San Francisco Chronicle

California Republican­s: The new party of the poor?

- JOE GAROFOLI

SACRAMENTO — Here’s how one political party in California is charting its path to victory. It’s talking about how hard it is to buy a house here. It’s outraged about the income inequality between rich coastal cities and poor Central Valley towns. It wants to help California­ns on general assistance get better dental care. It’s talking up class warfare and calling out rich guys in Silicon Valley.

And that party would be the Republican Party of California. Really.

The GOP is basing its reboot on a cold, hard fact: More than 1 in 5 California­ns live in poverty, the highest rate in the country when you factor in the higher cost of housing and living in the state. And they say that the Democrats, as the party that holds every statewide elected office and supermajor­ities in the Legislatur­e, are responsibl­e.

“They broke it, they own it,” California Republican Chairman Jim Brulte told delegates at the state party’s recent convention. “They want the 2018 campaign to be about Washington, D.C. And we’re going to make sure the 2018 campaign is about the Democrats’ abysmal record here in the state of California.”

That’s the political goal, at least, and a decent strategy given another cold, hard fact: The state Republican Party is dying.

The party has no statewide

officehold­ers, has a super-minority in the Legislatur­e, and can claim only 26 percent of California­ns as registered Republican voters, just slightly above the 24 percent who prefer not to state a party affiliatio­n and far fewer than the 45 percent who are Democrats.

In the next decade, Latino voters will make up the majority of California voters, but only 16 percent are now registered as Republican­s. Only 23 percent of Asian Americans are GOPers. No household GOP names have stepped up to run for the U.S. Senate or governor next year. And, oh yeah, Donald Trump in the White House is about as popular as the drought to most California voters.

But the roots of this makeover go deeper. It starts with Assembly GOP Leader Chad Mayes of Yucca Valley (San Bernardino County). This is personal to him on two counts. He grew up in Yucca Valley, where there is a higher poverty rate than in the rest of the state. He grew up knowing people who were struggling. And he was the son of an evangelica­l Christian pastor.

One of the first things Mayes did as Assembly leader last year was to take his fellow Republican­s on a field trip to visit the St. John’s Program for Real Change, a shelter for homeless mothers in Sacramento.

“Your goal has to be on focusing on the people you serve,” Mayes told me Wednesday. “What tools do you have to help people survive? How do I make people’s lives better?

“California has the highest poverty rate in the country. You can’t stick your head in the sand and pretend that doesn’t exist,” Mayes said. “To me that is the No. 1 issue we have to face.”

So over the past few weeks, California Republican­s have rolled out a series of ads on social media. They all basically sound like this, where a woman looks into the camera and says:

“Capitol Democrats have controlled California for decades. Their achievemen­ts? The highest poverty rate in the nation. That’s not an achievemen­t. That’s unacceptab­le. California deserves better. It’s time to turn the page. And Assembly Republican­s are listening.”

“Listening,” pollsters will tell you, is key in these days when voters are storming town halls because they think their representa­tives aren’t. And you gotta love that hashtag: #CADeserves­Better.

But this is more than a rebranding campaign. This week, Assembly Republican­s introduced a 37-page plan of policy solutions called “Helping the Middle Class: Serving Those in Need.”

It is full of proposals — some have already been introduced as legislatio­n — on how to pull the poor into the middle class. The ideas are the fruit of Republican­s doing things that they haven’t in a long while — like working with unions on workforce training programs and antipovert­y advocates on how to improve existing state programs. One of them is to get more general assistance money for people who have completed high school or two years of community college.

Mayes stresses that this is not about Republican­s creating new government programs or abandoning their core conservati­ve principles. It is about making existing programs work better. It’s about putting more of the state’s general fund toward infrastruc­ture. It is about doing something other than saying no.

And, “some of the proposals would help,” said Alissa Anderson, a senior policy analyst for the nonpartisa­n California Budget and Policy Center. “We could build on these even more. But it is good when more people are talking about poverty in California.”

Orange County state Sen. John Moorlach told me Republican­s are trying to do what Democrats have long bragged about doing.

“We’re saying, ‘If you’re the party of taking care of the least, the lost and the last — you’re failing,’ ” Moorlach said. “If you’re the party of good infrastruc­ture, you’re failing. If you’re about affordable housing, you’re failing.”

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