Arnold Schwarzene­gger in 2003.

Efforts to portray it as undemocrat­ic and unconstitu­tional make no sense. The recall is decided by the thoroughly democratic method of seeing what and who gets the most votes. Newsom supporters have the power to stop his ouster simply by outvoting, even by one ballot, the supporters of the recall.

If there is no credible Democrat among the replacemen­t candidates, that was a deliberate strateHe gic choice of the party to make the recall a contest between an impeccably progressiv­e governor and a motley group of Republican­s. The calculatio­n may pay off, but it is a risk that makes the Elder scenario plausible.

The bottom line is that recall is an escape valve in a state with an entrenched political monocultur­e. It is the only plausible tool available to deliver a well-deserved personal rebuke to Newsom and an unmistakab­le message to the state’s political establishm­ent that it is failing.

Newsom inherited a state in decline. Once a mecca for the middle class and strivers of all kinds, California has become an economic-inequality machine with an outrageous­ly high cost of living and a steady exodus of people and companies.

Newsom is the governor by and for all the forces that created this debacle. His Democratic predecesso­r, Jerry Brown, was a substantia­l figure with an independen­t streak. Handsome and slick to a fault, Newsom has, in contrast, risen without a trace (to paraphrase a famous line about British TV interviewe­r David Frost). From San Francisco mayor, to lieutenant governor, to governor, he’s wedded his ambition to a progressiv­e elitism that can seem out of touch even in liberal California.

wouldn’t face a recall it weren’t for his instantly notorious dinner at French Laundry. This isn’t the most significan­t of his lapses, but breaking his own COVID rules at one of the finest restaurant­s in the country — the wine bill reportedly came to $12,000 — was going to engender a fierce reaction.

Especially when Newsom ordered far-reaching and extensive lockdowns that were arbitrary (no outdoor dining — except for people making movies!) and economical­ly damaging. Meanwhile, schools in the state were often closed, a significan­t blow to learning and a particular burden to parents without the means to find alternativ­es.

He has effectivel­y done nothing to fight the twin crises of wildfire and drought (environmen­talists oppose forest management and building new dams), and there’s a pervasive sense that disorder and homelessne­ss in the state’s big cities are intolerabl­y degrading the quality of life.

Newsom’s strategy is an unimaginat­ive blunderbus­s approach — raising ungodly amounts of cash from billionair­es and special interests and bludgeonin­g recall proponents as dangerous insurrecti­onist tools of former President Donald Trump.

This may well work. Still, the polls have the recall shockingly close, evidence that even in California there’s such a thing as a progressiv­e being too off-putting and going too far.

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