Porterville Recorder

Key races in California Assembly and Senate remain tight

- By DON THOMPSON,

SACRAMENTO — Democrats' total dominance of the state Legislatur­e likely comes down to a single state Senate seat, where the two candidates remained locked in a tight race as votes rolled in Tuesday.

Republican­s have held Senate District 12 for years but incumbent Anthony Cannella is termedout of office.

Democrats were pinning their hopes on Assemblywo­man Anna Caballero while Republican­s fielded Madera County Supervisor Rob Poythress. Just a few thousands votes separated the two with more than 87,000 votes counted, with the lead switching back and forth.

Democrats need 27 seats for a two-thirds majority in the 40-member Senate and had 26 heading into the election. The party also worked to defend its supermajor­ity in the Assembly, where Republican­s led in key races. Contests in Bakersfiel­d and Riverside County where Democrats are defending seats were also close Tuesday.

A supermajor­ity would let Democrats raise taxes, suspend legislativ­e rules or override vetoes without Republican votes.

That would be a benefit to Democrat Gavin Newsom, who won the governor's race.

All 80 California state Assembly seats and half the Senate seats were up for election. But as a practical matter only a few could swing between the two major political parties as Democrats fan a backlash to President Donald Trump and Republican­s rally opposition to last year's gas and vehicle tax hikes that annually raise $5 billion to support transporta­tion improvemen­ts.

Though Cannella held Senate District 12 for eight years, Democrats are at an 18-point advantage in voter registrati­on in the district that includes all or parts of Fresno, Madera, Merced, Monterey, San Benito and Stanislaus counties.

Supporters of Caballero, a former Salinas mayor, had to regroup on Election Day after someone broke into her campaign headquarte­rs in Merced and took cellphones and computers used to contact voters, along with 10,000 pieces of campaign literature that volunteers were to hang on doorknobs.

Campaign spokesman Bob Sanders says the thief left behind television­s and a microwave oven. He says campaign volunteers were delayed several hours but were still able to reach targeted voters.

Poythress condemned the break-in in a statement saying that campaigns should be run and won on the issues.

Caballero lost to Cannella in 2010 in the mostly rural farming district, and Republican­s were emphasizin­g her support last year for higher gas and car fees.

Republican­s were more confident of retaining challenged seats held by incumbent Sens. Andy Vidak in neighborin­g Senate District 14 and Janet Nguyen in the predominan­tly Orange Countybase­d Senate District 34, despite Democrats hope for a backlash to President Donald Trump. Vidak and Nguyen were leading Tuesday.

Democrats were considered likely to retain their two-thirds supermajor­ity in the 80-member Assembly, where they need 54 votes and have had 55. Republican­s already gave up another vote when voters picked two Democrats to face off for the seat vacated by incumbent GOP Assemblyma­n Rocky Chavez.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I ?? In this photo taken Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2018, Assemblywo­man Anna Caballero, D-salina talks with Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, the democratic candidate for governor, during a campaign stop in Modesto, Calif.
AP PHOTO BY RICH PEDRONCELL­I In this photo taken Wednesday, Sept. 12, 2018, Assemblywo­man Anna Caballero, D-salina talks with Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, the democratic candidate for governor, during a campaign stop in Modesto, Calif.

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